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Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 17th 06, 02:27 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?

Hi there
I am a '78 Grumman Tiger owner here who is toying with trading up to a
Mooney. Not sure which one, perhaps a 201 for starters or maybe a 231.
My question to the group is "have you ever flown or own a Mooney?" What
are your thoughts about its reputation for being a "cozy" fit and its
performance? What year model was it and what was the cost of insurance?
Any insight into these speed demons greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Lou

  #2  
Old March 17th 06, 06:06 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?

Search r.a.o via google groups for Jon Kraus. You should find a ton of
good stuff to read from his purchase experience


--
Jack Allison
PP-ASEL-Instrument Airplane
Arrow N2104T

"When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth
with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there
you will always long to return"
- Leonardo Da Vinci

(Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail)
  #4  
Old March 20th 06, 07:56 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?

I own a Mooney and love it. A couple things I would note...

1) The Mooney is not for short pilots. I'm 6'4" and cannot use the rear
couple sit positions. A friend of mine is 5'10" and has very limited in
flight visibility over the glareshield and must fly with the seat all
the way forward. You can get rudder extensions and cushions but as is,
its for tall pilots.

2) The Mooney baggage door is awesome if you like to load em high. I
travel with my wife and kids and there have been times when the taxi
driver had trouble loading all the luggage in the taxi, but we can
always get it in the Mooney. When I had the Debonair I had to load the
first few bags through the little side door and the rest over the top
of the back seat. With the Mooney you load it from the top and you can
easily load it all the way to the top. For guys that only bring one or
two bags, its probably more work but for those of us that need to stack
em high, it works great.

3) It has great range. When you go down to southern Baja you'll find
that over half the planes down there are Mooneys. Most Mooneys come
stock with about 6.5 hours of fuel till the engine quits. I added the
fuel computer to better manager and I've flown close to 8 hours w/o
being able to find gas.

4) Good high/low performance. I've landed one some pretty small strips
in Mexico and can come in pretty slow, but I can also keep up with the
737's on final if necessary.

5) Simple gear. I have the electric gear but even that is probably the
simpilest gear system you'll find out there. We always had trouble with
leaks in the Arrow. In the Mooney its just one motor and one
transmission that works all 3 gear at once.

6) Not hard to fly. I've tought people to fly Mooneys that haven't
flown in decads and have even trained student pilots to fly the Mooney.
If you can control your airspeed you probably won't find the Mooney to
be difficult to fly at all.

7) Because it sits low, getting in and out is more difficult. In a
Bonanza you sit up, like in a truck, in the Mooney you sit low, like in
a sports car with your legs in front of you. It is more difficult to
get in/out of than a C182 but you're going faster on less gas. If you
want to carry people in the back, the models F and beyond have an extra
10' in the back (just like the Arrow did in 71). I've sat in the back
seat with another full size male before and its doable. No more tight
than the 182.

8) The best part may be the bullet proof IO-360 motor. Its only 200 hp
but it probably the most reliable engine ever made. I don't have to
replace cylinders every 1000 hours as the C182's and Bonanzas tend to
lean towards.

Anyway, not to be a sales person but I enjoy my Mooney.

-Robert

  #5  
Old March 21st 06, 11:26 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?

I've flown a Mooney once, a M20K if I remember correctly... it's been a
while. Damn thing would climb like a banshee and wouldn't want to come down,
except for the cool speed brakes (Precise Flight?). I could not get used to
the tight confines of its cabin, though. I prefer a little more shoulder
room. When we returned to home field the right tire blew (had a bald spot
and the owner had forgotten to change the tire), but with plenty of left
rudder and some careful braking and I was able to keep it on the runway.


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  #6  
Old March 22nd 06, 11:59 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?


wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi there
I am a '78 Grumman Tiger owner here who is toying with trading up to a
Mooney. Not sure which one, perhaps a 201 for starters or maybe a 231.
My question to the group is "have you ever flown or own a Mooney?" What
are your thoughts about its reputation for being a "cozy" fit and its
performance? What year model was it and what was the cost of insurance?
Any insight into these speed demons greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Lou


It's been almost 20 years since I owned a Mooney. I put about 300-400 hours
on it and then we sold it for a twin.

Here's what I remember.

Small cabin. Big guys over 200 lbs are going to be shoulder to shoulder.

Great flying plane. I remember loving to fly this plane. It was fun. It
did what you want and didn't complain. It was fast enough at the time and I
think they've even made them faster. Didn't drink alot of gas. Didn't want
to slow down during the descents. I commonly found myself fast on final
because I started down late.

It was just a blast to fly. It sits pretty low to the ground, so I never
took it to a grass strip, but for everything else, you could put it down
where you wanted it.

If I needed another small 4 seater, I'd look at them again. I think of them
like a fast little porshe.


  #7  
Old March 22nd 06, 01:00 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?

I flew an early M20 with the Johnson bar gear - 10+ hours for my
commercial. Tight? My Maule MX7 is tighter but easier to mount,
dismount and load.

The plane is optimized towards cross country performance. Nice wing for
cruising but you are definitely aware when it is in the 'laminar mode'.
Not particularly fun to take off and climb out on an aged 200hp
lycoming. Once it gets up on the step, it performs. Same on landing
except once you get it slowed down past a certain point, you can do some
really nice obstructed short field stuff. I can more easily land short
over a 50ft obstacle than my Maule! (Easier, not shorter).

Hard to say it's fun to manuever but it's a satisfying cruiser. Point A
to B efficiently.

I'm sure it does fine on turf but not it's favorite place.

God, I'd love to have one but I'm on turf and I like to go in all
conditions. So I'm flying it's complete opposite and loving it too. So
it takes me 20 mins longer.

wrote:
Hi there
I am a '78 Grumman Tiger owner here who is toying with trading up to a
Mooney. Not sure which one, perhaps a 201 for starters or maybe a 231.
My question to the group is "have you ever flown or own a Mooney?" What
are your thoughts about its reputation for being a "cozy" fit and its
performance? What year model was it and what was the cost of insurance?
Any insight into these speed demons greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Lou

  #8  
Old March 22nd 06, 03:09 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?

Mooney is a great airplane.
The laminar flow wing likes to go fast and not slow down. Too many
pilots land the Mooney too fast because they do not plan their
approach.
There is a company at the San Antonio airport that installs speed
brakes in the wing. These things are great! You can leave your power
in and desend without shock cooling the engine. They will help you get
slowed down to a good approach speed.
I was doing some hood work with a doctor in their 231 Mooney,
practicing unusual attitude recovery. He had not flown the 231 since
the speed brakes were installed. The 231 was in getting into the
yellow arc and he had not yet recovered. I told him to push the red
button and he would gain a few more seconds before he was in real
trouble. He pushed the button and the brakes deployed. This gave him
time to correct his situation.
I am 6'4" and weigh 225 lbs. I have no problem fitting in the or
getting out of a Mooney. The person sitting in the rear seat is not a
problem as long as they are in a child seat or had their legs
amputated. The rear seat of a Mooney is like any sports car.
The down part of a Mooney has to do with line boys and tugs. Mooney
has a serious turning limit on the nose wheel. ALWAYS check the nose
gear carefully during preflight. Going past the limits can cause
damage to this structure.

  #9  
Old March 22nd 06, 05:12 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?


"Clay" wrote in message
ups.com...
Mooney is a great airplane.
The laminar flow wing likes to go fast and not slow down. Too many
pilots land the Mooney too fast because they do not plan their
approach.
There is a company at the San Antonio airport that installs speed
brakes in the wing. These things are great! You can leave your power
in and desend without shock cooling the engine.


Not that speed brakes aren't useful, but:
http://www.avweb.com/news/maint/182883-1.html (Reprint from Kas Thomas' TBO
Advisor)





  #10  
Old March 22nd 06, 05:32 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
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Default Have you ever flown\owned a Mooney?

I used to work for a Mooney dealer, and got to fly the M20J & K. I liked
them both.
I'm 6'2", 190, and fit comfortably. Strong point: Speed & Miles per gallon.
They are fun to fly, and I have had both in and out of small strips(1500'),
off of grass & dirt. Climbs well, cross country is a blast, and descent just
requires a little planning. Start down early with a slow descent, trade
altitude for extra speed with the same fuel burn. The added speed in the
early part of the descent, will "pre-cool" the engine so that later power
reductions can be done without "shocking" the engine. Although the
circumstances were a little unusual, I've flown a 231 literally "cross
country", non-stop, SFO - DCA in 8hrs.

Al



"Juan Jimenez" wrote in message
m...
I've flown a Mooney once, a M20K if I remember correctly... it's been a
while. Damn thing would climb like a banshee and wouldn't want to come
down, except for the cool speed brakes (Precise Flight?). I could not get
used to the tight confines of its cabin, though. I prefer a little more
shoulder room. When we returned to home field the right tire blew (had a
bald spot and the owner had forgotten to change the tire), but with plenty
of left rudder and some careful braking and I was able to keep it on the
runway.

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