fiftynineSC wrote:Two things first:
1) What year of 185 are we talking about? (significant differences as far as mods needed between a 1961 and a 1985)
2) Most importantly (in my opinion)....the often used, "what's your mission?"
Example, if your mission is to fly to the East coast for vacation from North Texas and you have a stock '79 model...nothing. Avgas and maybe an engine monitor.
If your mission is to fly to Alaska and the 185 is your all purpose jeep and need to hit some really short, rough stuff; you need more wing.
In my case, i have a fairly late model so I didn't have to mod it for my mission. Mine's a '75 and has long range fuel, extended baggage, factory removable jump seats, etc. I fly from North Texas to Idaho with the confidence to hit all the strips but the "big creek 4." So, for me my must haves are 8.50's, safety equipment, and a heater. Literally the only STC's i have on my 40 plus year old plane are 8.50's, Tanis, and aftermarket fuel drains (previous owner).
For guys with an early model it would have to be extended baggage first. For guys that really need to get short and rough...sportman and 29's and a tailwheel. For the guys that are on floats and short lake; wing-X and a 550.
That's the "must-haves" for me. But, there are a lot of "nice to haves"!! My nice to haves are firewall battery, GAMI's, pull handles, and flat baggage floor.
P.S. Just to give perspective on what a 185 can do with proficiency...there's very little a 185 can't do in the right hands. Much shorter, many would say you need a cub or a helicopter. Faster, you need a Cirrus. A friend of mine operates (and has for 30 plus years) his stock 185 off of one of two 1200' and 600' (when light) unimproved pasture strips. When I say stock...I mean not a single STC. 8.00's and an 8" TW. He and his wife operate out of that farm strip and blast to Colorado on a regular basis at 140 knots and have since I was a kid.
Bill
Bill - great question, thank you for that. First thing I ask folks who come to me for advice about a plane/car/pistol or rifle build is "what's your mission." Reading the rest of your post you and I are singing from the same sheet of music.
What year? Late model is what I'm thinking...so far. 185F. However, comma, an earlier one with upgraded panel, reasonable mods or a price that let's me do mods isn't off the table. I don't know enough about them all yet to say it must be a 19xx year bird. Learning is occuring.
Number 2, my mission. I have never owned an aircraft with a 185's capabilities before so my mission will probably grow with my experience. I would love to have the abliity to do a little more exploring. I've never camped with my plane before. Never been able to do any kind of backcountry flying and want to be able to check out some neat places. For me the 185 is quite capable, reasonably fast, can haul anything you fit in it. I like the useful load because when I need it, it's there. When I don't I get to operate 400-500# under max gross at full fuel. Whether I run to Hard Eight BBQ in Stephenville or OSH or northern WI/MN in the summer it's all doable from N. Texas in a 185.
Couple must haves as far as I'm concerned are things I had on other planes. Fuel flow/totalizer, engine moniter, GAMI injectors, shoulder harnesses. I'm learning about these seat rails and installations so whatever I need to do there for a safer operation I will do. For me another must have is avionics for a solid IFR platform. Found a couple with autopilots, had one in my Bonanza, loved it. Autopilot would be a want,not a must have. If I find the right plane without, so be it. But again, if I find a structurally sound bird at a price point that lets me gut the panel and do avionics, okey dokey.
Already since my original post I've been reminded of the TurtlePac and other options for fuel vs. Flint tips should I EVER think I need it so, learning is occurring. Trying to learn all these things y'all know to help assign some value to what I'm seeing. I can't afford one of these pampered amphibious $250k airplanes. Good plane, good firewall forward, good enough avionics that I can fly and save money for upgrades would be okay. Depends on the price.
No I don't envision hard core Alaskan bush flying. Floats in the future is a maybe, big maybe. I would love to camp OSH. Would love to make an Alaska trip. Everything in between would be smaller trips and outside of that the majority of my flying would be shorts hops or local flights to hone skills, give rides, have fun and just go commit aviation.