Here's the bird I really would love to own:

Like a chariot in the sky. With your two horses charging forward! (I know cheesy cheesy.)
The twin Navion has an Achilles' heal: the nose gear fork. The nose gear was designed for a single, not a twin with more yaw on landing. I sold a fork to a guy outside of Seattle who had a nose gear failure, and this plane is sitting in a hanger (currently?) from a nose gear failure. They said it's been rebuilt five times!
Unknown date - N722T suffers from a nose landing gear collapse.
October 2011 - Michael Callison from the museum provides us with this update:
The landing light holes were fiberglass over to repair a previous damage from previous accidents. TT-90 has been major repaired around 5 times. Lots of different parts on the aircraft have different serial numbers. We installed the landing lights on the gear legs and put gear doors back on the mains. The engines were overhauled last in 1963 which was quite a while ago. The compressions are good but the right engine was starting to make metal and probably has a camshaft starting to go. Needless to say we would like to get this one back into the air. We spent over $5,000.00 on have the exhaust completely rebuilt before the accident. The replacement nose piece will have landing lights back in it.
October 2013 - advertised for sale
Anyone know more about this?
------------------------------------------------------------
Vosburgh Airfield, P.O. Box 207, New Cuyama, CA 93254
jason.vosburgh@vosburghairfield.comCell: (805) 766-3880
http://www.airnav.com/airport/5CN4http://www.VosburghAirfield.com