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On Aug 24, 4:08 am, Thomas Borchert
wrote: Michael, So I'm looking for low purchase price (used), low repair and parts costs, and low $ per hour to run. You need to be aware that having such a strong focus on the lowest price may have inherent safety issues. You get what you pay for. Having said that, have a look at the Ercoupe or the Piper Warrior 140. IMHO the venerable Cessna 150 is your best combo choice for cheapest in all three categories: to purchase, maintain, and operate as a general purpose everyday flyer. The Piper Cherokee (not Warrior, that's a different plane - pedantic nit here) 140 is the next cheapest overall, and gives you the benefit of 4 seats and considerable extra speed, but also considerable extra fuel burn. The Ercoupe has become too much of the antique, occasional-only special purpose flyer that you spend all your time and money fixing up into a hangar queen instead of using as a workhorse everyday flyer out of fear you'll break something expensive or difficult to repair on it. The Cherokee 140 has not been holding its resale value too well lately, as the used plane market is full of good buys in a 140 so that may be something to seriously consider if purchasing a plane dirt cheap today right now bears more weight than future resale value in your decision, but the Cessna 150's have been holding their resale value rock solid even throughout the used plane market slump over the past year or so... cheers, rutger |
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, but the Cessna 150's have been holding their resale
value rock solid even throughout the used plane market slump over the past year or so... Doesn't that contradict the "cheap to buy" requirement? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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On Aug 26, 3:56 am, Thomas Borchert
wrote: , but the Cessna 150's have been holding their resale value rock solid even throughout the used plane market slump over the past year or so... Doesn't that contradict the "cheap to buy" requirement? No, not necessarily, because while the 150s have been holding their value, the price range for good specimens has been holding steady in the upper teens to low twenties, with the finer specimens in the mod twenties which in my book still falls in the "cheap to buy" category. The better quality Cherokee 140s used to be mid-upper thirties, even into the low forties for finer specimens and now those same calibre aircraft are being sold in the upper twenties to mid thirties just to get them moving on market. I think the Cherokee is definitely the plane-per-dollar value leader right now, but if you do not really need the four seats, faster cruise and extra fuel burn, the Cessna 150 will get you into the air, and keep you there for the overall long term, for less overall money spent across.... for say 5 years or thereabouts of ownership or even longer terms. |
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