Gump's plane: 34,706 hours
Have problems with your aircraft? Maybe just questions about how best to tune or adjust something? Regs or maintenance? Need to know the best way to do something?
Gump's former 207 N7384U had 34,706 hours as of 6/12/14. That's four years in the air!
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PA12_Pilot offline

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236
- Joined: Wed Dec 22, 2004 2:29 pm
- Location: Knoxville
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One of the nicest flying Sleds I ever flew. A couple-three thousand of those hours on her are mine.
Gump
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GumpAir offline

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4557
- Joined: Wed Feb 14, 2007 9:14 am
- Location: Lost somewhere in Nevada
- Aircraft: Old Clunker
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Thu Aug 28, 2014 11:13 am
Nothin short of amazing. I wonder how many engines in the logs? I know when we were considering putting a 206 on leaseback at Larry's we were told that the $35K or so to re-power was considered a consumable like gas and oil and would likely be something we'd be doing almost every year. I guess you need to wring 30,000 hours out of them to make it pay. I was just trying to figure out how to get a free airplane. That's not the way to do it apparently.
I guess Jorgy had a 421 (?) on lease back for a bunch of years and when the final set of engines and props wore out, he gave it to the leaseholder and walked away. I imagine that 207 has made some money. Navajos and King Airs make money. Not many others though unless the use encompasses something else like a guide service, fish spotting, or resort use.
Folks "remanufacture" Beavers. I wonder when they'll start doing that with 207s? Can't be many left.
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Mister701 offline

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2134
- Joined: Thu Dec 05, 2013 11:13 pm
- Location: Sparks
- Aircraft: Rans S7LS
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Thu Aug 28, 2014 11:29 am
With Sleds, I always figured an engine a year. I still don't think there has ever been a better money maker for that kind of flying, than the lowly C207. Things are changing, for the better, with fancy new runways, kerosene burners and IFR routes and approaches, but nothing comes close to the cost efficiency and profit per pound hauled than that airplane.
They get rebuilt over and over, but parts are getting real scarce and expensive. A little part of me cries every time I hear of one getting wrecked. I spent a lot of wonderful time flogging around in Mr Cessna's airplane.
Gump
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GumpAir offline

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- Aircraft: Old Clunker
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Thu Aug 28, 2014 12:30 pm
Wasn't the entire reason for the existence of the Caravan because of the 207's basic goodness, and they started out with the idea of a turbine 207??
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EZFlap offline

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Someone should estimate how much fuel has flown through those pipes.
If you really want to be shocked, then multiply that number by today's fuel price.
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Battson offline


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1810
- Joined: Wed May 09, 2012 11:19 pm
- Location: New Zealand
- Aircraft: Bearhawk 4-place
IO-540 260hp
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Over 600,000 gallons at say $6.00 a gallon. Almost four million bucks worth of gas.
Gump
Last edited by
GumpAir on Thu Aug 28, 2014 3:18 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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GumpAir offline

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- Aircraft: Old Clunker
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GumpAir wrote:Over 600,000 gallons at say $6.00 a gallon. Almost four million bucks worth of gas.
Gump
"The only way to make a small fortune with aviation, is to start with a large fortune." - Unknown
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Battson offline


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1810
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- Location: New Zealand
- Aircraft: Bearhawk 4-place
IO-540 260hp
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Believe me. That airplane didn't move much unless it was making money. Those airplanes up in the far north earn their keep.
Gump
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GumpAir offline

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- Aircraft: Old Clunker
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