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#1
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what do you think of this 337 for sale?
https://honolulu.craigslist.org/oah/...225705822.html
the ad is pretty scant, but what I do know is: fresh annual last month, Total aircraft time is 3016. Front engine 1186.5 and rear 1139.3 (boo). It appears to be a reims aircraft, the faa thinks it's something like a 1985 but it's a 72. Maybe 85 is the import date? Here it was, 10 years ago http://www.steveweaver.com/n337n.htm Looks like the props were done with the engines. I gather it's been kept out on the ramp since moving to hawaii, which is what I'll have to do. Nothing has been changed avionics wise, it's been flying so it must have some sort of adsb solution. I wish I had more to chose from, but it's here and it's for sale, that's about the best one can ask for out here. There are what appear to be superior airplanes with lower time engines on the mainland, by the logistics of getting one here are rough, and expensive Last edited by phlgsse : 11-09-20 at 07:49 PM. |
#2
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I can't imagine you'd even keep looking! I bet Hawaii 337s come up for sale only once every 2-3 years. There are only 4 registered to Hawaii addresses.
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1969 T337E |
#3
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Quote:
edit: I guess the point is, do I pursue this one or wait for something else to come along, not necessarily another 337. Last edited by phlgsse : 11-09-20 at 08:34 PM. |
#4
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I bet $45k cash would buy it right now. In the mainland, that's a $35k airplane with those engine times.
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#5
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that's kind of my thought as well. he had it on the market over the summer, took it off, and put it back on. I need to talk with the A&P (yeah, THE) and find out if it's decent. Someone told me the a&p told him that one of the 337's on island should be sold for scrap. Unsure if it's this one or another. I had a junker single here I just sold. I want two engines for around here for sure.
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#6
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This could be a great buy if you plan to operate under part 91. No requirement to do engines at TBO under 91. I've seen these engines go over 2000 hrs, but I wouldn't count on it. Send some oil off for analysis, remove the oil filters and cut them open to check for metal. Both of these things will cost you under $100, and that includes buying new filters. Have a compression test done on warm engines, preferably with you present. Note the trends in logbooks over the last few annuals. Have cylinders been replaced, or are these the originals? What major repairs have been done in the last 10 years? How many hours per year has the plane flown over the past few years?
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#7
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The only continental 360 I've had was a turbo and there's no way it'd go 2k hours. I'm not sure about the na other than jewel wants a lot more to overhaul the 6 than a lyco 360. Thems the breaks I guess.
Unsure, I haven't seen the logs yet. It's been flying coast guard auxiliary and I think has flown regularly, just based on sale history it appears 1k hours over 13 years, which isn't great. The logs should be illuminating. |
#8
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Ah...if you're not stuck on a 337, I might pass. What's your mission?
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1969 T337E |
#9
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Island hopping with 2 of us and a dog or two. There's a pretty nice aztec up for sale but he wants 85k and I think insurance will be even worse on an aztec. I had a grumman cheetah shared with a guy but I'm pretty certain an over water engine failure would prove fatal in that... And my partner wanted to dump 50k into a 20k airplane.
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#10
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The easy entry of the clamshell door runs circles around loading women, children, and animals up over the wing! My elderly mother was badly injured when she mis-stepped coming onto the wing to board on my Bonanza! This would NEVER happen on a 337! The cabin of the 337 is the roomiest, with the best visibility, of any light twin. Cessna actually got quite a bit right with the 337. The new electric airplane company (I forget the name) is putting 337's into airline service between the islands - if that's not an endorsement, I don't know what is! Last edited by mshac : 11-09-20 at 08:58 PM. |
#11
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Maintenance is a whole other thing here. Getting parts here and the cost to get them here is unreal. Need a windscreen? Sure, $700 for the part and 1k to ship it |
#12
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Oh and I haven't regularly flown a multi since about 2000. I flew a 310 once this summer. Lol
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#13
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The Skymaster is like flying a single with two engines. If you can get over the awe factor of having six levers in your hands, you'll soon realize it responds like a big single engine. The pitch is heavy, and the aircraft is very stable. Lose an engine, lose some airspeed. Feather the inop engine, and continue your flight. In a Skymaster, an engine-out is not an "emergency", its an inconvenience.
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#14
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The panel is state of the art - for 1985. It does have a modern Garmin transponder, but that's about it for anything on the plane made after 1990.
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#15
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The bright side is I just don't fly ifr, so thank God it's got deice boots. In hawaii. |