Cherokee 180 vs. Archer
Hi, guys. As I continue to shop for a plane, I am beginning to think that an Archer/Archer II might be out of my price range with the avionics I'm hoping for. However, I've seen a Cherokee 180 or two nicely equipped and more in line with the prices I have budgeted for.
I know the Cherokee 180 will have a shorter fuselage and thus less rear seat legroom. I *think* that useful load is usually a little better for the 180s vs. the Archer.
What other significant differences should I be weighing as I consider the tradeoffs between the two models?
Thanks-
Jim
I know the Cherokee 180 will have a shorter fuselage and thus less rear seat legroom. I *think* that useful load is usually a little better for the 180s vs. the Archer.
What other significant differences should I be weighing as I consider the tradeoffs between the two models?
Thanks-
Jim
Comments
I am thinking about leaving the rear seats behind as now it is only my wife and me when we travel.
Good Luck on your search
By the way ..study hard. When you find a candidate:
Has this past summers' yolk AD and others been completed?
Wing fuel tank seals been done properly?
Stabilator bushings OK?
Cracks in the skin on the wing in front of loading area?
Static system OK?
Everything work?
All door seals OK? Check in baggage area under floor covering.
All antennas OK?
Mode C transponder? Been checked in the last 24 months?
Old radios- have avionics shop check them out.
Log books
Accident history
Tires?
Rigged properly? Fly crooked?
Seat rails OK?
etc etc.
Be careful and thorough. Both the A&P and I have owned planes before. And the A&P currently owns an Aircoupe.
AOPA has a bunch of info that is well worth reading.
Good luck.
Regardless, I'm glad I've got the longer wings, and I'm *really* glad I've got the extra legroom in back. I've carried several large adults back there (not all at once!), and post-flight comfort reports have all been positive. Several have expressed confusion along the lines of, "why would you think I wouldn't be comfortable?" It's not the back seat of a Cadillac sedan, but I don't have any concerns about carrying "big folk" on 2-4 hr trips.
Useful load was a bit of a surprise. Paperwork with the plane at sale indicated a 950-lb useful load, but had the plane weighed (on certified scales) during annual and the UL got revised down to 850 lbs. I'm still a little confused about that, because I can't figure out where all the "extra" weight is, and warm day takeoffs fully loaded still have a good rate of climb. It hasn't cramped my style, so I'm not going to complain about it.
My plane came with a low SMOH engine, a 430W, and a factory wing leveler (which were requirements on my shopping list). I do have a long list of future upgrades, but I'm not sure about priority yet. One thing I know I want is to put headset jacks in the back seat--I've been using a 3-place extension cord plugged into the copilot's side when needed, but that's a poor solution (always fighting volume and mic problems because the intercom isn't designed to support that kind of rig). I'd also like to get the electric trim back into operation, but I'm not sure how big a job that is; the switch on the yoke is (mangled? missing? honked up?)...a problem, and I know that alone can be pretty expensive. Since that switch is inop, I've got no idea what shape the clutch and drive mechanism are in (other than it's there and it moves freely when using the manual trim wheel). It bugs me to have a factory capability not functioning, but I also have trouble justifying the money to fix, since it'll be expensive and I can use the manual trim just fine.
I also have the idea that I'd eventually like to get a GPSS roll steering converter to help with single-pilot IFR flying, but I know that will be expensive too. I wonder if it'd be better to save up for a few years and go for a more ambitious upgrade, like a modern rate-based digital autopilot....
Congratulations on Challenger and sounds like you will be sinking some money into her and she will be pretty happy with as the new owner, never understood the Challenger thing as they didn't make them for long, some called them the first Archer but I always thought they were a cross between both the 180 and the Archer and somewhat in between. A really nice plane and I looked at one and tried to buy it and it was well equipped with your wish list, but I missed it (to cheap and stupid at the time) but was a really nice plane, bought an 82 Archer and very happy with it to date. Happy Flying in your new Bird, keep feeding it thousand dollar bills and it will take care of you.
There are big differences between the '72 180 and the '73 Challenger: A wider door and an extra 5" of rear legroom, and the longer straight wing and stabilator. The '74 and '75 Archers are nearly identical planes to the '73 Challenger; rounded corners on the windows are the biggest difference I'm aware of, so that's why some folks say "the Challenger was the first Archer". The next big change came with the '76 Archer II that got the semi-tapered wing and became the first PA28-181.
FYI on this, might help some people who are making this decision:
https://piperowner.org/download-your-cherokee-guide/
Digital Product Manager
Piper Owner Society