That is a nice looking Deb, same year as mine. The FAA site says it is serial # CD-154, mine, N35F is CD-72. My father once owned N421T which lived in Texas for a while, but is now in Colorado.
I see it has a three blade prop, was it repowered? I bought the DeShannon STC and put an IO-520BB and McCaulley C-406 in mine in 2003. Wow, what a difference over the tired old 470.
Look closer...that's a two-blade McCauley prop. My buddy got distracted helping a hangar-mate move a C210 and walked back to his Deb from the tail,,, forgetting to remove the tow-bar. He had replaced an ammeter and wanted to taxi out to the runup area to test it. As soon as the engine started the nosegear oleo compressed and he experienced a prop-strike.
Insurance paid for an engine tear-down and prop (and he was lucky because since he wasn't starting it to go fly but only to do a test run... it was considered a "not in motion/ground-event" and his zero-deductible applied.
Basically, he got a lower-end overhaul on engine and the original prop and governor and spinner were no longer available so he got all new/more modern units. A year later, he landed down in Progresso at Pedersen's mod facility (looks more like an 18-wheeler wrecking yard from the air) and landed on a close-by parallel street instead of the street-like actual runway 50' east. On roll-out the nosegear collapsed when it hit a 6" curb.
Once-again, insurance picked up the tab and this time it cost him his $1K deductible to get a modern, New A-36 nosegear (replacing the original out-of-availability which had mandatory service bulletins against it) and another engine bottom overhaul and new prop.
He later replaced all six cylinders with new. (In effect, making it a complete Major Overhaul, but because of the sequence of events, looks like 3 major repairs instead.)
Before he died, he was very worried that he'd not get good value from that airplane when he quit flying and sold it because the records didn't indicate Major Overhauls but instead Major Repairs, when in-fact the engine was very low-time.,,, however the repairs lead one to believe an engine with high time between Ovhls because of the continued "time in service" math.
He died unexpectedly in unsuccessful recovery from surgery-gone-badly and poorly advised by close family member (my opinion) to enter hospice rather than change doctors. The airplane went to Angel Flight and I believe it's now under change-of registration, probably sold to someone in OR. If that person ever contacted me I could tell them a lot about that airplane which isn't obvious.
But, they are really nice little airplanes. His also had an interior trim that other Debs do not have because Pedersen used it to develop new products. He had also won the AvWeb lottery and it has a new Avidyne ID540 in it, recently installed.
Moderators: we didn't mean to hijack this thread. Feel free to split it off and retitle it. Apologies to others.