StillLearning wrote:
The cost does make me wonder if I should just buy a different airplane and get something more suited to cross country IFR flight. But, then I remember I have to park it somewhere, insure it, and maintain it. I do not have an instrument rating, so I can save around $4k by training in my own plane. Once I have a rating and a plane that I can keep current in, I will be far more likely to maintain currency. Without an IFR capable plane, I know I would not keep current.
My plane does not have any NAV radio now, I have two coms and a VFR gps and flight instruments. I like my old school panel, but having more reliable and better equipment that has IFR capabilities might just save my ass some time in the future. Dumping the vacuum system will save me a few pounds and increase reliability. I am cheap, but I like good equipment.
After looking at multiple panel arrangements and then looking behind the panel, is there someone who has a template to where a 650 will fit in a 53? Between the yokes, the lower panel and the defrost duct, its kind of limited.
Just a little heads up here:
Forget about money. There is NOTHING inexpensive about IFR flying, and the gizmos in your dash are the very least of it. It takes a lot of flight time to stay current...flight time that's not very enjoyable for what it costs.
I know exactly ONE person who has stayed IFR current and safe on his own dime, and dozens who have a ticket and never use it because they got sick and tired of spending the bulk of their flying budget to stare at their panel through foggels and talk to Central. The one person who has stayed current also put a $100k glass panel in his 180 and doesn't have to worry about gas bills...
There is no "light IFR"...either you can fly by looking out the windows or you cannot. Once you cannot, it doesn't matter if it's a quarter mile visibility or zero-zero. When you file with Central there's a level of airmanship you are expected to adhere to, and if you don't you'll be doing an involuntary flight review if you're still alive. It's really not the sort of thing most people can practice an hour or two a month and be proficient at.
Aside from a necessary step in getting my commercial rating, the IFR ticket has done almost nothing to increase my safety or enjoyment of flight. I concluded that small planes and IFR conditions in the mountains of the western US don't mix, and there isn't anywhere with an instrument approach that I want to go to anyway.
That said, I got my IFR ticket with a non-standard panel and instruments strung from here to Tuesday, and only one comm radio. You'll get used to any layout...you just won't be able to transition to another airplane.
Good luck.