I've got over 100 hours in Arrows and intentionally did my instrument in one. I'd never fly the 180 HP model, as I got scared by the lack of performance in one. The 200 HP Arrow II is actually quite a nice airplane. About 1000 useful on 50/48 usable gallon tanks. That means a 700 pound UL, simple gear that doesn't have major issues and easy to slow down for stable IFR approaches. Of course, I prefer a Tiger or Mooney, but Arrows are really underrated airplanes.
In fact, they are quite decent 3 person airplanes and you can do 4 if you trade fuel.
One airplane. One. Out of thousands that have been around forever.
Yes, a Mooney is basically better at everything, except UL on some of the short bodies. They are also less forgiving.
The Arrow isn't a great airplane at much of anything. It is a good airplane at a lot of things. It goes fast enough on little enough fuel to be an economical XC plane on trips up to about 500 NM. For a complex plane, the MX is rather reasonable. The engine choice for the NA ones is as bulletproof as it gets in GA. The gear are simple, very reliable and have the easiest emergency extend ever. They maintain the awesome manual flaps from the fixed gear Cherokees. Their controls are light enough to be responsive, but heavy enough to keep you from over correcting too much. Their gear speed is close enough to cruise that it is super easy to slow them down for an approach using the gear alone, making them a really stable IFR platform.
Oh, and another thing. Decent Arrows are very reasonably priced.
LOL - We all do.