TxKiger wrote:Hello BCP! I'm researching my potential next airplane and would like your insight.
Mission Profile
90% Flights
Within 200-400 miles of home base in Waco, Tx
Mostly will be solo, occasionally will take my wife and 2 kiddos
Off airport capabilities
10% of Flights
Trips to Colorado, Wyoming, Montana for hunting and fishing in remote areas
Off Airport
Will be bringing 3-5 people
Will need to haul 200-400 or more lbs of payload in addition to passengers
I'm leaning towards a Dehavilland Beaver, but my reasonable side is saying C206. What are your thoughts? Turbines are too expensive for me so they are out of the question at this time, but if you have other ideas I'd be happy to listen. Can anyone give me some real world numbers (takeoff, cruise, landing, etc) on the radial Beaver? The numbers I'm seeing online are all over the place.
For your mission, it would be helpful to give a good real-life example, with range included. For instance:
300 NM plus reserves. 6 people (weighing 1000 lbs). 300 lbs of gear. With this example in a 206 running ROP and fuel for the climb, you are looking at about 300# of fuel, and 1300# of people and stuff or a total of 1600 lbs. For a 206, you would need to find one weighing 2000# to make that all work and I don't think there are too many of those out there. Plus, if you fill the six seats, I don't know where you are going to put the 300# of gear. Someone mentioned the 185. The 185 makes a mediocre four place airplane. It makes a terrible six seater. And good luck getting 300# of gear in there with six people.
So....Beaver. I've been impressed watching Wrangell Mountain Air operate Beavers into legit off-airport strips where a bunch of people get out plus all their gear. They are probably light on fuel though.
Anyway, you get the idea. It's better to have some real world examples of range, people and gear to see if any of the planes out there are better suited to the mission. But coming from a 185 owner, I would not want to put six people in my plane with more than 50# of gear. I suppose a belly pod would help if one had their heart set on a Cessna.