I agree that the Piper aircraft is aesthetically superior to the Cessna LSA.
However, I am concerned with the prices of these two LSA's and also by the reduction in domestic construction. When it was originally announced in concept, the Cessna 162 was to be domestically constructed and priced in the $50,000 to $60,000 range. That is why peoples' excitement was so high, and why so much disappointment was aired throughout the industry with the final result.
Instead, the Cessna 162 is priced at $140,000 and made in the PRC.
Piper is doing much better on the price with an expected cost of about $100,000. However, this still puts the aircraft slightly outside the cost structure most middle income people are willing to plunk down. I fully realize there is a vast difference in required training (and therefore training costs and time) involved, but to put this into comparison, a new Piper LSA costs only $10,000 to $30,000 less than a 1970's to 1980's vintage used high performance twin engine aircraft, and about $50,000 more than a 1980's and even early 1990's vintage Cessna 172SP.
Airplanes well cared for last a very long time and the prices I quoted are for high quality (well maintained) used aircraft. That $50,000 to $60,000 cost structure would have offered a real revolution in personal aircraft ownership. It would have put a 15 to 20-year loan in the range of an average new car payment. Combined with the new aircraft depreciation option, it would have leveraged an undertapped market. The resulting expansion of the GA market would have applied cost pressures to lower prices of avionics and likely have increased the pool of maintenance and avionics shops.
I'm certainly not privvied to the spreadsheets of Cessna and Piper, but I must conclude that there is too much excess cost built into these two LSA's. When I think of the technologies in these two designs I cannot come to any other conclusion but that the two designs are still over priced for their intended markets. I'm not sure what must be done, but on a purely objective consideration, I refuse to believe it is impossible for an establish US-based aircraft company to build a $50,000 to $60,000 LSA and construct it within the nation to keep our aviation industry healthy and vibrant.
Further, I am more convinced that if that barrier were broken, that it would realize advantages elsewhere that are truly underappreciated by nearly the entire aviation industry.
Cheers,
Ken