Looks like Mooney is Back.........Again

That was predictable.

Eclipse seems to be following the same path as Mooney. Really it makes sense - a fast, efficient, smallish owner flown airplane is a bit of a niche market.
 
The M10 was dead on arrival, rushed into prototype and hobbled by its diesel engine. It'll never fly again. The idea was good, and marrying the airframe to a mogas burning engine like a Rotax might actually do something. Whether they have any of the materials to actually build another airframe I don't know.
 
That was predictable.

Eclipse seems to be following the same path as Mooney. Really it makes sense - a fast, efficient, smallish owner flown airplane is a bit of a niche market.

Follow Epic, it will follow Eclipse.
 
I have no problem with Mooney but how in the world can a company only deliver 1 plane per month and expect to make any money? No wonder they cost so much.
 
The composite trainer they were playing around with looked badass and would have been a great reinvention of an aging model and been their "blue ocean" of sorts

Their incompetent management though and complete lack of any kind of marketing or "staying with the times" meant that the trainer died and they were pushing out a small airplane at 7X the cost of what you can currently buy for almost identical performance..

The existing fleet needs to be sent to pasture and the brand needs to find their Blue Ocean.. whatever that may be

There's plenty of money out there and plenty of people with money.. Diamond, Piper, Cessna, Cirrus, they find a way.. so can Mooney
 
My understanding is this was a planned shutdown and it's only temporary while they bring in new management, systems, etc. We'll see.
 
My understanding is this was a planned shutdown and it's only temporary while they bring in new management, systems, etc. We'll see.
Maybe, but they promised the employees that they would get two weeks pay while they were off for the holidays and now claim they can’t afford to pay them.
 
...these poor workers are getting the shaft.. they were told to "go home"

https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all-news/2020/january/07/mooney-workers-told-to-go-home


"
“There’s nobody there,” said Devan Burns, a human resources staffer identified by the local newspaper as a “de facto” company spokesperson. “We went back to work after our furlough, and then they sent us on our normal two-week holiday during Christmas and New Year’s. We came back yesterday and were told to go home,” she said when reached on her personal phone.



Factory employees were initially caught off guard when the Chinese-owned aircraft company abruptly furloughed the staff on November 12. Workers were called back to work December 2 and again began hand-driving rivets and curving sheet metal for the company’s flagship M20 Ovation and $800,000 Acclaim Ultra models.


Don Maxwell, who leads Mooney owner maintenance clinics and is one of the leading experts on the topic, said at the time that the November disruption was “just another cycle in the life of Mooney.” He said he’s been affiliated with the brand since 1968 and has “seen lots of ups and downs.” Maxwell said no new parts were made during that three-week hiatus, but he pointed out that he had been in touch with parts department and warranty personnel during the work interruption.

This time, however, Mooney owners seeking official factory service or warranty work might be out of luck.

“There will not be anyone taking care of warranty issues,” Burns said, because “nobody is at the factory,” although several aircraft in various stages of completion remained on the factory floor.

The Kerrville Daily Times reported January 6 that the company furloughed its 55 employees and rescinded their holiday pay.

Albert Mooney established the brand 90 years ago, and his eponymous aircraft company suffered its first of many financial blows in 1930, just a year after it was born.

Over the past few decades a cycle of U.S. and international ownership groups from France, Germany, and China have weathered continued financial pressure in the face of competition from industry-leading Cirrus Aircraft.

Mooney pilots prize their aircraft for economy and their stoutness. The Mooney M20J 201 model coaxed 201 miles per hour from a fuel-injected 200-horsepower Lycoming four-cylinder engine that burned about 10 gallons of fuel per hour. There are more than 1,400 M20J models in the fleet; many of the popular “short body” M20C, -E, and -F models are also active.

Burns said she was unable to comment on any plans for the future. “It’s all up in the air right now.”

Efforts to reach other members of the Mooney staff and company executives went unanswered.
"
 
This is truly the phoenix of airplane brands. It rises from the ashes, over and over.

In this reincarnation, according to the announcement, they emphasize building parts and servicing the existing fleet, with the building of new airplanes going on the back burner. Sounds like what was happening in the factory for years after the 2008 recession.
 
Wow.. not even a mobile friendly site. And that announcement could have been jazzed up a little different on their site.. vs what looks like a PNG image of a word doc

Unless they can do something differently this time, innovate alternatively, etc., they're bound to keep repeating this cycle. Too bad.
 
they emphasize building parts and servicing the existing fleet, with the building of new airplanes going on the back burner
How does a model like that make any real money for them?

I'm still bummed hey bailed on that M10 they had in 2014
 
If they've reduced overhead enough to maintain operations by going the parts/service route, it might get them enough of a revenue stream to slowly move back towards manufacturing. Trying to go straight back to full production like they have in the past obviously hasn't worked.


*Edit* Now that I've read it, they're doing more than just parts and service. Already providing upgrades and minor improvements with plans to offer significantly more. Sounds like a good phased approach.
 
I always thought they should have brought back the Mooney cadet. Buy the type certificate from Univair, by the time they got tooled. up to build them I bet they'd have spent the same as they did on the M10, and they could have built airplanes. They wanted airplanes for China? A Mooney cadet can burn car gas all day long, and there's car gas everywhere in China. Sometimes you just have to think outside the box.
 
Back
Top