Cherokee 140 PA28-140: 150hp 2-seater with a bench seat thing in the back to place the flight-bag upon. trainer aircraft , able to lift itself and a bag of groceries on a hot day. Straight 'hershey bar' wing
Also Cherokee 140 PA28-140, 150hp, non-trainer personal airplane, 4 seats with 2 individual seats in the back plus a baggage area and "hat rack" behind the rear seat. Able to lift itself plus 3 adults, fuel to the tabs, loaded up to the full 2150lbs max gross on a hot Texas summer day, and do it in accordance with the book's published numbers (as long as you don't have a 1900+ hour runout engine).
Also significantly wider front seat shoulder room than a 172, and much quieter inside than a 172.
Low wing allows you to keep the runway in sight while making turns in the pattern. :wink2:
Hershey wing makes childs play out of gusty crosswind landings. Rides turbulence a little smoother than the Cessna wing.
No ladder needed to refuel the plane.
Adult in rear seat almost needs to sit sideways, else enjoy riding with his knees in his armpits.
Insurance with $30k hull coverage included typically ran me $600/yr.
Annual inspections typically ran me under 1 AMU per year unless I was upgrading radios, stereo intercom system, new strobes, etc at the same time.
I owned one for almost ten years, then became addicted to Vans RVs