28 Jun 2025, 13:34 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 21 Aug 2023, 18:23 |
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Joined: 02/20/16 Posts: 347 Post Likes: +467
Aircraft: E55, 7GCAA, Bell 206
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A Citabria.... Faster than a Cub or a Champ; much cheaper than a Husky.
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 21 Aug 2023, 18:57 |
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Joined: 12/29/10 Posts: 2769 Post Likes: +2625 Location: Dallas, TX (KADS & KJWY)
Aircraft: T28B,7GCBC,E90
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Username Protected wrote: A Citabria.... Faster than a Cub or a Champ; much cheaper than a Husky. Agreed. I have a late model 7GCBC with big tires and it's a great airplane. Aerobatic capable (sorta) and good enough for most backcountry strips. Robert
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 21 Aug 2023, 19:33 |
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Joined: 12/12/21 Posts: 143 Post Likes: +89
Aircraft: V35B/Super Cub
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My vote is for a Super Cub with a belly pod. If you want to camp, you need somewhere to put all that gear. The belly pod gets the weight down low and doesn't throw your cg way aft. Plus, it holds quit a bit (150bls). We love ours.
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 22 Aug 2023, 00:12 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20394 Post Likes: +25580 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: You'll love having a tailwheel airplane. It will make you a better stick and rudder pilot. It also really helps prepare you for multiengine flying, too, if that's something you might care about at some point. My first 480 hours are in a 180 HP CS prop C170B. Wonderful airplane, like a lightweight C180 in performance, but 170s are fantastically expensive to buy these days. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 22 Aug 2023, 03:15 |
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Joined: 03/24/19 Posts: 1459 Post Likes: +2050 Location: Ontario, Canada
Aircraft: Glasair Sportsman
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Having recently added a Luscombe 8C/E to my fleet I clearly have a bias, and some observations to share.
The airplane is a good, solid airplane that's without the mechanical degradation challenges of rag-and-tube or (heaven forbid) wood airplanes. It has some decades-old mechanical design challenges which necessitate regular inspections (especially rudder cables). A decent Luscombe will give you (solo) capacity to carry just about all the weight you can squeeze into the baggage area - it's not a big baggage area so one needs to be thoughtful in buying camping gear and the like.
On the plus side, the Luscombe provides you with better handling qualities than many of its contemporaries and a bit of a performance advantage on a mph-per-hp basis. It doesn't land short and it doesn't take off short. Its landing gear structure is not intended for off-airport operations. It is NOT a bush plane - if you fly it like one you'll quickly learn how to replace tailwheel mounting structure and the structural box in which the main gear resides.
If you own a Luscombe you will love hanging your elbow out the window on a hot day, and you'll have a grin on just about every flight. It's an honest flying airplane that does what it's told to do. Most of the old wives tales about it being nasty on the ground come from folks who have never flown one (seems this is common in the histories of many aircraft types).
Oh, did I mention that everywhere my Luscombe goes it draws attention? Yeah, 83 year old airplanes sometimes do that...
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 22 Aug 2023, 06:53 |
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Joined: 11/03/08 Posts: 16350 Post Likes: +27490 Location: Peachtree City GA / Stoke-On-Trent UK
Aircraft: A33
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It depends on what you want to do
If you want to go low and slow with the windows/door off, there is nothing that is nicer to fly than a champ or cub, preferably as light as possible meaning a 4-cyl continental and no electric system.
If you want to haul camping equipment a longer distance then you need something heavier. Rather than butchering a champ (into a citabria) I would suggest a trying out a Cessna 170
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 22 Aug 2023, 07:55 |
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Joined: 09/10/13 Posts: 2396 Post Likes: +1848 Location: Lexington, KY
Aircraft: B95A Z526F SU26
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Username Protected wrote: A very wide range of choices. The thought process should begin with a price range.
Jg Agreed, and further defining your mission. There are too many options for low and slow plus occasional backcountry and camping. How many people, yoke/stick, side-by-side or tandem, range, how big is your hangar, certified/experimental, aerobatic/not... etc? With a Bonanza in the hangar you already have a good cross country plane with useful load to go camping. Seems like a Cub, Champ, Citabria, Decathlon, Stinson, Shortwing Piper, or any of the Cessna tailwheels would be in play.
_________________ Steven Morgan ^middle name
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 22 Aug 2023, 07:57 |
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Joined: 05/11/10 Posts: 13093 Post Likes: +12773 Location: Indiana
Aircraft: Cessna 185, RV-7
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Josh gave you the answers. And I happen to have a 185 for sale.
If you have any interest in owner maintenance, E-AB is a huge plus. An Experimental Super Cub would be lovely, but you have to be a drug lord to afford one. Get the right tailwheel experimental — say, an RV-7, -9, or -14 — and you might find it takes over the Bonanza’s mission. But, $$$.
If what you want is romantic sunsets, J-3, Champ, Kitfox, RANS, etc are more alike than they are different (except cruise speed) and all will scratch that itch. Buy whatever is close to you and be aware that you’ll likely sell it in a couple of years. There aren’t that many pretty sunsets on unplanned evenings, and sunset flights aren’t as fun as they ought to be. This isn’t sailing.
And back to the top, a 185 will do the Bonanza’s mission minus 30 knots of cruise but plus 300 or 400# of useful load.
The answer to the question “which taildragger?” is two more questions: “what do you want to do with it?” and “how much do you want to spend?”
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Post subject: Re: Considering a taildragger .... Posted: 22 Aug 2023, 08:59 |
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Joined: 08/31/17 Posts: 1760 Post Likes: +705
Aircraft: C180
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Metal wing Citabria 7GCBC (been there done that w wood, just buy the metal one you’ll get it back in resale)
Is very favorable comparison to the cub experience. Ours got bent but would buy another in a heartbeat.
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