NAGY MESEROLE TERESA A· ICAO24 a9e793· last seen 5d ago

N7371M is a Cessna 175, a single-engine piston aircraft operated by NAGY MESEROLE TERESA A. SkyMeter has tracked 42 flights totalling 15 hours of airtime via ADS-B. The most frequent segment is 3W3 to KESN. Service window in our records spans 288 days. Of those flights, 2 (4.8%) carry at least one detected incident: a go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The Cessna 175 has a 36 ft wingspan, a maximum takeoff weight of 2,450 lb.

About the Cessna 175

The Cessna 175 Skylark represents one of general aviation's more interesting commercial missteps: a promising idea undermined by mechanical complexity. Introduced in 1958 as a higher-performance sibling to the wildly successful 172, the 175 paired the familiar Skyhawk airframe with a geared Continental GO-300 engine producing 175 horsepower. The geared propeller allowed the engine to spin at higher RPM while the prop turned more slowly, theoretically delivering better performance and fuel efficiency. On paper, the 175 offered a 15-knot cruise advantage over the 172 and superior climb rate, making it attractive to pilots seeking more capability without stepping up to a retractable-gear aircraft.

In practice, the geared engine proved troublesome. The reduction gearbox required careful maintenance and was prone to expensive failures if operators didn't follow Continental's strict procedures, particularly the mandatory five-second pause at 1,200 RPM during runup to allow oil pressure to build in the gears. Many rental operators and private owners accustomed to simpler direct-drive engines found this finicky, and gear failures became common enough to tarnish the type's reputation. Parts availability declined as Continental discontinued the GO-300, and insurance costs climbed. By 1962, after just 2,106 examples, Cessna quietly discontinued the 175 and refocused on the 172, which would go on to become the most-produced aircraft in history.

Today the 175 occupies an unusual niche among collectors and budget-conscious pilots. Many have been converted to standard Lycoming engines, effectively turning them into 172s with different data plates. Unconverted examples with well-maintained GO-300s can still deliver that original performance promise, cruising around 140 knots at altitude, genuinely faster than a contemporary 172. The type's brief production run and mechanical quirks make it a footnote in Cessna's history, but one that illustrates how even minor engineering decisions can determine an aircraft's commercial fate. SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the most frequently observed.

FLIGHTS
42
all time
FLOWN HOURS
15
tracked time
📍
AIRPORTS VISITED
7
unique
📡
CALLSIGNS
1
9 routes
📅
SERVICE PERIOD
09/28/2025 → 07/13/2026
first → last
INCIDENT RATE
4.8%
2 flagged

Top routes

By flight count

7
3W3 KESN
4
3W3 3W3
2
3W3 KANP
2
0MD7 W29
1
0MD7 3W3
1
KESN 3W3
1
KESN W29
1

Flight numbers

Most-flown by this airframe

1

Aircraft specifications

Cessna 175

Engines
Single Piston
Vref (approach)
56 kt
MTOW
2,450 lb
Wingspan
36 ft
Length
25 ft
Wake category
Light

Recent flights

Newest 21 operations of N7371M

21
07/13/2026
36m
No alerts
07/10/2026
21m
No alerts
04/03/2026
38m
No alerts
03/22/2026
33m
No alerts
03/11/2026
26m
No alerts
01/02/2026
11m
△ Low approach-stability score
11/14/2025
44m
No alerts
11/01/2025
28m
No alerts
© SkyMeter · All flight data subject to ODbL attribution