Yep, I bought an airplane.
A little background...growing up my dad was a pilot as are a massive number of people in Alaska. It's a huge state and most of the areas are airplane access only so culturally having an airplane is like having a boat or ATV to access wilderness. I flew around with my dad and brother in our family Piper PA-18 Super Cub and saw some amazing places that people have never been to. Fast forward a few years and in 2013 I started going to college for professional piloting and taking flying lessons and got very nearly completed with my private pilot's license when I ran out of money (it's about $150/hr to learn to fly and a minimum of 40 hours are required before your final test) and landed a job in aviation but doing sales of aircraft parts instead of flying. That took the wind out of my sails in terms of desire to be a pilot and then after 5 years of customer service involving pilots that removed any further desire to be a pilot myself.
On a lark a couple months ago I just cruised our local craiglist which includes an aircraft section and ran across this particular plane which is a Piper J3, the precursor to the PA-18. It was a good deal for the little plane and I had the money saved so I gave the seller a call assuming it would have already sold but just curious more or less about the thing. He did in fact have several buyers lined up so he took my info and said he would call if they fell through. About 3 weeks ago I got a call from him that he said he just really wanted to sell me in particular this plane. He explained that he had a couple people fall through because of financing and the one guy that had cash to buy it was a much older gentleman and he wasn't comfortable selling to that guy due to his age and not really being "all there" and able to safely fly. There's a loophole rule that if the plane is lighter than 1320lbs loaded the pilot does not need a valid medical certificate to fly and this plane is under that limit so older pilots seek them out even though they probably shouldn't be driving a car let alone flying a plane.
Anyway, I looked the plane over with a mechanic, found nothing wrong except some missing paperwork that the seller was able to get sorted out so last Thursday I drove up with a pilot friend, test flew it, paid the man, signed paperwork, and had the pilot friend ferry her back to the home airport in Birchwood Alaska where I will be finishing my pilot training.Pretty excited to start this new chapter and finally finish my license and get access to the rest of this state.
The plane is a 1945 Piper J-3. Engine is an 85 hp Contenental carburated 4 cylinder, 190ci displacement. No starter, no electrical system to the engine is started by "hand propping" or just grabbing the prop and spinning it. Basic instruments only (airspeed, altitude, RPM, oil temp/pressure) and no radio of any kind, communication is with a handheld airband radio hooked up to an external antenna. Empty weight 715 lbs, max takeoff weight 1220 lbs. Tires are 26" blimp tires but I plan on upgrading to 29" bushwheels (landings up here are mainly on tundra/off airport).
Has anybody else on here been into flying or have a pilot's license? I'd love to hear from any other pilots/pilot curious with thoughts or questions.
A little background...growing up my dad was a pilot as are a massive number of people in Alaska. It's a huge state and most of the areas are airplane access only so culturally having an airplane is like having a boat or ATV to access wilderness. I flew around with my dad and brother in our family Piper PA-18 Super Cub and saw some amazing places that people have never been to. Fast forward a few years and in 2013 I started going to college for professional piloting and taking flying lessons and got very nearly completed with my private pilot's license when I ran out of money (it's about $150/hr to learn to fly and a minimum of 40 hours are required before your final test) and landed a job in aviation but doing sales of aircraft parts instead of flying. That took the wind out of my sails in terms of desire to be a pilot and then after 5 years of customer service involving pilots that removed any further desire to be a pilot myself.
On a lark a couple months ago I just cruised our local craiglist which includes an aircraft section and ran across this particular plane which is a Piper J3, the precursor to the PA-18. It was a good deal for the little plane and I had the money saved so I gave the seller a call assuming it would have already sold but just curious more or less about the thing. He did in fact have several buyers lined up so he took my info and said he would call if they fell through. About 3 weeks ago I got a call from him that he said he just really wanted to sell me in particular this plane. He explained that he had a couple people fall through because of financing and the one guy that had cash to buy it was a much older gentleman and he wasn't comfortable selling to that guy due to his age and not really being "all there" and able to safely fly. There's a loophole rule that if the plane is lighter than 1320lbs loaded the pilot does not need a valid medical certificate to fly and this plane is under that limit so older pilots seek them out even though they probably shouldn't be driving a car let alone flying a plane.
Anyway, I looked the plane over with a mechanic, found nothing wrong except some missing paperwork that the seller was able to get sorted out so last Thursday I drove up with a pilot friend, test flew it, paid the man, signed paperwork, and had the pilot friend ferry her back to the home airport in Birchwood Alaska where I will be finishing my pilot training.Pretty excited to start this new chapter and finally finish my license and get access to the rest of this state.
The plane is a 1945 Piper J-3. Engine is an 85 hp Contenental carburated 4 cylinder, 190ci displacement. No starter, no electrical system to the engine is started by "hand propping" or just grabbing the prop and spinning it. Basic instruments only (airspeed, altitude, RPM, oil temp/pressure) and no radio of any kind, communication is with a handheld airband radio hooked up to an external antenna. Empty weight 715 lbs, max takeoff weight 1220 lbs. Tires are 26" blimp tires but I plan on upgrading to 29" bushwheels (landings up here are mainly on tundra/off airport).
Has anybody else on here been into flying or have a pilot's license? I'd love to hear from any other pilots/pilot curious with thoughts or questions.
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