So I want to buy a 182.

I'm jumping in to this thread a bit late, but here's my take on the situation:

TUCRACEMAN, what is your ultimate goal? To make money? To build time? To have a nice plane to fly your family around in? Some combination of all of the above?

All of the posts I've seen to this point have basically told you it's a lousy idea without any clue of what your personal circumstance is.

It's rare to have a leaseback agreement that will actually turn a profit. If your goal is strictly to make money, you'd be better off getting a second job at McD's than to try to turn a profit off of a leaseback aircraft. The only aircraft that actually turn a sizable profit are aircraft that fly 70+ hours/month at busy flight schools.

However, a leaseback can be a great way to either make an aircraft cheaper to own, or allow you to afford a plane you wouldn't ordinarily be able to afford on your own. Maybe your budget allows you to own a 152 or 172 by yourself, but by doing a leaseback, you can get a 182. You're essentially trading aircraft availability for added performance.

The break even points for most leasebacks are somewhere in the 40-50 hour/month window. If the plane flies more than that, you make a little money, if it flies less, you'll lose a little.

The thing is, how much would you spend to own this plane on your own? Maybe $1000/month? Even if you're losing money on the leaseback, if it flies enough to only lose $800/month, you're coming out ahead. Run the spreadsheets and find out how much it needs to fly in order to be a better deal than owning it by yourself, rather than trying to figure out how to turn a true profit.

Something else to consider are the tax benefits. Are you in a high enough tax bracket for it to matter? If you put the aircraft in its own LLC and treat it as a business for leasing it back to an FBO, the expenses associated with it can be tax deductible. If you're paying 35% income tax, writing off X thousand dollars in business expenses for the aircraft can save a considerable amount on your taxes.

As for how much it flies, that's HIGHLY dependent on your local FBO. How much do they need it? How much are they willing to promote it? What demographic do they generally rent to? Timebuilding college students are very different from high income individuals who want to fly around the country for business/pleasure.

Several people here are skeptical of how often it will fly. That might be true for their home airport. But you're dealing with your airport, not their airport. Do your own research in to your local airport and make your decision accordingly.
 
I'd avoid the 182 personally. If you're going to spend the money to buy a newer 182, you might as well buy something with some utility. A 182 doesn't really offer that much utility or you'd see more of them being used by air taxis. My advice, 206/207/210 or Cherokee 6. The Cherokees are nice because they can be had for a song compared to cessna products in similar shape, however, the more I fly the cherokee, the more I tend to think that the cessna's were a little more on the durable side, and were a lot easier to pack full of stuff.

A 206 in decent shape will run you about $150,000, way cheaper than a brand new 182, and you can fit you and 5 of your closest friends and go for a couple of hours. If you only want to bring 3-4 friends you can go a lot farther. Super stable IFR platforms all three of them, and comfy to boot. If you go oldschool and get a 205 you'll definitely have a bit of pig of an airplane if its loaded, however they can be had for a song.

With the cessna 200 series airplanes you can count on about 1400lbs of useful load give or take. Figure 1000-1100lbs after fuel and donut-munching pilot. They're fast enough (182 speeds) and the normally aspirated ones burn about the same thing as the turbo'd 182s but go a bit slower. Better platform if you want to pictures or survey, and definitely something more challenging to get your high-performance in than a 182 (think 172 but only slightly heavier) the 207 is about as heavy on the controls as the beech 1900, and loaded takes being out in front of the airplane more than the 182 does.
 
One my uncles friends has a cherokee six that I have flown with the guy a bunch and personally I hate that airplane!
 
I'd avoid the 182 personally. If you're going to spend the money to buy a newer 182, you might as well buy something with some utility. A 182 doesn't really offer that much utility or you'd see more of them being used by air taxis. My advice, 206/207/210 or Cherokee 6. The Cherokees are nice because they can be had for a song compared to cessna products in similar shape, however, the more I fly the cherokee, the more I tend to think that the cessna's were a little more on the durable side, and were a lot easier to pack full of stuff.

I was thinking that too. The only thing is, at least with a 182, you've got a shot at somebody renting the plane, and insurance allowing that to happen. With a 205/206/207/210, there is probably very, very limited ability to rent the thing. Maybe a fixed gear 205/210 could work on a rental line, but other than that, you aren't going to be able to make a leaseback work at all. Or, you could try to get it on a 135 certificate, but that might be more trouble than its worth.
 
One of our AMF pilots is selling his 182 here in Salt Lake its a mid 60's with new engine and prop.

Send me a pm if your interested in his number
 
Illegal Alien Aviation.

:D

We also do drywall!

Thank you for the input ya'll. Gave me a lot of things to think about. I guess I need to sit down and think of exactly what my final goal is. I'm need to get on the horn to B of A tomorrow and see what they can offer for a loan. Anyone know how much to expect to shell out for maintenance?

~D
 
Have you thought about a Cessna 180? Seriously, a C-180 is FAR cooler than a 182, and I know of NO PLACE that has one for rent. If you were to get a nice 180 and do a leaseback, you would have the national market for C-180 leasebacks cornered. You would be sleeping on a bed of money - and you would have a cooler airplane to boot.

C180.jpg
 
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