180 LITE HOMEBUILT
KADEY-170
CF-PHC


All pictures of the complete plane taken before re-build started.
This is a unique yet very desirable airplane. With it you
have all the benefits of homebuilt registration (reduced maintenance costs, flexible
airframe mods) but with all the confidence of proven Cessna and Lycoming
technology. While it is a one of a kind design, it has been proven over close
to twenty years of use so you are not going to be the test pilot. Flown to Sun
n Fun twice and northern
The aircraft was first licensed in 1982 and has flown regularly and with no glitches until 2000 (450 total time). While I did finish and license the aircraft, the major work was done by someone else (Harold Kadey).
Performance is excellent. Handling is just like a 180 hp Cessna 170.
Here are the specs:
180 Lycoming with CS McCauley prop (zero since inspection
on prop), Fresh $5000 Leggat top on engine: all cylinders (engine is 320 SMOH in early 80’s zero since top and internal inspection
this year). It is a very smooth running 180.
2425 floats with dual water
rudders and pump outs (These floats and rigging came off an early Cessna 180
and fit with no changes.) They need
paint and bumpers but I may not get to that. 2425’s provide good flotation and
are a flat top float.
Construction: Fabric covered steel tube fuselage same
dimensions as 170/172
170B wings with STOL kit
and large manual flaps
Metal
wing tanks (35 gallons, fuel gauges are mechanical with indicators in the ends
of the tanks visible form the cockpit).
The
fuel selector is Cessna but mounted on the back of the firewall with handle on
the lower instrument panel beside trim wheel.
All
control surfaces metal.
180
gear,
3 or 4 seats, huge
baggage area, 6’ flat floor for camping (over 8.5’ from rudder pedals to back
of baggage area).
Baggage door added on left,
Metal
access panels behind cowl and at tail (I’m redoing the whole boot cowl),
Cessna windshield and wing struts
Cessna
lower cowl and nose bowl but Piper style upper cowl with two large doors that
provide wide open access to engine.
Seaplane
doors (hopefully, right now each door is split horizontally with top hinged at
top and bottom hinged at front).
172
straight tail; 172 balanced elevators, trim tab and rudder.
New
paint, fabric, glass (the thicker no center strap style), most cables,
hardware, plumbing
Tubing
oiled internally
Four
place intercom
720
channel radio. Basic panel but room for full gyro.
Minimal
interior (painted covering fabric like Cub)
Registered
homebuilt but most replacement parts Cessna and Lycoming
Empty
weight about 1400 on wheels. A friend’s recently rebuilt 170B weighed 1445 with
the 0-300 engine and fixed pitch prop.
Colour
will be creamy yellow (similar to the colour on the tubing shown below) with
burgundy trim (trim design undecided).
Rebuild
should be finished in 2010. Specs and equipment may change.

The nose slopes down a little more than a Cessna so over the nose visibility is excellent both taxiing and in flight.


In this picture the tail of the plane is off
the ground on a bipod to make the cabin floor level for sleeping during one of
the Sun n Fun trips
Here the plane is also in

This shot shows that the plane has been
totally stripped down. You are looking down through a point between the
firewall on the right and the location of the instrument panel on the left. The
truss below is for the gear attach: quite rugged. The containers are catching
tube oil. Next is the interior fabric
going on.

As of April 21, 05 covering is on but not taped; have the new windshield and have picked up the “new” engine.
As of June 1, 09 (OK so other projects took priority) covering and taping finished. Sealer coats on and painted. Here the covering is finished and UV block on. The wings and tail are 2/3rds stripped now.

The plane is located in south eastern
705-877-8404
Answers to other questions I’ve received:
What is history of engine?
The engine came out of a Piper Comanche in the 80s. The guy was
upgrading to an 0540 which I had at the time. We made a trade and
he put the engine through his shop, Alaskan Aero engines. It was
majored and I have all the doc on that. I didn't install it until
a few years later (1983). There was a 180 engine with the plane when I got it
but I did not have any history on it so when this engine came along I thought
it wise to put it in. I’ve put 320 hours on it. Since use was sporadic in later
years I thought it would sell
better if it went through a shop for a top and internal inspection.
Prop is 74.5” McCauley constant speed
Why did I take the plane apart?
There were no significant problems (nor any damage history) when I took the
plane out of service, just a few improvements needed. There had always been
some binding in
the elevator around neutral. This was because of a minor
misalignment of the elevator control horn pivot which I fixed.
Getting to the back of the baggage area was a pain so I've put in
a frame for a baggage door on the left side.
I didn't like the way the tail spring exited the fuselage and it was difficult
to remove it for floats so I
reworked it.
The tail wheel steering cables needed fair leads.
The windshield was getting scratched.
There will be a long metal inspection panel at the tail to make it easier to get at tail spring and cables for float change over.
There won't be a fancy interior if
any in it just regular covering fabric painted.
The top fabric goes right to the windshield. To strengthen the fabric just aft
of the windshield I’ve added about 16” of metal. When refueling with cans on
floats it is sometimes handy to set a can in this area or even to slide across
to the other side.
Performance:
Cruise on wheels is about 130 depending on power setting; on
floats 115 to 120.
Previous empty on wheels was 1425 I think; current gross is 1985 (the max
available for a homebuilt when I licensed it in 1982)
but pretty sure I could get 2400 now.
It may come out a bit lighter this time.
On one fishing trip to Chapleau on floats we had three guys and gear with no
problems. Another time, my son and I refueled at