jrh
Well-Known Member
It's been a few weeks since I officially signed the paperwork, but I'd finally like to announce I'm the proud owner of a plane.
I bought a 1946 Cessna 140. It's got:
40 hour SMOH Continental C85-12 (85 hp) engine
40 hour SNEW McCauley metal cruise prop
3700 TT on airframe
Cleveland wheels and brakes
Brand new Alaskan Bushwheel 3200 tailwheel
King KY97A comm radio
Mode C transponder (but I need to do a 24 month check on it)
Whelen beacon and strobes
Alternator STC (originally had a generator)
Metal wings STC (originally had fabric wings)
Autogas STC (but never actually burned autogas)
Recent interior renovation (3 or 4 years old)
Complete maintenance logs. And I mean *complete* like, every scrap of paper since it rolled off the factory line in 1946. The records fill three 3" binders.
No major damage history. Had a runway excursion/nose over/prop strike incident 4 years ago (hence the new engine and prop), but otherwise is completely clean.
I've flown it about 9 hours so far, getting instruction in it for both proficiency and my insurance requirements.
Honestly, it's more challenging to fly than I expected. I did my tailwheel endorsement in a 2003 Citabria with a 150 hp engine and thought this would be easier, but I've learned the less power available, the more finesse a tailwheel pilot needs to have.
I'm still having a blast though and can't wait to get really good at tailwheel flying. It flies beautifully...controls are tight and balanced, it doesn't have a "heavy" wing during stalls, etc. I plan to fly it for fun for 60 or 70 hours, then start giving tailwheel endorsements in it (maybe have some remote chance of getting some of my money back!).
I bought a 1946 Cessna 140. It's got:
40 hour SMOH Continental C85-12 (85 hp) engine
40 hour SNEW McCauley metal cruise prop
3700 TT on airframe
Cleveland wheels and brakes
Brand new Alaskan Bushwheel 3200 tailwheel
King KY97A comm radio
Mode C transponder (but I need to do a 24 month check on it)
Whelen beacon and strobes
Alternator STC (originally had a generator)
Metal wings STC (originally had fabric wings)
Autogas STC (but never actually burned autogas)
Recent interior renovation (3 or 4 years old)
Complete maintenance logs. And I mean *complete* like, every scrap of paper since it rolled off the factory line in 1946. The records fill three 3" binders.
No major damage history. Had a runway excursion/nose over/prop strike incident 4 years ago (hence the new engine and prop), but otherwise is completely clean.
I've flown it about 9 hours so far, getting instruction in it for both proficiency and my insurance requirements.
Honestly, it's more challenging to fly than I expected. I did my tailwheel endorsement in a 2003 Citabria with a 150 hp engine and thought this would be easier, but I've learned the less power available, the more finesse a tailwheel pilot needs to have.
I'm still having a blast though and can't wait to get really good at tailwheel flying. It flies beautifully...controls are tight and balanced, it doesn't have a "heavy" wing during stalls, etc. I plan to fly it for fun for 60 or 70 hours, then start giving tailwheel endorsements in it (maybe have some remote chance of getting some of my money back!).