Or more practical to keep the original equipment fixed pitch prop. The ROI may not be worth it.
The crank and prop are negligible since you have to buy them anyway. The rest of the cost is the block mod (blocking off oil pressure relief hole) and the other prop parts and install labor.
It may be cheaper to get a 235 (or at least competitive) but the difference is that i can buy a archer this year. I can't a 235. Well...i could. ..i just don't want to.
Im working on cost next and I'll post a thorough break down. I think it's doable at this point but i still need to prove it to myself.
Have you previously owned an airplane? If so, which one?If it saves me a few gallons a fuel, gets me to my destination quicker, puts e at the top of the desired rental list, and sells for 10k more when its all said and done. ..is very worth it to me. 8 knots an hour for 400 flight hours per year is 3600 miles that you don't have to pay for. (Ok there is addition maintenance cost but that should be covered by the efficiency increase) And that's just one year. That's my thinking anyways
Have you previously owned an airplane? If so, which one?
You've said you're buying this to rent out to low-end pilots, possibly students. 400 hrs in a year is 33 hrs month, average.
Have you looked at other flight schools to see what utilization is for the low end aircraft in your area?
Are you a CFI who will be doing the instruction? Or are you expecting to put the airplane into a lease agreement at an existing school?
Have you contacted the school and asked if they want a trainer with a CS prop?
As an initial student, very few CFIs want to start students with a more complicated aircraft. With only the CS prop it still doesn't qualify as a complex for the commercial and so on.....So you're locked into primary training and possibly IFR depending on the panel.
Contact a shop and ask what a 100 hour inspection will cost with a CS prop. Run the numbers,best case, worst case.
Is there an STC for an electric prop?
Insurance and maintenance will drive up the cost in my specific use case. I dont disagree with you, and for an airplane only i would fly, id op for a money 201 or something...but that's not my plan for now.What everyone is basically trying to say over and over is it's almost always cheaper to buy what you want up front than to buy and upgrade.
Do you ever bother to drain the fuel selector drain to get all the gunk on your Cessna? It is the lowest part of those fuel systems? If so, how do you do it with out crawling on the ground?
Is 4 less that 3? A Piper has left, right and off. A Cessna has left right off and both. Cessna never built one that drains evenly from both tanks.
Do you use self serve fuel? How is dragging that hose up the ladder working for you?
Im trying to get actually verified numbers from an owner, but other planes sold in both variants show an 8-12 knot increase at cruise. To me that's worth the cost of the swap.
Would you like to buy the Brooklyn Bridge too?!
There is no way in heaven you'll see that kind of increase..........not even close.
...so why not?
I would be very surprised if there's that big a difference between fixed-pitch and CS on an Archer. Maybe a couple of knots in cruise if that, and somewhat better acceleration at the start of the takeoff roll and rate of climb.Im trying to get actually verified numbers from an owner, but other planes sold in both variants show an 8-12 knot increase at cruise. To me that's worth the cost of the swap.
Im trying to get actually verified numbers from an owner, but other planes sold in both variants show an 8-12 knot increase at cruise. To me that's worth the cost of the swap.
Ive pretty much settled on an archer ii. It seems to have all the requirements I'm interested in. Cs prop upgrade would require a crank swamp , but that's not a big deal.
I traded the star on the forehead for a knot on the back of the head from standing up while sumping under the wing.They are all death traps, because:
They only have one door.
The wing is in the wrong place.
The fuel tanks fill up with gunk because you never get on the ground to sump them.
They have too many positions on the fuel switch.
There was something else, but I can't remember what it is. I have too much brain damage from walking into the wing on the Cessna.
I got this info from hartzell today. Apparently the a3a hollow crank is just plugged. Converting it (allowing for installation of prop governor) changes the engine designation to a1a
JC:
Lqooks like there are a couple of STC’s that will allow for this on a PA-28-180.
They are:
SA2213WE (this one might be your best bet – I’ll get to that later)
SA556SW
SA556SW is a little vague, and if I remember correctly, the STC holder is difficult/impossible to get ahold of. Sometimes these older STC’s go “inactive” and the people are hard to find.
SA2213WE, on the other hand, looks like it’s still active, and appears to allow for the “conversion” of the existing O-360-A3A engine to an O-360-A1A, and then installing a CS prop. It appears that the O-360-A3A has a hollow crank.
That's interesting. A third party STC can modify the dataplate on the engine and/or add a supplemental dataplate.Actually the stc allows the change to the engine. It still remains an a3a. Only lycoming can change the designation and re-data plate the engine.
Bob
https://www.lycoming.com/sites/default/files/Engine Nameplate Replacement.pdfThat's interesting. A third party STC can modify the dataplate on the engine and/or add a supplemental dataplate.
Which is what I said. Why post it without comment?
=my goal is to eventually own 3 or 4 planes that are known as solid, well maintained, fast, and 'priced the same' as the other guys.
IMO the Archer II is a fine airplane right out of the box not and worth the surgery to change it. Also, the CS prop will cost you some useful load. The 180 hp PA-28 has been one of the most popular airplanes on the planet for over half a century, and if the prop conversion were worthwhile a bunch of people would have done it by now.
Cost, complexity, and mostly weight. A Cherokee 180 is JUST BARELY a 4 place airplane. Another 50 pounds is not what it needs.
Which is what I said. Why post it without comment?
I whacked my head real good on a Cessna strut this evening!They are all death traps, because:
They only have one door.
The wing is in the wrong place.
The fuel tanks fill up with gunk because you never get on the ground to sump them.
They have too many positions on the fuel switch.
There was something else, but I can't remember what it is. I have too much brain damage from walking into the wing on the Cessna.
An Arrow can be had for around the same money, already has a CS prop, and it might work out well for commercial students or others needing time in a complex aircraft to rent.
What everyone is basically trying to say over and over is it's almost always cheaper to buy what you want up front than to buy and upgrade.
Unfortunately, it looks like the original poster hasn't been here in over two years, so he probably won't see your post unless he has an email alert set up.I just came across this. My 1968 Cherokee (D model) is the 180 HP with a CSP. I have the STCs if you still want them?
All this talk about Cherokees, Warriors, Archers and Arrows makes me quiver.