Inexpensive but Capable. What have you done?

Rusty Coonfield

Filing Flight Plan
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Mar 11, 2020
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Rustycoon
Hey All, I’m hoping to not reinvent the wheel here and learn from the extensive research that you all have done.
I am looking at purchasing a plane and unfortunately nothing in my price range has what i feel is a minimum panel for extensive IFR flying.
Goals are to be able to do WAAS approaches and ditching the vacuum system. Also, to have decent autopilot integration. Ideally with altitude capture but at least altitude hold.
So I ask you - What’s the cheapest way to do it?
Garmin 430W and 2 G5s??? What autopilot?
 
Club is the way to go. If not, then partnership. There’s several ways to get there from an avionics perspective.
 
I totally agree!!! Unfortunately my needs are such that a club or partnership are unlikely to work. I need to commute to work and keep the plane away from base for 7 days at a time.

Club is the way to go. If not, then partnership. There’s several ways to get there from an avionics perspective.
 
What's your price range? The panel you're asking for is $25-30k.
Go retro and hand fly and you can get a plane for that much
 
Just went down this road, ended up with a $30k project. So... is that cheap? It was not an extravagant panel like some.

It could be done, using new equipment, for $15-$20k, depending on the autopilot. If there is no current autopilot in the plane, then the sky is the limit. If you need ADSB, then you’re going down the GNX375+Single G5 road, if you don’t, then the absolute cheapest option is probably doing the GNX175+Single G5, and you might be able to do that for $10k, but you’ll have to live with all your existing radios (and potentially forego having a VOR/LOC if the plane doesn’t already have one).
 
Hey All, I’m hoping to not reinvent the wheel here and learn from the extensive research that you all have done.
I am looking at purchasing a plane and unfortunately nothing in my price range has what i feel is a minimum panel for extensive IFR flying.
Goals are to be able to do WAAS approaches and ditching the vacuum system. Also, to have decent autopilot integration. Ideally with altitude capture but at least altitude hold.
So I ask you - What’s the cheapest way to do it?
Garmin 430W and 2 G5s??? What autopilot?
Cheapest? On the radio stack side, that would probably be the Garmin GPS175 ($5k), GNC355 ($7k) or GNX375 ($8k) depending on what NAV/COM and transponder/ADS-B is already in there.

For flight instruments, a pair of G5's is hard to beat.

Edit: Forgot to add that unlike the G5's or the radios, which autopilot is very much going to depend on which airframe.
 
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Cheapest? On the radio stack side, that would probably be the Garmin GPS175 ($5k), GNC355 ($7k) or GNX375 ($8k) depending on what NAV/COM and transponder/ADS-B is already in there.

For flight instruments, a pair of G5's is hard to beat.

Edit: Forgot to add that unlike the G5's or the radios, which autopilot is very much going to depend on which airframe.

I like this approach for new equipment, and for an AP a Garmin GFC500 would be hard to beat if it is approved in your model. 430s still work but I wouldn't put in new. My config is a GNS430W, dual G5s and a legacy STEC AP. It works, but is sometimes kludgy.
 
I wanted the same thing, but it is way out of my price range.

The 2 G5/ GTN650/GFC500 upgrade on a club plane cost more than my plane did, so I know I will not be going that far.

My current panel is a vacuum 6 pack with a single nav/com (MAC 1700, No GS) and a VFR GPS (Aera 500).

My plan is to do some of my training and my check ride in a rental, and some small upgrades to my plane to allow basic IFR.

I will be carrying a handheld with an adapter to plug into my aux port to listen to ATIS, but long term I would like to add another radio that is compatible with the Garmin serial controls.

Already done:
Added a GDL39 for ADS-B in and a uAvionix Tailbeacon for out.

But for most of the capability you are looking for, my upgrade plan is:
uAvionix/Aerovonics AV-20S - this will give me the reliability of an electronic stack in addition to my vacuum system, I won't get the useable load back, but I also won't have to worry (as much) about loosing my vacuum pump in IMC. It will still be a threat to my bank account, but not to my life.

A second Com (possibly nav, but not a priority)

A Glideslope and indicator (I have a line on a KI-214 if I can find someone to test it)

After flying that config for a while, and getting a feel for how much capability it adds, I may step up to a GTN 175 if budget allows, and possibly a digital autopilot if one is ever STCed for the Yankee.

If I were to do all of that, the cost would be about the same a installing 2 G5s:
(prices are from Aircraftspruce, unless noted)
GDL39 3D - $400 - Ebay
Tailbeacon - $2K
AV-20S - $900
KI-214 - $500 (used from a fellow aviator)
Phase 1 = $3800 + labor

Garmin SL40 - $1400 -Ebay
GTN-175 - $4300
Phase 2 = $5700 + labor

Total = $9500 + labor

Trutrak (if Bendix/King ever certifies it for the AA1) - $5100

Labor is to varied for me to predict.
 
Something to note, the GDL39 3D has built in AHRS, so I could use the attitude and synthetic vision with FF rather than the AV-20s, but I'm not 100% comfortable with leaning on the iPad that much in the long term. If you are, you can save $1000 by cutting out the AV-20S.
 
If I were to do all of that, the cost would be about the same a installing 2 G5s:
(prices are from Aircraftspruce, unless noted)
GDL39 3D - $400 - Ebay
Tailbeacon - $2K
AV-20S - $900
KI-214 - $500 (used from a fellow aviator)
Phase 1 = $3800 + labor

Garmin SL40 - $1400 -Ebay
GTN-175 - $4300
Phase 2 = $5700 + labor
You could replace the GPS175, TailBeacon and GDL39 ($4300+$2000+$400=$6700) with a GNX375 (est $6900) for the same functionality. Alternatively you could replace the GPS175 and SL40 ($4300+$1400=$5700) with a GNC355 (est $6000). The advantage to either swap is weight and space saving as well as potentially less labor.
 
OP needs to say what is in his plane currently vis-a-vis indicators, nav/coms, ADSB, and autopilot. The barest bones way to get to WAAS would be just adding a GNX175 and using the existing indicator, but who knows what is already in there.
 
Rusty, you seem to be posting incongruous goals -- panel equipment vs. airplane purchase. You ought to start with a realistic price range for an IFR machine which meets your basic range, payload and other parameters. Once you settle on that, see if there's anything in your price range in that category of aircraft which feature the avionics you prefer. You definitely want to purchase the aircraft with the avionics you want already installed, if possible. The avionics always lose a lot of value when they're installed and sold in a used aircraft.

After that, lay out an operating budget. As they say with aircraft ownership, it's not the cost of admission that does you in, it's the cost to stay in the ballpark. I spent a lot less on my Twin Comanche, purchased for average price in 2000, than I've spent on it since then. In fact I've probably spent triple its purchase price keeping it running, fixing things and upgrading it over twenty years -- not including the actual operating expenses.

Operating an IFR-equipped aircraft on a regular basis simply isn't cheap. Finding a panel that includes autopilot and WAAS GPS isn't going to make that any easier. Make sure this is feasible for you -- it's better to wish you were an aircraft owner, than to wish you weren't.
 
As others have said, it really depends on where you are starting. If you get a plane that has, say, an STEC30, then you can get away with 2 G5s and a WAAS GPS and you'll have WAAS approaches, Alt hold and GPSS. If the airplane doesn't have an AP, you should probably get a GFC500 in there, or buy the STEC30 coming out of someone's plane.

As for which GPS, it depends if you want to have all in one NAV/COMM/GPS or if a GPS is all you need. I personally like having at least one all in one box. Others are happy keeping a KX155 or SL30 in for ILS and using something like a 175 or 375 as their primary.
 
Sitting here pondering the amount that we've put in our 210B since initial purchase last summer:

Audio Panel: LNIB (used) GMA-347 from a source I trust = $800
GPS (primary nav): Brand New GPS-175 purchased online = $4100
Indicator: LNIB (used) GI-106A = $840 (w/new install kit)
Comm #1: Used Icom IC-A200 (eBay) = $250
Comm #2: Used Icom IC-A200 (eBay)= $250
NAV #2: Used King KNS-81... I have one primary, and two spares, about $350 in all
Indicator: Collins IND-351 $550 w/ new install kit
DME: King KN-64 (Came with the plane) = $0
XPDR: Garmin GTX-330ES $400 used, plus $100 install kit, plus $1495 ES upgrade

Add on about $1.5k in miscellaneous supplies: all new circuit breakers, new glareshield lighting, a new (LNIB) VSI, overhauled ASI, new pitot/static plumbing, temp sensor for transponder, all new antenna cabling, etc.

My sons and I did all the work, so the amount saved there is probably a 50% cost savings, so... That's part of the reason I went with this setup (no dealership surcharges). A couple of the good deals came from family connections (thanks Bro!) and others from careful scouring of the interwebs...

Is it perfect, no... But, we basically have the utility to go anywhere now...

V/r,

-Dana
 
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