Congratulations on your first pass.
Do you have anything other than a G1000 to pick from? For instance with gauges, dials and proper instruments rather than the McPanel of the Garmin?
A Turbo 182 can't be cheap compared to other options if available. I can see it being beneficial in about 150 hours when you're polishing up for the commercial especially if whatever multiengine you're using has similar avionics but 200 hours in a Turbo whiz-bang 182 seems inefficient.
Thanks
We have for the time being:
4x Cessna 172r's $128/hr
1x CEssna 172M $108/hr
1x Cessna C182TC W/G1000 $180/hr
4x Piper Warrior III's (Garmin 430's) $128/hr
1x Piper Arrow III $160/hr
1x Piper Seminole $280/hr
I will do most of my initial instrument with the 172R or Warrior (havent decided if i really want to fly the warrior or not yet) and then in Stage 3 start flying the 182 on the long cross countries. For Commercial i will fly the 172, 182 and arrow for sure and then the seminole for multi. However, Im only paying 60% of the above costs, so about $76/hr for a Cessna 172R and $108/hr for the 182 due to a contract my school has with the state in which the state gives a 40% discount on my rentals.
The 182 is the only G1000 a/c as of now, however, they will be selling the 172M (due to a/c age contract) and the Arrow (engine about to time out and airframe has a crapload of time) and will be buying a new(er?) Arrow. So the new arrow might have a G1000 as well. The warriors have two garmin 430's in them while the C172r only have older garmins (no moving maps, just the info) which i cant remember the model off the top of my head. I dont know what arrrow or seminole have as i havent been in them, but they are 1989/1991 models respectively and i dont think they have ever modernized the avionics... Same for the 172M, dont know as i havent flown it and its a 1970's model.
All the piper aircraft are Ex-University of North Dakota aircraft and the 172R's are all from Western Michigan University. The 172M was bought straight from Cessna in the 70's...