Al mooney had it right. A 140 Cherokee with four passengers is looking for an accident to go to. Grossly underpowered.
Well then try two adults in a Cherokee 140 on a hot day full tanks. It's still a disaster. Anything with the gear hanging down is not going to go fast especially if it's underpowered with a Hershey bar wing.Like most aircraft, it is a tradeoff. I did fill the seats in mine a couple times, admittedly the passengers were mostly on the diminutive side. But I keep the gas light (still plenty to make it to my destination and back with the necessary reserves) and it worked out just fine. Admittedly, with larger sized passengers the trip would be a no-go.
While I agree about Al Mooney, I can't fill the seats in my M20C and take a full load of gas either. Still tradeoffs.
That's a fast Cherokee.
Well then try two adults in a Cherokee 140 on a hot day full tanks. It's still a disaster. Anything with the gear hanging down is not going to go fast especially if it's underpowered with a Hershey bar wing.
The factory may have installed the antennas, but the performance is based on bare bones design, done by computer, verified with a prototype, not the factory end product. The numbers were generated before the first plane was ever built.
No ADF, SS, GPS, VOR, ELT, VHF, Satellite TV and whatever else.
Wind triangle will still show lower TAS than actual if you have winds aloft, try playing with your high tech E6B
Saner to say the book numbers are wrong...maybe just easier than trying to understand why.
While I agree with the underpowered... plenty of fixed gear planes are much faster than anything comparable with RG... Cirrus and the Cessna 400 come to mind.Anything with the gear hanging down is not going to go fast especially if it's underpowered with a Hershey bar wing.
While I agree with the underpowered... plenty of fixed gear planes are much faster than anything comparable with RG... Cirrus and the Cessna 400 come to mind.
While I agree with the underpowered... plenty of fixed gear planes are much faster than anything comparable with RG... Cirrus and the Cessna 400 come to mind.
Maybe not in the same class as the above but the RV-8 is a fixed gear 4 banger that is no slouch for speed.
I personally did not put any speed mods on the 310, but it ended up 20 knots faster when I sold it than when it was donated to Cloud Nine. This was basically done by paying very close attention to detail in terms of baffles (big one)
Attention to detail is the easiest and cheapest speed mod, in my opinion.
Yep.. most airplanes could benefit from a lot of free speed mods. Just make sure everything closes up tight and seals. Baffling, cowl flaps loose and not closing all the way, gear doors not adjusted or tweaked and leaving a gap when closed, cargo doors, cockpit door not sealing well.. that stuff adds up. When/If I ever buy a plane, I will pay a lot of attention to those things.
Where is your battery mounted? To get the flat floor you will need to move your battery to the firewall if it's not already there.New to this forum.
Any Recommendations for extended baggage on a 1965 H model 182?
SelKirk seems to be a popular one, but I’m not a big fan of the step up. I’d like it to be flat all the way back.
Thank you in advance,
Andrew
I also have a bit of time in a Mooney M20J with a Lopresti cowl and some other mods. This one also does close to book numbers, maybe 5 knots faster.
It is in the tail, Should have specified. Worth mouting the battery on the firewall to get a flat floor, or accept the step and move on. Haha
Thanks.
It is in the tail, Should have specified. Worth mouting the battery on the firewall to get a flat floor, or accept the step and move on. Haha
Thanks