1985 CESSNA A185F

1985 CESSNA A185F for sale
$275,000
Good Deal
Year
1985
Make
Cessna
Model
A185F
Total Time
6,602 hr
Location
Taylor, TX
Seller
Volation Limited
Source
controller.com
← View all Cessna A185F for sale View on controller.com →

Performance & Capacity

Seats
6
Cruise
145 kts
Max Speed
127 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 29 active listings

This listing at $275,000 is near median.

Description

If you know what you are looking at, you appreciate how incredibly valued the C185 tail dragger is to the private pilot community. These aeroplanes are like art pieces - slowly accruing in value as the years past and the demand grows year on year. This example wants for nothing and our client is ready to see it fly off to a new owner. If ever there was a bullet proof aviation investment - the Cessna A185F is the poster child. Call or email to discuss - this is a valued aeroplane in todays market.

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.