Drillerdave wrote:I guess I should have read a few more posts before making my own , but getting to know a group of experienced pilots around home is like trying to swat flys with a shoe string they are always touch and go . I hope the thread hasn't put anyone out . I think I have narrowed my search down to the 170 and the 182 . Fabric is out but deffinately want the taildraggers , probably harder to learn but they just look cool .
Nosedragger wrote:Drillerdave wrote:I guess I should have read a few more posts before making my own , but getting to know a group of experienced pilots around home is like trying to swat flys with a shoe string they are always touch and go . I hope the thread hasn't put anyone out . I think I have narrowed my search down to the 170 and the 182 . Fabric is out but deffinately want the taildraggers , probably harder to learn but they just look cool .
Tail dragging a 182 will get expensive, and there's a long learning curve. (For the airplane)
lesuther wrote:
Mooney E F G. easy to maintain, no student would likely have an issue using it for training.
There is a reason that for a good long while, after Cessna and Piper quit making airplanes that Mooneys kept selling in large numbers. I did owner assisted annuals and I/A supervised repair on mine without any unusual difficulties that I recall. Don't forget the C model with the carburetor either. I flight planned 155-160mph at 9gph. The 1963 through 1967 models with the manual gear are the best buy and the simplest to maintain; but you want to have that type specific pre-buy inspection to make sure that the AD on the manual gear has been complied with and a check for corrosion on the inner 4130 fuselage cage caused by leaky windows. Other than the new manual gear AD I don't think (?) that there is a single airframe AD on any all metal Mooney airframe from those years. In 1968 Mooney quit flush riveting the bottom side of the wing and they slowed down about 5-10 mph in cruise. All models were slower from 1968 until the J model (201) came out in '74-'75. I wouldn't buy any electric gear Mooney until the J model. Finally, I think my C model was easier to land smoothly and in MUCH stronger cross-winds than any Cessna.GumpAir wrote:It's been my experience that the people who dislike the Mooneys for perceived maintenance issues, cabin room, and difficulty in flying have never actually worked on one or flown one.
I'm not real high time in them, maybe 400-500 hours total in E's and F's. Flown properly, and not like a C150, they are a joy to fly, dirt simple, and get you down the road faster, on less gas than just about anything else out there. They are fussy about speed in the pattern, and flown properly slow, will short/soft field just fine.
The O/P needs a car he can drive on the freeway, at freeway speeds. A Mooney does that with a simple learning curve. Sure, a C150 is a better teenager car, but in a short period of time this student will be a grownup pilot. Being stuck 800 miles each way as a commute in a draggy Cessna or Cherokee would be like riding a Moped on the interstate.
Gump
GumpAir wrote:It's been my experience that the people who dislike the Mooneys for perceived maintenance issues, cabin room, and difficulty in flying have never actually worked on one or flown one.
I'm not real high time in them, maybe 400-500 hours total in E's and F's. Flown properly, and not like a C150, they are a joy to fly, dirt simple, and get you down the road faster, on less gas than just about anything else out there. They are fussy about speed in the pattern, and flown properly slow, will short/soft field just fine.
The O/P needs a car he can drive on the freeway, at freeway speeds. A Mooney does that with a simple learning curve. Sure, a C150 is a better teenager car, but in a short period of time this student will be a grownup pilot. Being stuck 800 miles each way as a commute in a draggy Cessna or Cherokee would be like riding a Moped on the interstate.
Gump
Drillerdave wrote:I need experienced advice and opinions. I work in the oilfield and drive approx 800+\- miles one way to work once a month . I am looking into getting my private pilot license, and I'm thinking my money would be better spent if I applied the 140$ an hour toward the purchase of my first plane instead of rent . I need a plane that will get me there and back with short field capability. It doesn't have to be a speed Demon to beat my 16 hour drive time , I would prefer dependability and control over speed . I have access to a 1400' grass strip near home in mississippi with covered hanger , but for the 14 days at work the plane will be exposed to the elements in New Mexico . Any recommendations for a starter plane would be greatly appreciated . If my thinking is way off base I take constructive criticism well
Drillerdave wrote:I need experienced advice and opinions. I work in the oilfield and drive approx 800+\- miles one way to work once a month . I am looking into getting my private pilot license, and I'm thinking my money would be better spent if I applied the 140$ an hour toward the purchase of my first plane instead of rent . I need a plane that will get me there and back with short field capability. It doesn't have to be a speed Demon to beat my 16 hour drive time , I would prefer dependability and control over speed . I have access to a 1400' grass strip near home in mississippi with covered hanger , but for the 14 days at work the plane will be exposed to the elements in New Mexico . Any recommendations for a starter plane would be greatly appreciated . If my thinking is way off base I take constructive criticism well

Squash wrote:800 mile commute? Seriously? I would go commercial. Heck, I even pay people to fly me from Kenai to Anchorage sparing me a 3 hour drive. 800 miles is farther than from Soldotna to Barrow and there is no way I would want to do that commute in my plane........just me.
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