akschu wrote:https://www.barnstormers.com/classified_1095566_c150+taildragger.html
I dig the old 150's with the straight tail. They are lighter than the newer ones with the rear window, and because the fuse is basically a cessna 140, you can convert them to tailwheel using 140 parts.
You end up with a C-140 with a metal wing and 100HP that looks like a baby 180.
I had exactly that when I joined this forum in 2013. A David Lowe conversion (NOT a "Texas Taildragger"). Beautiful 1959 Baby 180. Square tail, fastback. Flew it for over a year and sold it for a bit more than I paid, to the local CAF wing to train tailwheel drivers for their N3N. I did spin training and used to have a blast spinning it. Very docile and predictable recovery.

I added VG's. In retrospect, though I like the VG's, it was kind of a waste. At least at the elevations around here, with just a little practice, you can already land a 150 on a shorter field than you can take off from. I swapped out the high pitch cruise prop for the lowest pitch approved on the TCDS and that got the RPM's up on that smooth running little O-200, but with my home field at 4723' MSL, it stil took around 7-800' to get off the ground on the asphalt runway.
So, unless you have the money right now for a more powerful plane, go ahead and get an old airworthy 150, fly it, and then later, if you do the Lowe tailwheel conversion, you might sell it at a profit when you're ready to move up.
Pierre