
Goodyear wrote:If you are a confirmed solo flyer you have many options. If you add a passenger things start to change. Three most important things imo for a camping/reasonable backcountry airplane: 1) useful load, 2) horsepower, 3) range. The problem with most Supercubs (not carbon cubs) is their gross weight limitation. You can find a lot of 150 hp Supercubs with a useful load of less than 500 lbs (increase is available but requires extensive mods). Put in 36 gallons of fuel and you are flying solo. Fly with 1/2 tanks and you are not flying in the backcountry. This also rules out most Citabrias except the Scout. Maules are a good choice and in your price range. Older Glastar if short field operation isn’t a necessity. Cessnas may be your best option and resale value. Have fun looking.
I've only ever I stalled these kits with the fabric off. I've been told it can be done with the fabric on, but I really can't see how. I guess it stays on but you sure have to put a lot of cuts in it don't you?DENNY wrote:Goodyear wrote:If you are a confirmed solo flyer you have many options. If you add a passenger things start to change. Three most important things imo for a camping/reasonable backcountry airplane: 1) useful load, 2) horsepower, 3) range. The problem with most Supercubs (not carbon cubs) is their gross weight limitation. You can find a lot of 150 hp Supercubs with a useful load of less than 500 lbs (increase is available but requires extensive mods). Put in 36 gallons of fuel and you are flying solo. Fly with 1/2 tanks and you are not flying in the backcountry. This also rules out most Citabrias except the Scout. Maules are a good choice and in your price range. Older Glastar if short field operation isn’t a necessity. Cessnas may be your best option and resale value. Have fun looking.
The Gross weight upgrade is good for 2,000 lbs and can be done on a covered wing. Here is a https://www.wipaire.com/modification/gr ... super-cub/.
DENNY
mtv wrote:Rob’s points are well taken. To summarize: “The limiting factor in back country Ops is nearly always the pilot, not the airplane.”
His comments are also close on the Husky. I requested a Husky for work back when, because I couldn’t get the work done I needed (wanted) to do in the two or three Cubs I had access to.
That mission was relatively long range, long endurance during relatively short days near the Arctic Circle, fall and spring. And, yes, off airport ops was part of the mix.
What the Husky offered was more speed (I documented that our Husky was 20 mph faster than any of our Cubs in all configurations: floats, wheels and skis), and great fuel range. BTW, all our Cubs were basically stock 18s, all with 160 hp. The Husky’s 180 hp and Constant Speed prop plus those 50 gallon tanks afforded really good fuel economy doing the kind of work I was doing (low level, slow survey/telemetry).
I also found that the Husky would go anywhere I was willing to take one of those Cubs, but, as Rob noted, I had to work quite a bit harder to make that happen safely in the Husky.
That said, performance-wise, I found that the Husky was a FAR better performer than any Cub when operating on floats or skis, and a lot of my ops were in those configurations.
The Husky is indeed a great airplane, but it demands a bit more focus and skill on the part of the pilot to do what a Cub does easily.
Not a bad thing, in my opinion.
MTV
Mapleflt wrote:mtv wrote:Rob’s points are well taken. To summarize: “The limiting factor in back country Ops is nearly always the pilot, not the airplane.”
His comments are also close on the Husky. I requested a Husky for work back when, because I couldn’t get the work done I needed (wanted) to do in the two or three Cubs I had access to.
That mission was relatively long range, long endurance during relatively short days near the Arctic Circle, fall and spring. And, yes, off airport ops was part of the mix.
What the Husky offered was more speed (I documented that our Husky was 20 mph faster than any of our Cubs in all configurations: floats, wheels and skis), and great fuel range. BTW, all our Cubs were basically stock 18s, all with 160 hp. The Husky’s 180 hp and Constant Speed prop plus those 50 gallon tanks afforded really good fuel economy doing the kind of work I was doing (low level, slow survey/telemetry).
I also found that the Husky would go anywhere I was willing to take one of those Cubs, but, as Rob noted, I had to work quite a bit harder to make that happen safely in the Husky.
That said, performance-wise, I found that the Husky was a FAR better performer than any Cub when operating on floats or skis, and a lot of my ops were in those configurations.
The Husky is indeed a great airplane, but it demands a bit more focus and skill on the part of the pilot to do what a Cub does easily.
Not a bad thing, in my opinion.
MTV
Hey Mike, I'm curious what your take would be on a Scout, now that A1 Skinner has abandoned the cause.![]()
They seem to be an underappreciated make & model. I towed sailplanes for many years with one but never need to "push it". However at the time I was impressed with what I could do with it given my experience levels at the time, about 40 years ago
Rob wrote:testosterone slinging?![]()
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FWIW, I know many people with Huskies, and have never met one 25 mph faster than my old beater cub, let alone 35! And my cub is slooooow... Is that a thing?![]()
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comparing the slowest configured cub to the sleekest husky my not be an accurate assesment.
Take care, Rob

Rob wrote:If getting in to 'rougher' strips carries much weight at all on your wish list, nothing else listed is going to do it significantly better than what you have if 26" Goodyears are the limit. Certainly not a short coupled Maule.
TriPacerPilot wrote:I've considered the Maule with it's extra power, but my Pacer's wing has about the same area and it's lighter, so it's hard to believe the Maule gets in much slower. I understand it will get out shorter.
1:1 Scale wrote:Rob wrote:If getting in to 'rougher' strips carries much weight at all on your wish list, nothing else listed is going to do it significantly better than what you have if 26" Goodyears are the limit. Certainly not a short coupled Maule.
Curious why you would call the Maule "short coupled" in relation to a Pacer, when the Maule was developed FROM the Pacer?
1:1 Scale wrote:TriPacerPilot wrote:I've considered the Maule with it's extra power, but my Pacer's wing has about the same area and it's lighter, so it's hard to believe the Maule gets in much slower. I understand it will get out shorter.
I don't know the empty weights of an M5-210 like the one posted in the Barnstormers ad above, and your Pacer, but the M5 will have considerably larger flaps than your Pacer. I think they're about 6' long, so I would suspect it would be pretty comparable to your Pacer in slow flight.
Scolopax wrote:
I wasn’t intending to bloviate or sling testosterone. Just sharing my experience, as the original poster identified “not much slower than his pacer” as a point of criteria for selection.
I’ve never owned a Supercub, but have flown some and alongside some with 150-160 hp Lycomings turning borer props that maxed out at 90 mph, and are most frequently operated at 75-80 mph in cruise to achieve a reasonable fuel burn.
Our A-1A Husky on 31s with an MT two blade shows us an honest 110+ knots at 2350rpm and 21” mp where we fly. It’s burning a little less than 6 gph at this power setting. I didn’t believe it initially, but after 500 hours in it, we have a pretty good sample to base our speed and efficiency numbers on.
I’ve flown a lot of other Huskies, and ours is a little faster than others I’ve flown, but they are all 120 mph airplanes at 7 gph or less between 5000-10000 feet.
The PA-18s that I have flown will take off and land much shorter than the Husky, and are considerably lighter. I love them, and hope someday to own one, but in my experience, they are slower than the Pacers that I have been around, and appreciably slower than the Huskies I’ve flown. If I operated from the shortest and roughest strips out there, or gnarly off-airport sites, a stripped down PA-18 would be my first choice. I am just Sharing my experience, not dogging the Cub. Pun intended...
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