Ercoupe Archives - Plane & Pilot Magazine https://cms.planeandpilotmag.com/tag/ercoupe/ The Excitement of Personal Aviation & Private Ownership Thu, 11 Jul 2024 11:02:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 Bargain Buys on AircraftForSale: 1946 Erco 415-C Ercoupe https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/bargain-buys-on-aircraftforsale-1946-erco-415-c-ercoupe Tue, 09 Jul 2024 11:36:16 +0000 https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/?p=631739 The classic Ercoupe has a well-earned reputation for being among the cheapest aircraft to purchase and maintain. Unfortunately, many have been maintained by some of the cheapest owners, as well,...

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The classic Ercoupe has a well-earned reputation for being among the cheapest aircraft to purchase and maintain. Unfortunately, many have been maintained by some of the cheapest owners, as well, and have become increasingly shabby over time. This 1946 C-model is the other extreme – an Ercoupe that has been enthusiastically maintained with an open checkbook for many years, and it’s available for $28,750 on AircraftForSale.

With a design dating back to the late 1930s, the Ercoupe was designed with fun, safety, and economy in mind. The unique H-tail reduces the left-turning tendencies during takeoff while also minimizing the weathervaning effect prevalent in crosswinds. While the original Ercoupes lacked a rudder and rudder pedals entirely, this example has had them installed as an aftermarket kit, making the airplane a bit more familiar for newcomers to fly.

Despite its age, this is an airplane with plenty of life left. With only 2,264 hours on the airframe and 785 hours on the Continental C75 since major overhaul, the new owner can expect many years of trouble-free enjoyment – enjoyment that’s multiplied when the canopy windows are lowered for an open-cockpit flying experience. The original fabric wing covering has been replaced with metal, eliminating the need for costly $10,000+ fabric replacement in the future.

Remarkably, this Ercoupe includes all logs since new. So, in addition to receiving a well-maintained airplane with new windows, brakes, exhaust, fuel tank, and battery, the new owner will also have nearly 80 years of documented history to reference. The presence of every logbook is as much a testament to the fastidiousness of all the previous owners as it is a source of documentation. 

Image from AircraftForSale listing

Inside, this Ercoupe has been refreshed with a new floorboard, new interior, and even a new, minimalist panel. The panel was designed to provide a clean, uncluttered look that compliments the airplane’s art-deco aesthetic while providing all the instrumentation necessary for fun VFR flight. The layout even provides ample space in the center for a tablet to be mounted in either a vertical or horizontal orientation.

It’s not every day that a classic icon of aviation’s golden age becomes available at a price less than that of many Harley-Davidson motorcycles. And it’s even rarer for such an icon to come in such meticulously maintained condition. But this Ercoupe checks all of the boxes and is ready to provide its next caretaker with an economical and uniquely vintage flying experience. Learn more about Ercoupe ownership here.

You can arrange financing of the aircraft through FLYING Finance and quickly calculate your monthly payment using the airplane finance calculator. For more information, email info@flyingfinance.com

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Bargain Buys on AircraftForSale: 1946 Ercoupe 415D https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/bargain-buys-on-aircraftforsale-1946-ercoupe-415d Thu, 14 Mar 2024 16:04:46 +0000 https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/?p=630720 Today’s Top Pick provides a unique combination of vintage charm and economical operating costs – a 1946 Ercoupe 415D. Designed in the late 1930s as a safer, more stable alternative...

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Today’s Top Pick provides a unique combination of vintage charm and economical operating costs – a 1946 Ercoupe 415D. Designed in the late 1930s as a safer, more stable alternative to existing taildraggers, the Ercoupe was one of the very first aircraft to incorporate a tricycle landing gear configuration. Additionally, it utilized an interconnected rudder and ailerons, eliminating the possibility of inadvertently entering a spin. Lacking rudder pedals entirely, steering on the ground is achieved by turning the yoke left and right, just as in the air. Crosswind landings are easily accomplished by leveling off in a crab just above the runway and allowing the airplane to rotate to the runway heading as the main gear touches down. 

Several different manufacturers produced nearly 6,000 Ercoupes between 1940 and 1969, making replacement parts relatively easy to source and relatively inexpensive to purchase. Additionally, the Continental C85 engine sips fuel at a rate of about 5 gallons per hour, helping to minimize operating costs. Vibrant owners groups offer new owners a wealth of knowledge and know-how.  

This particular example has a low airframe time of only 2,871 hours and an even lower engine time of 305 hours since major overhaul. It is configured as new, without rudder pedals, but has been modified with a metalized wing. At the expense of a bit of useful load, this eliminates the need for costly wing fabric replacement, which can easily exceed $10,000. Perhaps best of all, this Ercoupe sports the original canopy design that enables flight with the top and side windows wide open.

Pilots interested in a unique vintage aircraft with economical operating costs should consider this 1946 Ercoupe 415D, which is available for $39,000 on AircraftForSale.

You can arrange financing of the aircraft through FLYING Finance. For more information, email info@flyingfinance.com.

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Airplane Doors https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/airplane-doors-05-2023 Mon, 26 Jun 2023 00:02:20 +0000 https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/?p=627519 A hilarious meme a few years back was an airport sign board that read, “When one door closes, another one opens. Other than that, it’s a pretty good Cessna.” It’s...

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A hilarious meme a few years back was an airport sign board that read, “When one door closes, another one opens. Other than that, it’s a pretty good Cessna.” It’s funny because it’s true. Airplane doors were not there at the inception. The first planes didn’t need no stinking pilot enclosures and, hence, didn’t need no stinking doors, either. Pilots flew out in the open, which was fine when your top speed was no faster than a trotting horse. And even for a time after, pilots made do with flying goggles and small windscreens.

But as planes got faster, it became clear that aircraft needed some kind of enclosure to protect the pilot from the airstream. So, planes were given enclosures, and those enclosures were by necessity given doors. There are a few unspoken rules about doors. One, they don’t work very well in general, and two, airplane makers are all for putting as few of them on their planes as possible. It seems crazy, but the practice of shortchanging owners on the number of doors is rooted in a few commonsense concerns. Doors are heavy, hard to get to work well, and for low-wing planes, they require additional structure on the part of the wing that gets walked on, for obvious reasons.

Finally, doors aren’t as structurally integral to the fuselage as having no door is, so planes are automatically at least a bit stronger the fewer doors they have. So, putting just one door in a plane, as you see on many Piper, Beechcraft and Mooney single-engine models, is done to save weight, cost and complexity and to maximize the structural integrity. And while doors have gotten better, thanks to better manufacturing methods that yield closer tolerances and a better fit, the struggle is real, both for manufacturers, which need to figure out how to make a good-fitting, light and durable door, and for pilots and their passengers, who get to fight to make do with the few doors they’ve got.

  • First airplane doors: Perhaps the Avro Model 12, which was the first plane with an interior
  • Doors grow in popularity: Mid-1920s
  • Cheat code: On several models, pilots were in the open and passengers inside an enclosure
  • Door-making challenge: No suitable materials to make windows
  • Window/door breakthrough: The invention of acrylic glass in the early 1930s
  • Popular enclosure type: The bubble canopy
  • Door on bubble canopies? The canopy itself either hinges open or slides rearward
  • Potential safety risk? Canopies can open in flight, sometimes leading to a fatal crash
  • Doors become popular: 1930s, popularized on cabin-class biplanes and monoplanes
  • Material used for the doors: Usually the same materials as the rest of the plane
  • Early cabin biplane: Beechcraft D-17 Staggerwing
  • Max occupants: 5
  • Number of doors: 1
  • 1930s innovation that complicated doors: Pressurization
  • 1930s airliner: Douglas DC-3
  • Number of passengers: Up to 32
  • Number of doors: One
  • J-3 Cub of mid-1930s: One Dutch door for both occupants
  • Advantage: You can fly with it open
  • Ercoupe of 1930s: First popular slide-back canopy
  • Advantage: Roll it back in flight
  • First modern piston single: 1947 Beechcraft Bonanza
  • Number of seats: 4
  • Number of doors: 1
  • Ultimate Bonanza expression: Current G-36 Bonanza
  • Number of seats: 6
  • Number of doors: 2 (progress!)
  • Most popular plane: Cessna 172
  • Doors? 2
  • Other popular ’60s planes: Piper PA-28
  • Doors? 1
  • Position of door: On the passengers’ side
  • Reason: Unknown
  • Doors? 2! One on each side
  • Safety concern: Door popping open in flight
  • Level of risk: From the door being open, almost none
  • Reason for increased risk: Pilot panic over the open door, loss of control
  • Airliners number of doors: Often up to three
  • Used for boarding and deplaning: Just one
  • Reason: Jetways are set up for one-door operations
  • Exception: Airbus A380 jumbo jet
  • Boarding doors: Three
  • Reason: Saves a lot of time when boarding as many as 500 passengers
  • Time to board full A380 flight: As little as 20 minutes
  • Early Cessna 172 issue, circa 1956: Poor door functionality
  • Early Cirrus SR22 issue, circa 2001:Poor door functionality
  • Number of doors on six-passenger TBM introduced in 1990: One
  • First year pilot-side door offered as an option: 2002
  • Cost: Around $50,000
  • Added weight: Around 75 pounds

This article was originally published in the May 2023 Issue of Plane & Pilot. Subscribe today so you don’t miss an issue!

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