Have you flown one (a J3)? I think they are a bit narrow unless you have very thin/small shoes. You might look at a Legend Cub which I think is a better plane.
Both are fun to fly with the windows and/or doors open.
Aerobatic is a trike, unless it’s been converted.I’ve never been in a Cub or tailwheel airplane, but have been thinking about a second plane. I do not want to have to hand prop the plane either. Have been thinking about a Cessna 150 aerobat (guessing these are for acrobatics?), Cessna 120/140, Piper Cub. Also like the bi-planes and planes with a rotary engine, but I do not have a high budget (30-50k) for this so haven’t considered planes like the Extra.
Aerobatic is a trike, unless it’s been converted.
I’ve never been in a Cub or tailwheel airplane, but have been thinking about a second plane. I do not want to have to hand prop the plane either. Have been thinking about a Cessna 150 aerobat (guessing these are for acrobatics?), Cessna 120/140, Piper Cub. Also like the bi-planes and planes with a rotary engine, but I do not have a high budget (30-50k) for this so haven’t considered planes like the Extra. Also need to make sure it can fit in the hangar which I’m not sure of how to play Tetris with it.
I think the open windows/doors would be cool but being able to close them and have heat is also important due to location. I guess I need to find me one of those cool pilot hat and face goggles.
Then may wish to consider a Champ rather than pay the designer label price for a Cub.I do not have a high budget
I have a J-3 and I love it because it is old and has history.... A Legend is just a fake remake.Have you flown one (a J3)? I think they are a bit narrow unless you have very thin/small shoes. You might look at a Legend Cub which I think is a better plane.
Both are fun to fly with the windows and/or doors open.
Same with the Luscombe. 25 mph faster, pretty good handling, sportier than the Champ or the Taylorcraft...The Cub is one of the all time great airplanes, but as others have said almost any of its contemporaries are better planes. Remember it was designed in the 1930s to carry two 1930s size individuals with 37HP.
Every time I fly a Cub I'm appalled by the heavy controls, sluggish handling, and how sore I am when I climb back out. But cruising one at 500' with the door open on a warm summer evening followed by a touchdown on a good turf runway is a magical thing. And hand propping, starting it with your own muscle power, is part of that magic.
@mandm let's partner in a 7AC champ. You just need to move your hangar to C81 or somewhere in the middle.
(I’m very serious - but can’t do UGN).
I do not want to have to hand prop the plane either.
Before you jump into a partnership, make sure to have the discussions about things like what you’ll do if one of you wants to convert to a glass panel with WAAS capability and the other one doesn’t.@mandm let's partner in a 7AC champ. You just need to move your hangar to C81 or somewhere in the middle.
If you’re worried about prices… you’ll need to find an extra partner… *cough* *cough*PWK could work too, but likely way pricier than UGN (if there are hangers available). Likely less friendly.
I read here from @Racerx that C81 is for sale.
Original Cubs are certificated, and can be flown under light sport rules because they meet the requirements of aircraft that a sport pilot may fly because of the way the reg is written. There are probably Cubs out there that DO NOT meet this reg, for instance, if they've ever specifically had a Beech Roby prop installed. Old logbooks can become very important.Are Cubs certificated, light sport or home built? Because I’ve seen some that say light sport, many people say rebuilt, so just wondering what their status is.
Yes.Are Cubs certificated, light sport or home built? Because I’ve seen some that say light sport, many people say rebuilt, so just wondering what their status is.
That’s a far stretch from a Cub! Pulling Gs upside down isn’t my cup of tea, but I know a couple of guys who love it. One has a Pitts. One has a One Design. I think both would rather have an Extra!
A Pitts will have whatever power the builder put in it. The original S1C was 85HP, but they've been built with well north of 200HP.I also like the look of the bi-plane and seems Pitt’s will have extra power. It might fit in the hangar too since they are super small. Just casually looking at the moment
I’ve never been in a Cub or tailwheel airplane, but have been thinking about a second plane. I do not want to have to hand prop the plane either. Have been thinking about a Cessna 150 aerobat (guessing these are for acrobatics?), Cessna 120/140, Piper Cub. Also like the bi-planes and planes with a rotary engine, but I do not have a high budget (30-50k) for this so haven’t considered planes like the Extra. Also need to make sure it can fit in the hangar which I’m not sure of how to play Tetris with it.
I think the open windows/doors would be cool but being able to close them and have heat is also important due to location. I guess I need to find me one of those cool pilot hat and face goggles.
I was in a J-3 arrangement with 7 people. There was never a scheduling problem.
It must have been way over gross, but those big wings sure do produce a lot of lift!
A friend of mine once had a J3 Cub (actually several) , and a set of extra J3 wings. He did this well before my time, But he told me about mounting the extra set of cub wings on the J3 (they were using J-3's for crop dusting) to make a bi-plane out of it. I think they just wanted to try it and were thinking that they might be able to carry more load with it. Turns out the extra set of wings were so draggy it would barely get off the ground. They quickly removed them and went back to the normal (for a J-3 Cropduster) configuration.
Brian