29singlespeed wrote:Thanks all!
Probably will just hold off on a purchase and make the drive. Used to more power.
You're missing the point!
C120/140's are great mountain airplanes,
because they're so anemic you have no choice but to learn what the air is doing as it interacts with terrain. THAT will make you a mountain pilot...nothing else will. The tail wheel is a bonus, but it's the lack of power that's the real benefit. A mechanical autopilot understands everything there is to know about using the throttle, but flying low and slow with terrain all around you demands understanding air, and pilots who started out with big engines rarely (usually never) reach that understanding.
My wife and I regularly flew our Cessna 140 (with a 235 Lycoming) back and forth across the Sierra Nevada Mountains and the Great Basin while traveling between California and Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming. We learned more about air movement, orographic lift, cross country planning, fuel endurance, weight and balance, energy management, and diurnal weather patterns in one year of flying our 140 than we would have learned in decades of flying a powerful airplane. We had to get REALLY creative, again and again, to get where we were going, and it never occurred to us that we couldn't go somewhere because we didn't have enough airplane. There's simply no substitute for that sort of learning.
The way the FAA teaches flight doesn't work in the mountains because GA airplanes simply don't have enough power to compensate for the dynamic air movement that occurs in tight terrain. NONE of them do. I had a Carbon Cub dealer tell me "terrain is no longer a factor", and I think he believed it. If he ever moves off the coast and starts flying backcountry, he's going to die.
Learning the nature of air movement by flying an anemic airplane in the mountains (with safe airports on each end) is the best backcountry flight training you can get...and a WHOLE lot more fun than just pushing the throttle in and pointing the nose up.