Littlecub wrote:Not that the idea to remove the passenger door and rudder pedals isn't valid, Flap, but most of us should look in a full length mirror to see most of the superfluous weight that our small aircraft carry. (This is NOT aimed at Jerry. This is aimed at the majority of US BCPers)
You guys missed my point... probably because I was being a bit less sarcastic and obnoxious than usual. I was saying to take out the right seat and cover over the door opening because that way you won't even try to put a passenger in it... even my single digit IQ tells me a 100HP 150 being flown in and out of demanding strips at those DA's and terrain is more than likely a single place airplane. Certainly if my corpulent ass was in the left seat.
I wonder just how light you can get a stocker 150 if you strip it bare bones. Eleven hundred... a grand? I know that stripping it is how they got the performance numbers for the brochure in the first place (I have a fond memory of the 1976 150 Commuter II sales brochure at my first flight school... 124 miles an hour cruise speed and 128 or 130 maximum speed. The instructors would laugh their asses off when I asked why the school airplanes only went 98 miles an hour).
I think you might be able to "tune up" and smooth out and lighten up and "massage" a 150 into a better performer without bending the rules TOO bad. The French built airplanes had the O-240 engine of 130HP... probably should be on the same type certificate, eh? Jerry you might want to look for a runout O-240 someplace... it would be a fairly easy one-shot field approval if it's already approved in the frog version. A tailwheel conversion (no I won't have one to sell) would get rid of 25 to 40 pounds and get the prop further off the ground. The VG's and droop tips would really help. Maybe "repairing" the exhaust system with enthusiastic malice would help. Plenty of interesting ideas to discuss, all perfectly sparkling white legal of course, if anyone's interested.