Guess this might be a good place for me to put .02 in
Really glad to see not EVERYone is screaming Deathrap! Tommytrauma!
Bottom line, this is a very VERY simple airplane that does what it was designed to do based on input from (wouldn't u guess) thousands of flight instructors. It teaches the student what that little vertical trim tab lookin' thing on the back is for.
There are some really great attributes that have been mentioned here so far when it comes to owning one. Fun little cross-country machine. As far as the soft field performance, the 16'' tires are the best for this, all the Tomahawk II's are equipped with them.(1981-82) Another thing to remember, the plane does have some AD's, and on some of the older models 1978-1980 there were instances where they were complied with incorrectly by A&P's out in the field, however, these AD's were complied with as the Tomahawk II's were being built by Piper, so you can rest assured they were probably done as intended.
If you are truly operating out of a SOFT field, meaning soggy etc... make sure you have a good 2800 ft if there are obstacles at the end. On a hot day, make it 3000. Holding the yoke full back does nothing for you until 35 knots besides adding un-needed drag, same goes for the flaps prior to about 50. Holding the elevators full aft prior to 35 just leads to an almost certain over-rotation that really causes a significant performace loss in this plane. 112 horsepower, on a hot day, even when u level off in ground effect there are a few wide eyed seconds when the airspeed sits at about 55 before slowly creeping up to Vx as the branches approach. Don't heave the nose way into the air on the roll either.......Leave the ground ahead of the power curve, You'll surely find the ground one more time otherwise. On a hot day with obstacles you might want to even consider no flaps, seems to perform better this way.
Now, Spins are obviously the soft spot here.....and because of some bad mistakes, and it's 'action-required' spin procedure, the old wives tale has gotten so bad that noone would go up with me to spin the thing a couple years back so I talked to some people who had, read the book and went up and taught myself. I figured, theres 8 AD's on the tail alone, the first 6 should hold the thing on, and the last 2 are just for good luck

I will admit, I'm young, unmarried and looking at 20 years of student loan payments
Spins are conventional. The student or, yes, even instructor who's spin recovery procedure is to let go, grab the bottom of his/her seat and scream until the plane stops lawndarting towards the ground is going to have a bit of a problem in this airplane, because it requires you to actually USE the spin recovery procedure that is almost identical to the 150/152 procedure. Ailerons nuetral, FULL(not just some)rudder opposite rotation and then, where in the 152 u can just relax back pressure, you swiftly push the stick forward and yes, in some, not all, but some instances wait until christmas(which still is usually no more than 2 turns) and bam, ure going straight down, unstalled and ready for another. Most first timers might even get into the negative G scenario when the stall is broken and that full down stick takes effect...be ready to release it once the spin has STOPPED, premature relaxing of the yoke can really delay recovery, again, it really makes the pilot use the procedure.
One thing to remember, stick with the procedure.
Myths that lead to NTSB investigations......
#1 Adding/subtracting power will blast air over the T-tail and therefore make it more effective in recovery. Wrong.
#2 The airplane steepening and tightening up when the anti-spin inputs are used means they aren't working so stop and try something different.....the complete opposite is true, this is a characteristic of the recovery.
#3 Two 180 pound guys, flight bags, 3/4 tanks and the seats back far enough to a comfortable position makes for an excellent CG location and any ensuing flat spin after 2 rotations should be met with utter suprise, and the smoking hole 15 seconds later is entirely due to this horrible, AD magnet deathtrap that had no business being built in the first place when we already have forgiving airplanes like 152's to teach pilots feet and book procedures aren't part of today's flying.
How many of those spin accidents began at 5000ft? Not too many. Can a 152 recover from a base to final spin at 500ft? Even Yeager would auger in there. How many of those spins resulted from illegal, many times low level aerobatics? Were the witnesses pilots? If you want the stats for this country, check the NTSB records and do a little reading, I'd be more worried about the gear collapsing if you don't know how to land in crosswinds with this plane.
Yea it has a nosewheel, but it does what it can on the part of a good trainer.
Make sure you check out
www.pipertomahawk.com !!
Best Regards'
T-hawk