This is my first post here. I've been a member for a few weeks now, lurked a bit, read a lot, and appreciate all of the knowledge I'm seeing here. I have seen some excellent posts on here.
I am an Aerospace Engineer and have had my private pilot's license since 1989. I've got lots of Cessna time including a bunch in a 206 and a little in a 177, along with the 150/152/172 time we tend to get early on. I've also got some Stearman time (my favorite to date!), a little Waco time, and even flew the RV-7 prototype out at Van's. I love airplanes.
A good friend of mine turned me on to the Piper Comanche. I cannot believe I overlooked this plane! I wish I had bought one 20 years ago when I was single and had more disposable income

Seriously though, I would like to buy one now. I am pretty knowledgeable about aircraft. But, I want to learn as many ins and outs of the Comanche as I can before I buy one. I read about a gent in Sport Aviation that bought a Bonanza for $40k, thought he got a great deal, got it home and discovered it had so much serious corrosion that it would cost another $140K to make it airworthy. I don't want to end up in that boat. All of the reading I did pointed to the ICS as THE organization for these birds. So I joined up.
I'm trying to read as much as I can before I post a bunch of questions, as I'm sure most everything has already been answered. Nevertheless, I'm sure I will have many dumb and silly questions for you guys that are obvious to those that have owned these planes. Please don't throw too many pies at me

From my engineering/hot rod point of view, I think Pug really got it right with this design. It looks to me like he had his folks take what they could from the WWII era fighters and make a real winner of a civil plane. Tapered wing with a laminar flow airfoil, zinc chromate on the internals to prevent corrosion, electro-mechanical landing gear that is simple and reliable, and a solid airframe. They got it right. Even if it was a bit complex. I want one!
Glad to join your crew, and hope to be flying with you soon.
Jim