ktup-flyer
En-Route
It's possible, but you'll have a very steep learning curve. It's a fast plane with a lot more going on than your standard Piper/Cessna. I have heard they're very easy to landThink learning in a V35 would be feasible?
It's possible, but you'll have a very steep learning curve. It's a fast plane with a lot more going on than your standard Piper/Cessna. I have heard they're very easy to landThink learning in a V35 would be feasible?
This is pretty good advice, not just for the OP but for everyone's first plane.My 2 cents (worth nothing)... Buy a clean 182, get your private/IR/etc knocked out, then see where your wants are. The 182 will appreciate unless you bend it and it meets all your reqs minus 2 seats and 30kts. If you end up wanting more, then throw it up on TAP and go buy your Bonanza or whatever.
Loving all the replies! I'll see about getting the 180 guys number, I know him through my boss and didnt get his number the other day.
Lets change this up a little.. Lets assume my kids do not care for flying and the wife and kids would rather road trip in a car, which I also love, and the only thing it will be used for is myself to fly to meetings and for personal enjoyment and I dont need anything more than 2 seats and a place to put a bag... What is the for lack of a better word sexiest/sportiest most fun aircraft if interior space does not matter? Also in the same 100k or less price range and being used for same business purpose and distance etc as discussed earlier?
Do they make a lift kit for the Mooney for when he builds his grass/dirt runway?You need a plane built in Texas! Get a Mooney, "We love to fly. Fast." We are easy to recognize by the sleek lines of the fuselage, the long smooth wings, the fast look on the ground and our smiles leaving the gas pumps. Oh, our vertical stabilizers are put on right, too!
Popular entry planes are M20-C and M20-E; M20-F has a little more interior space (but the front seats are identical); M20-J is an F with aerodynamic cleanup and the efficiency king of certified GA.
I have a C, and get ~147 KTAS on 9 gallons per hour, call it high teens in miles per gallon. At 170 mph . . . .
P.S.--it was my first plane, bought 5 weeks after my checkride. See my earlier post about insurance costs.
Do they make a lift kit for the Mooney for when he builds his grass/dirt runway?
I've seen him. Just stereotyping lol.I know several with C and E models who live at grass fields.
Go to youtube and look up piperpainter when you have a minute. While I do go to grass strips in mine, I'd rather not take my Mooney where he takes his . . . .
Loving all the replies! I'll see about getting the 180 guys number, I know him through my boss and didnt get his number the other day.
Lets change this up a little.. Lets assume my kids do not care for flying and the wife and kids would rather road trip in a car, which I also love, and the only thing it will be used for is myself to fly to meetings and for personal enjoyment and I dont need anything more than 2 seats and a place to put a bag... What is the for lack of a better word sexiest/sportiest most fun aircraft if interior space does not matter? Also in the same 100k or less price range and being used for same business purpose and distance etc as discussed earlier?
So.. I need something fast enough to greatly speed up traveling an average of 65mph on the road for a minimum of 200 miles and on up toward 500 miles. Then the big factor in being able to justify it is operating cost. I think being around or below $200 per hour is still reasonable for my purposes. I am married and we have 2 kids and plan to have more in the future so a 6 seater is also very tempting and further tempting yet is a twin engine, but I fear the operating costs would make the $200 per hour near impossible for a twin, correct me if I'm wrong please.
Now the big question, price range.. It would be financed, and I'm thinking around the $100,000 range or less, possibly more if that brings into the equation the obvious option for my criteria.
Lets change this up a little.. Lets assume my kids do not care for flying and the wife and kids would rather road trip in a car, which I also love, and the only thing it will be used for is myself to fly to meetings and for personal enjoyment and I dont need anything more than 2 seats and a place to put a bag... What is the for lack of a better word sexiest/sportiest most fun aircraft if interior space does not matter? Also in the same 100k or less price range and being used for same business purpose and distance etc as discussed earlier?
Heres the new situation: Talked to CPA this morning for a good while brainstorming what to do with this years taxes. I'm going to dot my i's and cross my t's yet but it looks to be a very good possibility that we will be buying a plane for tax purposes and it making sense for what we are wanting to do with my job etc.
New budget $125,000 - $150,000 for tax reasons I do not want to go lower, may go higher if there is a certain threshold where it makes sense to spend over the $150,000 for what you get.
So anyone have a new set of suggestions for this price range? 4 or 6 seat size, single or twin engine, turbo or not, this time I'm not as picky. Also if anyone has financing companies they recommend I'm all ears, but I will be contacting Airfleet and Dorr I believe.
Baron or 310 if you want a multi. A36 or 210 if you go single.Alright fellas, here is an update. The plane thing we where all talking about kind of faded into the background and didnt happen.
Heres the new situation: Talked to CPA this morning for a good while brainstorming what to do with this years taxes. I'm going to dot my i's and cross my t's yet but it looks to be a very good possibility that we will be buying a plane for tax purposes and it making sense for what we are wanting to do with my job etc.
New budget $125,000 - $150,000 for tax reasons I do not want to go lower, may go higher if there is a certain threshold where it makes sense to spend over the $150,000 for what you get.
So anyone have a new set of suggestions for this price range? 4 or 6 seat size, single or twin engine, turbo or not, this time I'm not as picky. Also if anyone has financing companies they recommend I'm all ears, but I will be contacting Airfleet and Dorr I believe.
What would a SR20 cost to operate vs a V35?
While window and daydreaming is fun...if you are serious about this endeavor, go get your PPL first THEN go buy a plane. You can research till your eyes bleed, but until you start getting into the air, you will not know what will be truly important to YOU. It falls under the you don't know what you don't know yet category.
While there is nothing wrong with purchasing a plane THEN starting your PPL...you have a specific mission and will need to make SOME compromises to accomplish that in your budget and that will be hard to quantify right outta the gate.
I still think you should look at the Cessna Centurions. Operating costs are around $200/hr. 6 seater with more carrying ability than the Moonies/Beeches/Pipers. You can get a really nice one, maybe even a pressurized one in that price range.https://www.controller.com/listings...oney-m20j-201?dlr=1&pcid=99&crmid=614711&if=1
https://www.controller.com/listings...03-cessna-350?dlr=1&pcid=99&crmid=614711&if=1
So those are 2 options im looking at now.. I went over the rest of the years projections last night and I can see where I easily could need to buy a more expensive plane than the m20j above... I also have a cousin that may want to split ownership for the same reason I'm wanting to buy and if thats the case we will need the plane to probably be about $300,000...
So for the $300,000 range what are the suggestions?
So those are 2 options im looking at now.. I went over the rest of the years projections last night and I can see where I easily could need to buy a more expensive plane than the m20j above... I also have a cousin that may want to split ownership for the same reason I'm wanting to buy and if thats the case we will need the plane to probably be about $300,000...
I see what your saying but I'm justifying it for tax purposes meaning a reasonable trainer wont cost enough to benefit me tax wise for what I need in that area. I mean if nothing else I can hire a pilot for the first little while worse case scenario.
On the other hand, if I was a client and you flew in, I would assume your company has high fees and is not careful and efficient with money.
Or this. https://www.trade-a-plane.com/searc...2R+SKYLANE&listing_id=2328870&s-type=aircraft
I have an R model (230hp, not upgraded) and get a touch over 145tas on 12-13gph in typical cruise. 1305lbs useful and 88 gallons usable. It's a great trainer.
Not in my experience.I think most people understand the difference between a single engine piston and a citation.
That 280 skylane I bet can haul!!!
Our club skylane is a 182H 230hp with similar stats as ktup.
Lol. If I could get her to 12K perhaps. Or power on descent! But truth by told I’m closer to 130 and 14gph I think.Speed is correlated at the cube root of power. So not much. 230 to 280 yields 6% increase in speed.
As to 145+ true in a 182 at 12 gph? Pics or it didn't happen .
Had my IA turn the prop up so it makes 2500rpm. I was at 143 true before then.Speed is correlated at the cube root of power. So not much. 230 to 280 yields 6% increase in speed.
As to 145+ true in a 182 at 12 gph? Pics or it didn't happen .
I've been lurking on this thread for a while... very interesting I must say.
Reading everything you've written about this airplane project, you have not indicated any real interest in flying, or learning to fly, or training (or costs thereof), or an instrument rating, or thinking about any of these issues. Only in owning an expensive airplane for financial reasons. This last statement (not interested in a "trainer"... huh? you can train in something real nice! Hire a pilot?... huh? Hire a CFI!) seems to cement this sentiment. So I'd say: *do not* fly, or train, or learn to fly. It just doesn't sound like it's your thing. Hire your pilot.
You've also not indicated any interest in the aspects of an airplane's "worth" that most owners and pilots find important (because our lives depend on it), such as the state of the engine, the state of the avionics, the suitability as an IFR platform, etc. You've seemed more interested in how a plane looks, whether it's sporty and sexy and fast, the poshness of the interior, whether it will impress your clients, etc. So perhaps "airplane shopping" is maybe not your thing either. Maybe hire that task out as well, to a skilled pilot/mechanic who knows what to look for under the cowling.
Not trying to sound harsh. That's just the $0.02 I get from reading...
Ravioli is trying to explore whether your plans constitute a commercial operation (and what kind) to the *FAA*, not the IRS. It's not a question for your tax guy. You could ask a CFI, though!