Hi everyone.
I’m sort of new here I have been lurking around this great site for years, because the Taylorcraft intrigues me.
I own a 1960 Cessna 150 that I converted to a taildragger. It’s a great plane, it performs pretty well and flies great. However it has its limitations, not legal on skis and floats, short field is not that of a T-Craft.
I always thought the T-Craft was too cramped for me (6’1”) and the visibility under the wing was bad, not any worse than the 150.
I got to fly a T-craft on floats a some weekends ago, what a blast, this T-Craft won the take of contest at Greenville this year. I have always wanted a float/ski plane. As I’m getting older and closer to retirement I’m defining what I would like in a plane, I don’t want to spend 60K+ for a Supercub, or a 170.
We are thinking about moving to Alaska, in the Slana / Nabesna area elevation 3000 feet. I see a bunch of Alaska members on this site. My question is what is your experience with the T-craft in Alaska. What engines do you have, what floats do you use how well does it work. Needless to say I would like input from anybody Alaska or not.
When I bought my first plane I almost bought a T-Craft, the same plane I flew on floats a few weeks ago and it keeps on bugging me why not. But as a new pilot I thought I wanted something a little more elaborate, like transponder, radio, lights etc. Some of those things I seldom use now.
I guess its part of the whole process to define what you really are going to use it for and I think that for me a T-Craft will fill the bill just fine and oh yes I would not mind an electric start on a floatplane.
Thanks
Peter
I’m sort of new here I have been lurking around this great site for years, because the Taylorcraft intrigues me.
I own a 1960 Cessna 150 that I converted to a taildragger. It’s a great plane, it performs pretty well and flies great. However it has its limitations, not legal on skis and floats, short field is not that of a T-Craft.
I always thought the T-Craft was too cramped for me (6’1”) and the visibility under the wing was bad, not any worse than the 150.
I got to fly a T-craft on floats a some weekends ago, what a blast, this T-Craft won the take of contest at Greenville this year. I have always wanted a float/ski plane. As I’m getting older and closer to retirement I’m defining what I would like in a plane, I don’t want to spend 60K+ for a Supercub, or a 170.
We are thinking about moving to Alaska, in the Slana / Nabesna area elevation 3000 feet. I see a bunch of Alaska members on this site. My question is what is your experience with the T-craft in Alaska. What engines do you have, what floats do you use how well does it work. Needless to say I would like input from anybody Alaska or not.
When I bought my first plane I almost bought a T-Craft, the same plane I flew on floats a few weeks ago and it keeps on bugging me why not. But as a new pilot I thought I wanted something a little more elaborate, like transponder, radio, lights etc. Some of those things I seldom use now.
I guess its part of the whole process to define what you really are going to use it for and I think that for me a T-Craft will fill the bill just fine and oh yes I would not mind an electric start on a floatplane.
Thanks
Peter
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