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Ernesto Castro
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No bullying, please! Lol, is a legitimate question!
Paging @steingar , your table is ready!
This is a good mission for the Mooney. If you plan to fly regularly into airports that have high density altitudes in the hotter months, the turbo will help alleviate the associated performance reductions.Thanks LevelWing! I saw that about the useful load, anyway I'm planning on doing trips with my girlfriend for the weekend, so it is not a big issue. The idea is to have a plane for doing one weekend trip per month. I live in Houston, and possible trips are Santa Fe, Denver, Destin, etc.
This, like with any other plane, is often times relative. I've had really good luck with mine, but it has excellent bones and I take care of her. A thorough pre-buy is highly recommended but know that with a turbo comes additional maintenance.Also I heard that Mooneys are relative cheap to maintain, at least compared with Bonanzas, etc.
I've never had any issues getting parts for mine outside of a rare one-off case. The factory is open and producing parts and the MooneySpace community is very active with a lot of knowledgeable people who know who to talk to and where to get parts if your local shop can't for some reason. Even for the older fleet, like mine, finding parts hasn't been overly difficult.For you Mooney guys, how is part availability?
Question - is it an M20 Bravo or a M20B?...
It's a M20 Bravo. https://www.trade-a-plane.com/search?listing_id=2376449. I mean, cheap, it's 170k, but anyway, it is a 1990 airplane, super fast, descent avionics, 450SMOH... I don't know, compared with a Saratoga is a no brainer.
It’s priced right for a bravo, not cheap. Its fairly common to overhaul prop at the same time as the engine, so I’m not sure how you are taking a positive (fresh overhaul) and turning it into a negative.Check out prop and engine 2 time (STOH) , 100 hours....that tells me it probably suffered a prop strike.
Which explains why its cheap.
If it was repaired correctly and has all of the documentation and logs, I wouldn't necessarily automatically say no to a plane with a prop strike unless it's a personal requirement (no damage history).Check out prop and engine 2 time (STOH) , 100 hours....that tells me it probably suffered a prop strike.
Which explains why its cheap.
I'm not speaking for @MooneyDriver78, but I don't think it's necessarily a negative. The prop being overhauled and the engine having a top overhaul at 100 hours would at least make me curious as to why it was done.It’s priced right for a bravo, not cheap. Its fairly common to overhaul prop at the same time as the engine, so I’m not sure how you are taking a positive (fresh overhaul) and turning it into a negative.
It’s priced right for a bravo, not cheap. Its fairly common to overhaul prop at the same time as the engine, so I’m not sure how you are taking a positive (fresh overhaul) and turning it into a negative.
Also I heard that Mooneys are relative cheap to maintain, at least compared with Bonanzas, etc.
For you Mooney guys, how is part availability?
I’d ask some questions, read the logs, but you wouldn’t do a top overhaul for a prop strike.
... I don't know, compared with a Saratoga is a no brainer.
As others said, I would recommend you at least sit in a Mooney. Their ergonomics are different and don't fit everyone well. I was interested in one until I sat in it. And interior dimension numbers do not tell the whole story. Otherwise, it does sound like it fits your mission quite well. There is a non-turbo Ovation if you don't want to fly high and deal with a turbo. No idea what those cost
That's a high performance retract with $100k+ hull value and you're a recently minted private pilot (I assume no Instrument rating). You might want to get some insurance quotes before you get too far into the tire kicking process. The rates may surprise you.It's a M20 Bravo. https://www.trade-a-plane.com/search?listing_id=2376449. I mean, cheap, it's 170k, but anyway, it is a 1990 airplane, super fast, descent avionics, 450SMOH... I don't know, compared with a Saratoga is a no brainer.
That's a high performance retract with $100k+ hull value and you're a recently minted private pilot (I assume no Instrument rating). You might want to get some insurance quotes before you get too far into the tire kicking process. The rates may surprise you.
That's a high performance retract with $100k+ hull value and you're a recently minted private pilot (I assume no Instrument rating). You might want to get some insurance quotes before you get too far into the tire kicking process. The rates may surprise you.
This is true, and I believe the cabin width is from the widest point.
Height isn’t the issue, MS has 1 owner that’s 6’9”.
It’s shoulder room and low seating position.
If you can stagger the seats you’ll have plenty of shoulder room.
But the low sports car seating position you’ll either love it or hate it.
I installed the pedal extensions and it makes a vast difference.My specific issue was actually me being short. To reach the pedals I had to be so close to the panel that it was uncomfortable and quite claustrophobic. Though I understand that this can be mitigated with pedal "extenders". Also, can be something you get used to, I guess.
I’d ask some questions, read the logs, but you wouldn’t do a top overhaul for a prop strike.
It wouldn't be correct to do a top overhaul for a prop strike. That doesn't mean someone didn't do it. But there are people who believe overhauls aren't required for prop strikes and others who think you need one if you hit a blade of grass. Regardless, the question of prop strike is supposition...
I installed the pedal extensions and it makes a vast difference.
"top overhaul" (whatever that might mean)
Cylinders and valves. You don't break the case open, it's just the things on top of the case. It is not an officially defined term.
You can’t comply with the AD this way.Can you inspect the crankshaft with the cylinders removed?
Can you inspect the crankshaft with the cylinders removed?
...It is not an officially defined term.
Can you inspect the crankshaft with the cylinders removed?