A1Skinner wrote:ington6 wrote:Yep, good thought. Remove the back seat, maybe that MT prop to take some weight off the nose,
I'm probably one of a few, but I'm personally not a fan of the MT. But yes it takes some weight off the nose. But interior, old panel stuff, old wires, all that adds up. Just working on a C182 and took 45lbs worth of old junk and wiring out of it. We could add to that number if we went at the interior, but not going there for now. This is all just out of the panel.
I'll echo what A1Skinner has said, start with the low hanging fruit and put the airframe on a diet. I'd even go so far as to reconfigure the interior to suit your intended mission i.e.: make it a combi with lighter rear bush seats. My ride isn't an big balls 182 only a simple 170 however to date I've removed close to 80 lbs of "unnecessary" and it shows. Thereafter; address low speed performance and handling, STOL cuff, Aileron fences, remove flap gap seals, add VG's (not all swear by these but they work for me). Then go spend some Loonie's (I'm Canadian) on fossil fuel and become one with the airplane; especially in the slow flight regime, get to know the "signs" of impending doom.
With that said; full disclosure, I to will eventually get under the hood. As you noted displacement is hard to argue with but most of these other "add on's" will serve to make the addition HP only that more effective. They are for the most part easily done without long periods of interruption to learn the nuances for your airplane and enjoying it along the way.