11 Nov 2025, 13:46 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:07 |
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Joined: 01/16/11 Posts: 11068 Post Likes: +7097 Location: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Aircraft: PC12NG, G3Tat
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Username Protected wrote: Michael, do you have any idea what a new one costs? I can't find it anywhere. And with the price of Jet A on these CAA cards 48gph aint all that much considering you can take the whole family. And play catch in the back!  2.1MM all baked. We'll get the pogo sticks ready too. I find the plane actually quite attractive. Plus the East Coast boys got challenged to a landing contest, so I need a ringer  Actually our summer plans are in the northwest, Jackson Hole, Colorado, Utah areas....maybe some easy back country flying, not the stuff that MIke Grommet or Scott do.
_________________ ---Rusty Shoe Keeper---
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:10 |
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Joined: 08/21/14 Posts: 185 Post Likes: +119
Aircraft: C33A, Challenger 604
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Username Protected wrote: The limitations: 150 to 160 knots at 300 to 350 lbs per hour. It is not efficient. Stay out of ice. You don't have the power to get above it, and the airframe does not carry ice well. Hot and high performance is not good. I only fly into Aspen in the morning in good VFR weather. Gross weight climb out of Aspen is about 400 fpm. It is not pressurized. Its best performance seems to be at 10,000 to 12,000 ft. Flying there for long periods time is fatiguing unless you use oxygen.
Agree with all of the above. I'd add, without a cargo pod, you'll see closer to 170 KTAS. But if you remove the cargo pod, but add amphibs, you're back to 150-160 KTAS.
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:10 |
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Joined: 01/16/11 Posts: 11068 Post Likes: +7097 Location: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Aircraft: PC12NG, G3Tat
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Username Protected wrote: The Caravan or Kodiak are no-brainer simple.. no gear, pressurization, etc. and JetA is silly cheap right now.
Let's go get this bird listed for sale in MN before it gets too cold!
 , stay tuned..... Agreed on the brain dead simple. Everytime I want to carry more than 8, it seems to get complicated very quickly. Simple flying. If it takes another hour, I'm actually ok with that.
_________________ ---Rusty Shoe Keeper---
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:11 |
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Joined: 07/26/10 Posts: 4296 Post Likes: +197 Location: West Palm Beach, FL (KLNA)
Aircraft: 1979 Duke B60
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Username Protected wrote: The Caravan or Kodiak are no-brainer simple.. no gear, pressurization, etc. and JetA is silly cheap right now.
Let's go get this bird listed for sale in MN before it gets too cold!
 , stay tuned..... Agreed on the brain dead simple. Everytime I want to carry more than 8, it seems to get complicated very quickly. Simple flying. If it takes another hour, I'm actually ok with that.
Call Banyan and have them set you up a demo flight, they have a few of them.
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:12 |
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Joined: 12/13/07 Posts: 20589 Post Likes: +10728 Location: Seeley Lake, MT (23S)
Aircraft: 1964 Bonanza S35
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Username Protected wrote: Actually our summer plans are in the northwest, Jackson Hole, Colorado, Utah areas....maybe some easy back country flying, not the stuff that MIke Grommet or Scott do.
We have beginner strips out here.
_________________ Want to go here?: https://tinyurl.com/FlyMT1
tinyurl.com/35som8p
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:15 |
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Joined: 01/16/11 Posts: 11068 Post Likes: +7097 Location: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Aircraft: PC12NG, G3Tat
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Username Protected wrote: Michael, sounds like you need a Mits or a Turbo Commander. Big load, but still able to get into tighter strips. They drink a little more, but then you have the option of having a pressurised, de-iced traveling cabin class machine as well as those bush capabilities. I like the Turbo Commanders too. They're on the table as an option. I just keep thinking about simplicity of operation. Check the tires, check the gas, load the chitlins, serve wine to the wife, mother-in law..........and off we go. Adding 2 extra seats makes a huge difference to what you can carry capabilities.
_________________ ---Rusty Shoe Keeper---
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:19 |
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Joined: 09/23/09 Posts: 12156 Post Likes: +11905 Location: Cascade, Idaho (U70)
Aircraft: 182
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Username Protected wrote: Michael, do you have any idea what a new one costs? I can't find it anywhere. And with the price of Jet A on these CAA cards 48gph aint all that much considering you can take the whole family. And play catch in the back!  2.1MM all baked. We'll get the pogo sticks ready too. I find the plane actually quite attractive. Plus the East Coast boys got challenged to a landing contest, so I need a ringer  Actually our summer plans are in the northwest, Jackson Hole, Colorado, Utah areas....maybe some easy back country flying, not the stuff that MIke Grommet or Scott do.
Michael.... The stuff I do is easy peasy. Anybody can do it as long as you can hit a speed. Only takes a bit more confidence to take your nice plane into the dirt/grass environment. Its really not that big of a deal. You all should come out and try a couple of them. Hell, some of them are 4500 feet long. Afterwards, you'll say to yourself "what's the big deal". Scott's stuff, on the other hand, requires substantially more gonad and experience. ...........and he has a very light model.
Most of the time, we are all going into pretty moderate stuff.
_________________ Life is for living. Backcountry videos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSChxm ... fOnWwngH1w
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:38 |
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Joined: 03/09/11 Posts: 1770 Post Likes: +829 Company: Wings Insurance Location: Eden Prairie, MN / Scottsdale, AZ
Aircraft: 2016 Cirrus SR22 G5
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Username Protected wrote: insurance for a guy with a lot of float time was $98K per year. Sadly your friend was being poorly represented on the insurance end so hopefully that ridiculous price he was paying didn't have a role in him selling the airplane? There is no way even in the hardest market during the last 10-15 years would a Caravan amphib (hull value in the $2m-$3m range) fetch a $98k insurance premium for an owner pilot with good float experience (albeit mostly piston?). That is absolutely crazy........I can't even fathom that or why he was paying that kind of rate.
_________________ Tom Hauge Wings Insurance National Sales Director E-mail: thauge@wingsinsurance.com
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:42 |
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Joined: 08/21/14 Posts: 185 Post Likes: +119
Aircraft: C33A, Challenger 604
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Username Protected wrote: insurance for a guy with a lot of float time was $98K per year. Sadly your friend was being poorly represented on the insurance end so hopefully that ridiculous price he was paying didn't have a role in him selling the airplane? There is no way even in the hardest market during the last 10-15 years would a Caravan amphib (hull value in the $2m-$3m range) fetch a $98k insurance premium for an owner pilot with good float experience (albeit mostly piston?). That is absolutely crazy........I can't even fathom that or why he was paying that kind of rate.
+1 of the above. When I was flying the caravan, we were paying about 20% of the figure that you quoted.
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:49 |
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Joined: 12/13/07 Posts: 20589 Post Likes: +10728 Location: Seeley Lake, MT (23S)
Aircraft: 1964 Bonanza S35
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Username Protected wrote: insurance for a guy with a lot of float time was $98K per year. Sadly your friend was being poorly represented on the insurance end so hopefully that ridiculous price he was paying didn't have a role in him selling the airplane? There is no way even in the hardest market during the last 10-15 years would a Caravan amphib (hull value in the $2m-$3m range) fetch a $98k insurance premium for an owner pilot with good float experience (albeit mostly piston?). That is absolutely crazy........I can't even fathom that or why he was paying that kind of rate.
Yep, you're right i had my numbers mixed up. The $98K was for his Citation, he paid $38K for the Caravan.
_________________ Want to go here?: https://tinyurl.com/FlyMT1
tinyurl.com/35som8p
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 13:58 |
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Joined: 03/09/11 Posts: 1770 Post Likes: +829 Company: Wings Insurance Location: Eden Prairie, MN / Scottsdale, AZ
Aircraft: 2016 Cirrus SR22 G5
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Username Protected wrote:
Yep, you're right i had my numbers mixed up. The $98K was for his Citation, he paid $38K for the Caravan.
Scott that is even worse. No Citation policy would be that much even if a 1000 hrs owner pilot was allowed to be PIC on his own Citation X. $38k for the Caravan is possible however with a lower time pilot - I can see that on a new amphib Caravan in certain situations.
_________________ Tom Hauge Wings Insurance National Sales Director E-mail: thauge@wingsinsurance.com
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Post subject: Re: Caravan or Kodiak Quest as a personal airplane Posted: 03 Dec 2014, 14:17 |
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Joined: 01/16/11 Posts: 11068 Post Likes: +7097 Location: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Aircraft: PC12NG, G3Tat
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Username Protected wrote: Michael.... The stuff I do is easy peasy. Anybody can do it as long as you can hit a speed. Only takes a bit more confidence to take your nice plane into the dirt/grass environment. Its really not that big of a deal. You all should come out and try a couple of them. Hell, some of them are 4500 feet long. Afterwards, you'll say to yourself "what's the big deal". Scott's stuff, on the other hand, requires substantially more gonad and experience. ...........and he has a very light model.
Most of the time, we are all going into pretty moderate stuff. I'm definitely coming out in the summer. Winter, too cold. I got no warm clothes. 
_________________ ---Rusty Shoe Keeper---
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