Piper Arrow question

Italianaviator

Well-Known Member
I was wondering if anybody could clarify the differences of all the types of Piper Arrows out there. I did some research myself and couldn't find much. I know there is the Arrow III, Arrow IV, PA28R, PA-28-140, PA-28-150, PA28 200, etc. I have the feeling that the last three digits are the hp ratings but I'm not sure.
 
The PA28-140, 150, 160, 180 are all fixed gear, and the three digit number is the HP of the airplane. If there is a '1' as the third digit (PA28-161) then the airplane has a partially tapered wing. A PA28-160 would be the same basic airplane, but with the older rectangular 'Hershey Bar' wing. There are other differences as well. Some of the lower HP ones, like the PA28-161 Cadet model did not have a baggage door to save money, as it was for the training market. There were also different body lengths made. In earlier years the PA28-180 was shorter, then back in the late 60's or early 70's they lengthened the fuselage to give more leg room to the back seaters.

As far as the Arrow goes, these are the PA28R's. The same goes here as well. A PA28R-201 has 200HP and a partially tapered wing. Some of the Arrows had turbo's, others had T-tails. The only one I have flown is the Arrow III and it was a decent airplane. They are kind of slow, but you can carry 4 people and 50 gallons of gas.

You should probably be able to find some info on these airplanes on the web. Trade A Plane would be good, as you can see what the differences are in the pictures and descriptions of airplanes for sale.
 
PA28-140 is a Cherokee 140, not an Arrow.

The 140 I think is 150 HP though... but I believe the 200 in the Arrow means 200 HP beacuse it does have a 200 HP engine.

Ask the other people on here.....I really have no clue LOL.
 
I always thought the Arrow was -201 because the engine had 201 cu. in. of displacement.
Nope. Ananoman is right. The "1", like the "1" in the simple PA-28 series refers to the wing design.

Sticking with the Arrows only
Arrow III, Arrow IV, PA28R,

PA28R is the general type designator that separates the Retractable and complex Arrow from it's fixed gear/fixed prop PA28 cousins. They came two flavors, the PA28-180 and PA28-200, referring to horsepower.

The Arrow III is a PA28R-201 and is the tapered wing model.

The Arrow IV is a PA28RT-201, the "T" in this case standing for it's "T-tail" where the stabilator is at the top of the vertical stab instead of at the bottom.

(There are also PA28R-201T and PA28RT-201T models that are turbocharged and substantially faster than the normally aspirated ones)
 
Got time in many diff Pa28's. I think the pa28R-200 was the one i enjoyed to the fly the most. However the 28R-180 wasnt much fun at all. Oh yea there is also a cherokee 235 as well.
 
The CFI who first checked me out in one told me that it had a "safe glide ratio." Or was that "glides like a safe"?

"You wanna be really close to the runway when you pull the power off for a 180," my CFI said.

"Why?"

Then I found out.
 
Some of the Arrows had turbo's, others had T-tails. The only one I have flown is the Arrow III and it was a decent airplane. They are kind of slow, but you can carry 4 people and 50 gallons of gas.
Starting with the III they increased to 72 gallons.
 
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