Now there's a new Supplemental Type Certificate (STC) that will increase the useful load of your Cessna 182P or 182Q by 150 to 160 pounds and your ramp weight (in most cases) by 160 pounds.
Best of all, this new STC requires no parts, no modifications, and no installation labor costs. One low initial price and your airplane suddenly gains greater utility, value, and safety benefits.
How did we do this? By investing in a multi-year FAA engineering, flight test, and certification program. We call the STC a Fresh Pick because no similar STC has been introduced for your airplane since it was built some 44 to 52 years ago!
*These numbers assume that the increased MGTOW is used for fuel only, and will vary with specific fuel consumption and your chosen cruise power settings.
This chart illustrates why the STC is an important contributor to increasing the usefulness, utility, value, and safety of the Cessna 182P and 182Q airplanes. Note the line depicted for our STC suggests that the highest ever 182 useful loads available are for the 1972-1975 182P models. However, take this all with a grain of salt; the empty weight reference is the Cessna "standard" for those years, and your airplane may very well be heavier today. All we can promise is an increase in useful load of at least 150 pounds for every 182P and 182Q ever built.
You have several choices. Most commonly, you'll likely use the STC for the flexibility to carry full fuel in the tanks. This option (which offers about an additional 25 US gallons) comes with the peace of mind that only added range and endurance can provide... especially in the face of unexpected weather or the need to divert to an alternate. In these days of higher fuel prices, this also might let you avoid an extra fuel stop and all the flight inefficiencies and costs that it portends. (Of course, don't get lulled into passing by that fuel stop when it's really needed.) Needless worry and sweat about near-empty fuel guages over hostile terrain is something we all want to avoid.
By taking this approach, your true payload will be lower than it could have been (since fuel is not considered "payload") but your useful load and gross weight have both been increased by at least 150 pounds.
Alternatively, you might only partially fill the tanks, really load up the cabin, and use some of the extra 150 pound gross for payload. There is no Zero Fuel Weight limitation. Just remember that the landing weight remains at 2950 pounds, so you'll need to burn off about 25 gallons before landing. What if you must land above 2950? Well, then you just do it. FAA has approved our STC with Instructions for Continued Airworthiness (ICA - see the link above) covering just such a case. Smooth technique is advised here, but your Cessna 182P/Q is built tough and will come through it OK.
Finally, you might want to carry a very minimal fuel load in favor of "jettisonable" payload... a skydiving operation to carry another 150 - 160 pound jumper comes to mind, but there may be other cases as well. The point of it all is that your loading flexibility and your airplane's utility have been markedly improved.
In 1981, Cessna introduced the 182R model, built until production ended in 1986. Just like our STC does for the 182P and 182Q, Cessna amended their Type Certificate to a 3110 ramp, 3100 MGTOW, and 2950 design landing weight. These numbers remain in place to the present day, even for the later 182S, 182T, and T182T models. Yet, all of the fixed gear 182 airplanes built since 1981 have a narrower CG loading envelope, in fact truncated at the aft limit by 2.5 inches less than the 182P and 182Q airplanes. While we accepted these same limitations for our STC when you operate your airplane at weights above 2950 (it has to do with worst-case stick force requirements), we proposed to FAA that there is no reason why the 182P and 182Q airplanes should not retain their original expanded envelope at weights of 2950 and below. FAA agreed. The result is that incorporating our Fresh Pick STC means that your 1972 to 1980 model Skylane, whether it's the 182P or the 182Q flavor, will have better loading flexibility and a wider CG envelope than any 182R, 182S, 182T or T182T that ever left the Cessna factory.
Is there more gross weight growth left "in the cards" for these airplanes? Probably not, even for the Part 23 certified restart airplanes. The constraint is very likely the required limit testing under worst case unsymmetrical wing loading. So, for now at least, unless Cessna changes the design, the Fresh Pick STC is probably the best that can be done.
It is worth noting that the Type Certificate Data Sheet (TCDS 3A13) for all the fixed-gear 182 airplanes allows a 30% increase in MGTOW under an FAA issued Special Ferry Flight Authorization (a "Ferry Permit"), but with some very important operational restrictions. These are strong airplanes.
Our comprehensive "FAQ" (Frequently Asked Questions) page might provide the answer you've been looking for.
If your question has still not been answered, visit our "REQUEST INFO" page and we'll return an answer in short order.
On the "DOWNLOADS" page you will find a sample flight manual supplement for your airplane. This will give you a good idea about performance changes when operating at weights above 2950 pounds.
Should you be interested in how this all was accomplished, visit our "HISTORY" page describing the development of our Fresh Pick STC.
We promised the FAA's Aircraft Evaluation Group we'd make our most current Instructions for Continued Airworthiness (ICA) available on this website for you or your maintenance provider.
The "LINKS" page provides some other information sources and related documentation.
Finally, of course, there's the all-important "PURCHASE" page. Major credit cards are welcome! Your complete STC data package, with the required permissions and serialized to your airplane, will be E-mailed within 72 hours or less.
Your one time cost is US $750, not much more than filling the tanks for a long cross-country trip!
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