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#9
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"i should have walked but i had a considerable amount of time and money into the prebuy [...] so i accepted his deal"
If you can't back out of a deal after a prebuy inspection, then it's not a prebuy inspection. Here's another look at Western Skymasters: I just landed a new-to-me T337 from Ron Lillie at my home airport. Is it the nicest plane ever? No, there is no $65,000 retractable twin that is the nicest plane ever. $65,000 retractable twins need work. Period. Is it airworthy? Yes. Am I satisfied? Yes. Did something minor break on the flight home? Yes. It's a fifty year old bargain-basement airplane. S*** happens. Will I be doing business with Ron again? Yes. For those of you getting ready to buy your first Skymaster, here's a suggested order of items. I highly recommend not moving to the next step until the previous step is complete. 1) Go over all the paperwork you want to examine. 2) Agree on a resolution for any discrepancies found. 3) Get a mechanic to look the plane over. 4) Agree on a resolution for any discrepancies found. 5) Perform (or have a qualified pilot perform) a test flight. 6) Agree on a resolution for any discrepancies found. 7) Fix the seller-resolved discrepancies. 8) Confirm that the seller-resolved discrepancies have been fixed. 9) Close the sale. 10) Fly it home. Don't try to do all the steps in one day. It won't end well. Buying a plane is like buying a house - it takes time. For this Skymaster, it took me about 8 weeks from my first call to Ron to today. I found him easy to work with and I expect to do business with him again. Last edited by JimC : 07-07-20 at 10:40 PM. |