EZFlap wrote:One guy did a tailwheel conversion on a 206. It looked great in the picture, but I have no idea about the reality of whether that would be a desirable airplane and have a market for it.
I could certainly design a 206 conversion and get it certified, based on what I am doing now for the 172/175/182. But I have ZERO experience with flying or operating 206's (other than watching Skydive 206's dad operate them at California City). I wouldn't invest the time/money/aggravation unless someone convinced me it would be a big hit with the working real-world bush operators.
There are people on this forum with a lot of professional experience using that airplane. I'm curious if any of those people think that a well-executed tailwheel 206 conversion would be highly successful or not.
I put between 4 and 6 thousand hours on 185s, working them on floats, wheels and skis. The last one I worked suffered a broken crankshaft, and I parked it on a mountainside. No harm to me, but the plane was a mess.
So we needed a new airplane. My boss at the time was the "inclusive decision maker" type, so he told me to provide our crew with the pros and cons of a variety of airplanes, and we'd vote.....groan. Long story short, they picked a 206, and frankly, since I was the one did the research, and presented the data....I really couldn't argue. Go with the flow.
So, a refurbished 206 F appeared in due time. Now doing the same job those 185s had been doing for 8 or 9 years.......and guess what? The 206 kicked the 185's ass every way from Sunday, except that it's kinda trucklike on the controls. With an IO 550 engine, it would carry more stuff, which was WAAAAAYYYY easier to load and unload, into and out of the same places the 185 would go, and easier.
Convert one to a tailwheel???? You won't see anybody who actually works airplanes converting a tri gear airplane to a tailwheel. Toy airplane maybe.
At one point, there was a guy hauling barrel gas into a remote strip for a helicopter operation (I know....). He installed some gear damage in the 185...rough short strip. I told them I could give it a try... Went in there with the first load and it was an absolute piece of cake. Would have been a PITA in the 185, mostly because of loading, but the 206 on a decent set of tires is a world beater. Bar none.
Only place where the 185 MIGHT have an edge is on skis. I worked airplanes (including 185s) on skis for 20 years and most of what I did on skis I could do in a Cub/Husky/Scout. the 185 in deep snow, is a great way to improve your winter camping skills.....don't ask how I know that.
The 206 is such a great working airplane, the only way Cessna could improve on it was to lengthen it....called the 207. The 207 isn't a great off airport machine, but what a hauler!
Tailwheels? We don't need no stinking tailwheels....
MTV