1981 CESSNA A185F NO LONGER LISTED
This listing is no longer available on the source. The details below reflect the last known information.
No photo available
$325,000
- Year
- 1981
- Make
- Cessna
- Model
- A185F
- Total Time
- 2,370 hr
- Location
- Placerville, CA
- Seller
- Mark Pilkington
- Source
- controller.com
Performance & Capacity
- Seats
- 6
- Cruise
- 145 kts
- Range
- 720 nm
- Useful Load
- 1,440 lbs
- Burn
- 15.5 gph
- Engines
- 1 · Reciprocating
- Power
- 300 hp
- MTOW
- 12,500 lbs
- ICAO Type
- C185
Manufacturer-published specs for the Cessna A185F model. Actual aircraft may vary by configuration / modifications.
Operating Cost (est.)
- Hourly Variable
- $175
- Annual Fixed
- $22,000
- Engine Overhaul
- $35,000
- TBO
- 2,000 hrs
AeroGurus estimates based on industry averages for the Cessna A185F. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.
Market price band
Cessna A185F typical:
$190,000 – $899,500
median $269,000
across 28 active listings
This listing at $325,000 is 21% above median.
Description
V" Brace
Tailwheel lock
Right side openable window
Soros air vent tubes
Rosen visors
BAS shoulder harnesses
BAS tailcone lift handles
Pilot side articulating seat
Door stewards
Seat arrestor belt
High backed quick release split backed rear bench seat
Extended baggage area
Snyder speed kit
800x6 main tires
XP Modifications 10" Tailwheel
Wingtip strobes
Rear seat vents
Refuelling steps and handles
Chrome spinner
Scimitar three blade prop
Brackett air filter
Large non-congealing oil cooler
Lightweight starter
Cowling cooling lovers
Kossola Engine mount
Horizontal stabilizer abrasion boots
Jackscrew access panels
Ground power input
Engine
Engine 1 Time
68 SMOH
Engine TBO
1,500
Engine Notes
Engine Time: 68 Hours SMOH on IO-550D
Props
Number of Blades
3
Prop Notes
Propeller Time: 78 SPOH on Scimitar McCauley three blade
Avionics
Avionics/Radios
King KMA 24 Audio panel with 3LMB
Garmin GNS 530W color IFR moving map GPS/Com
Garmin G5 Color PFD
Garmin GTX 345 ADSB Transponder
Garmin area 660 portable GPS
King KCS 55A Slaved HSI
King KY 196 Digital flip/flop Com
S-Tec 30 Autopilot with altitude hold
King KNS 80 RNAV
BF Goodrich WX-8 Stormscope
EDM 700 graphic six cylinder engine analyzer
Hoskin fuel flow computer
King KR 87 ADF with BFO
Avionics master switch
External antenna connection for portable com
Kenwood CD/AM/FM radio
Remote autopilot controls on yoke
Dual yoke mounted push-to-talk buttons
Outside air temp' guage
Exterior
Exterior Notes
Bright white base with burgundy major accent and gray minor accent in traditional late model 180/185 scheme. Overall excellent condition, rated 9 out of 10.
Interior
Interior Notes
Gray leather seats with Maroon and gray fabric inserts, matching side panels and carpet. Cream headliner. Overall rated 8 out of 10.
Inspection Status
Inspection Status
Annual Due: February 2026
Airworthy
Yes
About the Cessna A185F
The Cessna 185 Skywagon is the definitive American bush plane — a four-seat, high-wing taildragger that carried Alaska, delivered missionaries, and hauled freight across the world's roughest terrain from 1961 to 1985. Powered by a Continental IO-520-D (300 HP), the 185 delivers 150 KTAS cruise with a useful load exceeding 1,100 lbs on wheels and serious payload even on floats. With approximately 4,400 built, the 185 is no longer in production — and surviving examples appreciate in value year after year.
What makes the 185 legendary. The tailwheel configuration keeps the propeller clear of debris on gravel strips. The 300 HP Continental provides the power-to-weight ratio needed for short-field operations with a full load. On Edo or Wipaire floats, the 185 is the most popular bush floatplane in North America after the de Havilland Beaver. The 185 can operate from gravel bars, glaciers, tundra, and unimproved strips where nosewheel aircraft cannot go.
Key variants. The 185 (1961-1967) used the Continental IO-470-F (260 HP). The A185E/F (1966-1985) upgraded to the IO-520-D (300 HP). The A185F is the most desirable variant — 300 HP, later-production refinements, and the most remaining airframe life. The 180 Skywagon is the smaller sibling with a Continental O-470 (230 HP) — less power but lighter, simpler, and often cheaper.
Buying advice. Corrosion is the primary concern on any 185, especially float-equipped aircraft. Inspect belly skins, float attach fittings, wing strut attachments, and lower fuselage longerons. Continental IO-520 engines are reliable but check for case through-bolt corrosion and crankshaft counterweight wear. The 185 tailwheel spring and tailwheel housing wear from hard landings on rough strips. Fabric condition on fabric-covered ailerons (some models). Float condition (Edo 2960 or Wipaire 3000) dramatically affects value — fresh floats can cost $30,000-$60,000.
Market. Cessna 180: $80,000-$180,000. Cessna 185 on wheels: $100,000-$200,000. A185F on amphibious floats: $180,000-$350,000. Premium examples with fresh engine, floats, and modern avionics: $250,000-$400,000+. A Cessna 185 for sale is an appreciating asset — these aircraft are not being made anymore, and demand from bush operators and adventure pilots only grows.
Produced 1973–1985.