charheep
Cleared for Takeoff
got 3.
Got my tickets, and I’m tired.
omg PLEASE win so you can never, ever ever say anything about MY bad paint job again.......
omg PLEASE win so you can never, ever ever say anything about MY bad paint job again.......
I kind of like the paint job, assuming no corrosion. I think I’d keep it. Then instead of Cool Beard Guy, I’d be Cool Paint Guy.
omg PLEASE win so you can never, ever ever say anything about MY bad paint job again.......
Eh, probably pretty cheap to have the brown stripes changed to red or similar and it would look fine. The bright blue and brown combo are a little bit of a mismatch, but I wouldn't be complaining if it were mine!
Hey… perception is realityWho lied to you and said you were Cool Beard Guy?...
according to the FAA published SN, and this site
https://www.flyhpa.com/services/air...lane-buyers-guide/cessna-aircraft/cessna-182/
it's an F
Cessna 182F (1963, S/N 54424 – 55058)
according to this article, and the photos of the panel
https://www.avweb.com/features/cessna-182-skylane/
it's an E
"The 1963 182F sported a thicker, one-piece windshield and back window, a standard T-panel and an increase in horizontal stabilizer span of 10 inches. Flap pre-select also became standard."
And according to wikipedia, the F model was certified 1 Aug 1962
but according to the FAA database, the raffle plane's AW date was, 01/17/1963
Making it an F
so my very unreliable conclusion is that the Avweb article has some bad info regarding when the flight instrument layout and flap switch changes happened
OR perhaps more likely
the panel and flap update happened in the middle of the F variant someplace, later in the year.... some F's including this one didn't get the upgrade.
which is too bad, because those are two things that would be huge dings for me personally against this prize aircraft IF I were shopping to buy it. I've always hated those hold and count the seconds flap switches...consider them a distraction and less safe...and the non standard layout doesn't scan nearly as well IMO
Seems to me that a lot of these lists of variant histories and articles over simplify the info and make it seems that design changes and model variants change according to a calendar year, while it seems teh manufacturers don't seem to care about holding standards of any kind...with mid calendar year variant changes...and with mid variant design changes.
Basically nothing means nothing regarding year produced or variant type.
If someone wins this bird, they can probably have a new custom panel made and solve most of those issues.
If someone wins this bird, they can probably have a new custom panel made and solve most of those issues.
The Cessna Pilots Association's 182 Model History states that:according to the FAA published SN, and this site
https://www.flyhpa.com/services/air...lane-buyers-guide/cessna-aircraft/cessna-182/
it's an F
Cessna 182F (1963, S/N 54424 – 55058)
according to this article, and the photos of the panel
https://www.avweb.com/features/cessna-182-skylane/
it's an E
"The 1963 182F sported a thicker, one-piece windshield and back window, a standard T-panel and an increase in horizontal stabilizer span of 10 inches. Flap pre-select also became standard."
And according to wikipedia, the F model was certified 1 Aug 1962
but according to the FAA database, the raffle plane's AW date was, 01/17/1963
Making it an F
so my very unreliable conclusion is that the Avweb article has some bad info regarding when the flight instrument layout and flap switch changes happened
OR perhaps more likely
the panel and flap update happened in the middle of the F variant someplace, later in the year.... some F's including this one didn't get the upgrade.
which is too bad, because those are two things that would be huge dings for me personally against this prize aircraft IF I were shopping to buy it. I've always hated those hold and count the seconds flap switches...consider them a distraction and less safe...and the non standard layout doesn't scan nearly as well IMO
Seems to me that a lot of these lists of variant histories and articles over simplify the info and make it seems that design changes and model variants change according to a calendar year, while it seems teh manufacturers don't seem to care about holding standards of any kind...with mid calendar year variant changes...and with mid variant design changes.
Basically nothing means nothing regarding year produced or variant type.
Question I have is, will the Continental AD be completed by WOH (if applicable) before I pick it up in May?
I'd think you could source a decent loan to pay the taxes using the aircraft itself as collateral, but I don't have anything to back that up. The rest of the costs are going to be monthly expenses no matter what.ha ha...yeah I thought about that, but then I remembered post #4 in this thread. After paying those taxes + finding out how much a hangar or tie down is going to cost + insurance.... I'm not so sure my wife will let me keep it!
Especially since most of the GA piston fleet will run over a Musketeer in flight.over a run out Musketeer
Geronimo conversion used 180HPoooh...an apache with oversized engines.... I'm partial to the round nose and round tail over an Aztec..... except 150HP an 160HP way too under-powered. What's the biggest engine that has been put in a round nose Apache?
ahh....never mind. A twin is mostly just more expense.....
I'd probably go in on it even though I have no practical mission for a twin. Just like with any of the WoH raffles, I'd think it would be prudent to have a prebuy done on it to make sure it was worth the time to even take possession of it.Wonder what the interest level would be if they offered a 310, Aztec, or Twinkie.