Jump to content

Swingin

Basic Member
  • Posts

    29
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling
  • Location
    KOGD
  • Reg #
    N3255F
  • Model
    '67 M20E

Recent Profile Visitors

541 profile views

Swingin's Achievements

Explorer

Explorer (4/14)

  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Conversation Starter
  • Week One Done
  • One Month Later

Recent Badges

0

Reputation

  1. Thought I had it sold, didn't happen. Back on the market, $31,000.
  2. I believe it sat from around '06-'10, the owner (second owner at the time) was in deteriorating health. It was hangared in AZ during that time, but it still needed some love when it started flying again (tank reseal, vacuum system, some avionics).
  3. Work is taking me to Asia for a few years, so the plane must go! $34,500 $31.000 (6/12). 1967 M20E - 2,100TTAF, 900STOH. Fresh Annual (Apr 2014). Tanks resealed at Advanced Aircraft, Troutdale OR (2012). No damage history, complete logs. AD Hub w/ ECI. IFR pitot/static (Dec 2013). Avionics: Audio Panel - NARCO CP-135 Comm 1 - NARCO COM-810 Digital Comm 2 - NARCO COM-810 Digital NAV-1 - KNS-80 RNAV/DME NAV-2 - NARCO NAV-122 VOR/LOC-GS XPDR - NARCO AT-150 w/ encoder Digital fuel flow/totalizer - Hoskins CFS-1001A JPI Scanner digital CHT/EGT Mods: Lightweight starter LED landing light New exhaust (2012) New battery (2013) LASAR 100 - Flap Gap Seals LASAR 101 - Aileron Lower Gap Seals LASAR 103B - Brake Wheel Cylinder Rotation LASAR 104 - Dorsal Fin Vertical Seal LASAR 105 - Tail Root Horizontal Fairing I'm the fourth owner, it's been hangared since birth in SoCal, Arizona, and now Utah. Paint is stock but is in great shape, considering the age. Some paint damage on the access panels following the tank reseal in 2012. Interior redone in the 90s. High-time engine, compressions are great and oil samples come back clean though. I run LOP and normally see around 145KTAS at 9.7GPH (ram-air). Located in Brigham City, UT (KBMC). Call Pete at 801-648-9612.
  4. Check your PMs, info sent.
  5. If he's saying the #3 runs hotter than the rest then presumably there is some sort of analyzer installed. The reading he's getting off of #3 could be due to having a gasket-style probe installed on that jug, with bayonet-style probes on the other three. Mine used to have bayonet probes on all four, and at my last annual the mechanic swapped #3 to a gasket-style probe for the analyzer, with the bayonet probe still going to the stock 6-pack analog cluster. My #3 consistently reads 75 degrees hotter now than it ever used to, and that's the only thing that changed. The stock analog gauge still shows in line with the digital readings from the other three jugs though. Had me concerned for a while but after reading up, I've not too worried about it. I would be more concerned about the stuck cowl flaps and the reverse-rigged ram air control. Makes you wonder what else is going on in there.
  6. Commercial, inst, multi-engine land. All courtesy of competency agreement with the FAA through the USAF. Cost me about 30 minutes at the Denver FSDO. I could test for CFII but it involves a written I haven't yet taken (no apparent need). Getting back into GA was seriously challenging. I'm loving it though and it's made me a better military pilot. And the M20E is far and away more complicated to fly than my work plane (stick-rudder, engine management).
  7. Not sure if this is helpful for either of your situations, but the gasket-style probe reads 50-75 degrees hotter than the bayonet style, which it replaced. Again, mine were fine before, all low 300s at cruise. Now just the reading with the new probe is high. If everything else checks out, look at the probes themselves, before getting too deep into the engine itself.
  8. Did some more searching here after I posted (wrong order to do it in, I know) and answered my question. Kindly disregard!
  9. Since my last annual (about 60 flight hours) my #3 CHT has been consistently higher than the other three. The probe on #3 was changed to a gasket style probe during the annual. I've read that the gasket style sensors can read up to 50 degrees off, but seeing 390-430 on #3 is disconcerting. Low 300s on all the rest. I've had the baffling inspected, and it is fine. The EGTs are unchanged from before the annual. Any questions I should be asking or things I should be looking at? Thanks
  10. Great experience there this past winter, both for a full reseal and an annual inspection. I would highly recommend them and will use them again (although hopefully not for a tank reseal!) Also, flying into TTD is fun, especially if you get to come down the gorge. PM me if you have any specific questions about my experience.
  11. It has some damage history from 30+ years ago. (http://report.myairplane.com/). Otherwise it's hard to say from just the ad. No mention of the fuel tanks, that can be very expensive. If you're serious about buying it, a few hundred for an inspection at a Mooney service center will save you many thousands down the road.
  12. I just had my tanks resealed by Greg at Advanced Aircraft in Troutdale, OR (first tank work ever for a '67 E). Fast, professional, and very straightforward about his assessment of what I needed. I would use their services again and I confidently recommend them to anyone.
  13. Arriving for a fuel stop on an XC today, pulled the power back to get to the pattern and it started running rough. #1 EGT was near zero, but worked fine at higher power settings. Pulled the cowl and the #1 intake tube was slightly askew with one bolt missing. Thought it was gone for sure out the cowl flaps, but it was at the bottom of the cowl. Found a mechanic on field to put it back in and check the security of the other 7. Many were loose. He said vibration was a likely culprit, so I'll be balancing my prop soon.
  14. I like the Aerox system. Their cannulas are supposed to be very efficient, and you can fine tune each one for altitude. I live at 4,500' and spend time hiking/skiing each year well above 12K', but I still go on supplemental O2 for flying above 10K' or so, even lower if it's a longer flight. Not because I get hypoxic specifically, but I find that if I don't I'm a little tired for the rest of the day. It's cheap and easy, so why not. I think I ordered mine through Aircraftspruce.com, but that's probably not the only place. Google Aerox for more info.
  15. When I had about 30 hrs on my M20E, I developed a rough idle that would clear out at higher power settings. Difficulty starting sometimes as well. Finally I had enough when the vibration during a reduced-power descent became pronounced. Culprit was that the #2 intake gasket had rotted out and the ensuing vibration caused one of the bolts to back completely off, and I had a massive intake leak as you can imagine. Interesting to know that it's more widespread.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.