Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

I all ready know the response I am going to get

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

N813CA

Yeah buddy
Joined
Jul 21, 2002
Posts
685
I asked this last year but my Father is more serious and will sell his high performance cabin class twin for a great deal. He is now looking at accepting any reasonable offer. My father is just getting old enough were he just doesn't fly the airplane enough to be worth keeping. I promise you that you will not find a cleaner and more maintained twin out there. My father is the kind of guy that will get the clock fixed before the next flight if broken. Here is the link. It is now any reasonable offer so disregard the price. I will aslo be willing to pay a $5,000 finder fee if you find someone interested.

http://www.aso.com/listings/spec/ViewAd.aspx?id=144371
 
Any airplane I look at that is associated with Florida immediately is tarred (fairly or not) with a "corrosion" issue.

IIWY I'd fly it to AZ or NV and try to sell it from there if you don't get any bites. Plus a good long flight would do it good. You can find potential squawks and fix them on your timetable rather than under the pressure of losing a prospect.

How about donating it to charity for a tax write-off? If other taxable investments are going up and the annual comes due, it might make sense.
 
Why don't you keep it? I can't afford two motors, let alone one... Hate to say it but even here in AZ, plane prices have collapsed or people are not selling due to the loss in value. I count about 50% of the aircraft on line at a local airfield non operational, the rest in various states of flyability, and only about 1 in ten worthy of flight. Yours looks great, but the reality, it's value in todays market, it is absolutely a buyers market.
 
Last edited:
Any airplane I look at that is associated with Florida immediately is tarred (fairly or not) with a "corrosion" issue.

IIWY I'd fly it to AZ or NV and try to sell it from there if you don't get any bites. Plus a good long flight would do it good. You can find potential squawks and fix them on your timetable rather than under the pressure of losing a prospect.

How about donating it to charity for a tax write-off? If other taxable investments are going up and the annual comes due, it might make sense.

Bingo we have a winner. Beech Dukes look fast and go fast but burn a ********************load of fuel. They get like 400HP out of those 541's but they are hangar queens unless you do you own wrenching mx costs will kill you. As I recall the tail structure has a lot of magnesium parts corrosion is a real problem with these planes. If it had the Pratt turbines on it it'd be a steal. The Lycomings? not so much
 
first of all I will I will get you a burn per hour... Also I would love to keep it but I am only an FO making 40K a year or I would. If you are truly interested fly it and look at the maintenance logbooks before you decide. My father has owned Cessna 177RG, Cessna 310, Cessna 421B, BEV35 and BE60. He can honestly tell you that the Duke was his most favorite,
 
As an A&P, the Duke was my favorite, but like you, your going to need to find a Doctor or Lawyer or such. The days of airline pilots actually owning fancy plane stopped about twenty years ago.
 
Bingo we have a winner. Beech Dukes look fast and go fast but burn a ********************load of fuel. They get like 400HP out of those 541's but they are hangar queens unless you do you own wrenching mx costs will kill you. As I recall the tail structure has a lot of magnesium parts corrosion is a real problem with these planes. If it had the Pratt turbines on it it'd be a steal. The Lycomings? not so much


541's?. Are we talking about a Duke here? I could have sworn they were Lycoming 720's. The 8 cylinder odd ball inverted engine. For the price you are asking, just scrap it and part it out. Those are high dollar engines by themselves. Your dad was better off keeping the 421...well maybe not. Those GSTO's can eat your wallet. I have seen nice Dukes recently being offered for less then 80K and not coming out of FL. I have wrenched on lots of planes 421's and Dukes were my money makers. Good luck trying to sell that one in this day and age of $6+ per gallon for avgas.
 
It is now any reasonable offer. The Duke destroys the baron. I have flown both . It has only been in FL for 3 years and before that Montana for the entire time so no corrosion.
 

Latest resources

Back
Top