Hi. I am not a certified pilot, and have never been in a tail wheel aircraft. That said, I am by no means at par with the skill/knowledge level of the rest of these guys, I am just sharing what I have learned in my research. Both the Cessna 180, Maule M7-235 B, and Bearhawk 250 would work as great tail wheel aircraft. I am not sure whether they carry the type of transponder you need, so that would be something to double check. The maule, can add an extra ( 5th ) seat in the back, but is very cramped for teens/adults, and I hear it takes a lot of planning out the placement of your load when using the 5th seat. Another thing to consider, is that the 5th seat is where the baggage area is, meaning you will not have room for hardly any luggage when you're hauling someone in the back extra seat. Also, stock, the maule only has 895lbs of useful load. This is deffintently not the greatest useful load, although the aircraft can be STCd for a useful load of 1195lbs. Now we're talking. The aircraft is gonna stall at about 35kts ( fully loaded ), and, with stock tires, you'll be getting about 10gph @105-110KIAS. Rotate at max gross is 600ft for the maule. The bearhawk doesn't bother to try to bump out the fuselage and add an extra seat, because they are smart enough to know that, just like the maule, it would be practically useless. The Bearhawk 4 place with a Lycoming I/O 540 engine ( about 250hp ), should get around 9gph@ 105KIAS, but could push cruise speeds of 170MPH IAS, at about 14gph. The stall speed fully loaded should be almost the same as the maule, but because u have 15 more horsies, you're gonna see rotate at about 400ft instead of 600. The Bearhawk 4 place I believe has about the same cabin dimensions as the C180. Speaking of the C180, I believe you get about 1100lbs useful load with this aircraft, and is a four seater. This would be probably the most " cross country " suitable aircraft of the 3 I believe, but in terms of takeoff, you'll be seeing numbers around the 1000ft Mark for rotate and 1100-1200ft above 50ft. Than again, some skill could lower those numbers. At cruise, I believe 150-160KIAS would be higher end cruise speeds, and the GPH at that speed, I do not know. Stall speed is gonna be a little bit higher, at about 52MPH IAS. I think the maule can hold 85 gallons of fuel, and the bearhawk I believe can hold 55 gallons, with optional Aux tanks in the outer part of the wing. I am not sure of the Cessna 180's fuel capacity. In terms of landing gear configurations, the Maule I believe can be fitted with both aluminum spring, and oleo strut. The Bear hawk is Oleo strut, and the C180 I believe is only aluminum spring. I have heard, that the handling on a maule in slow speed flight is very sloppy, whereas the Bearhawk I have heard is quite an improve!ment on handling. Again, I am not a certified pilot, nor have I ever been in a tail dragger aircraft, so the information I have shared should not be looked at as correct, in the case that someone else corrects my post. I hope I helped. Happy flying
