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Showing posts with label small planes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label small planes. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Folding Plane

A California startup revealed an aircraft

on Wednesday evening built for an increasingly popular new kind of pilot—the weekend aviator with a jones for expensive toys.

Loaded with features like folding wings (so you can keep it in your garage) and seat belt-like parachutes (so you can ease the whole thing down to the ground), ICON Aircraft’s new light sport airplane (LSA), dubbed the A5, might just be the ultimate joyride.

“We designed it so that people who don’t know airplanes know that something has changed,” Kirk Hawkins, ICON’s chief executive officer, told Popular Mechanics.

What’s changed are federal regulations, which created a new form of airplane and a new kind of pilot licence that requires less training and no medical check to obtain. The Federal Aviation Administration created the Sport Pilot category in 2004, but only now are players large and small entering this virgin market. At the “Sun ’n Fun Fly-In,” an aircraft festival held in Florida earlier this year, manufacturers showcased 75 LSAs, up from just 20 in 2006.

For ICON, reaching new customers meant a design that borrowed heavily from automobile marketing. “The product has to have sex appeal and be aesthetically inspirational,” Hawkins says. “It not only has to perform well, it has to look like it performs well.”

ICON faced another design hurdle in ensuring that aspiring pilots were not cowed by the risks of flight. The A5’s cockpit gauges look like they belong on a sports-car’s dashboard, while curved structures guard against accidental contact with the propeller whenever the plane is on the ground. Perhaps most crucial to this goal is that increasingly common parachute: no delicate maneuvers are necessary if the airplane is distressed—it can simply float to the ground.

Engineers at ICON also built the A5 to be a lot less of a hassle than other small aircraft, allowing owners to have a lot more fun. The wings can fold for storage in a large garage, and the airplane even comes with its own trailer. Amphibious models have platforms that connect to docks or piers. Versions of the A5 that can’t land in water will have automatic, rather than manual, folding wings.

Hawkings isn’t shy about his attempt to make flying small airplanes the luxury motor sport of the 21st century. “The passionate consumer will not use these to get to grandma’s house quicker,” he says. —Joe Pappalardo

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Embraer Phenom 100 Plane

Three More Brazilian Planes Sold to Middle East 

The Embraer Phenom 100 is a Very Light Jet (VLJ) developed by Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer. It has a capacity for 4 passengers in its normal configuration, but it can carry up to 6-7 passengers with a single crew, optional side facing seat and belted toilet. It has a maximum flying range of 1,178 nautical miles with 4 occupants and NBAA IFR Reserves. As of 1 January 2009, its price is US$ 3.6 million, (citation needed) with the first aircraft delivered in December 2008. The fourteenth plane was acquired on March, 25th 2009, by a private pilot.

Role                     :Very light jet
Manufacturer  : Embraer
First flight         : July 26, 2007
Status                  : In production
Produced           : 2007-
Number built   : 18
Unit cost            : US$ 3.6 million
Variants             : Embraer Phenom 300

Embraer, the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer, announced the sale of three executive jets to United Aviation, company from Kuwait that operates luxury air charter services.

According to information from the Brazilian company, orders were made for one Phenom 100, one Phenom 300 and one Legacy 600. With this contract, the number of orders for executive aircrafts Embraer has received from the Middle East increases to 10, of which five have already been delivered.

According to Embraer, the Legacy should be delivered in October this year. United Aviation already has two airplanes of this model, which they received in 2004. The two Phenom, new model of the Brazilian industry for executive aviation, should be delivered between 2008 and 2010. The Kuwaiti company will launch the new models in the region.

The Legacy has capacity for taking up to 16 passengers, the Phenom 100 for four and the Phenom 300 for six people. "The Phenom 100 and the Phenom 300 represent a natural choice to complete our current fleet and are part of an expansion strategy in the Middle East," said the president of United Aviation, Abdul Salam Al Bahar, according to a statement released by Embraer.

According to him, the company started working in the field of luxury flights using the two Legacy they already own.

The vice-president for the executive aviation market at Embraer, Luís Carlos Affonso, said in a recent interview that the company considers the Middle East one of the main markets in the world for the sector.

In May the company sold two Legacy in the region, one for the president of the bank Fransabank, the Lebanese Adnan Kassar, and another to Celtel International, subsidiary of the Kuwaiti MTC in Africa. Kassar is also president of General Union of Chambers of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture of the Arab Countries, of which the Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce is a member.

Embraer did not disclose the value of the contract, but the stated price of the Legacy 600 is of US$ 24.5 million, the Phenom 100 costs US$ 2.75 million and the Phenom 300 costs US$ 6.65 million. The first units of the Phenom 100 are to get to the market mid 2008 and the Phenom 300 one year later.

United Aviation, which also operates helicopters, belongs to Kuwait Projects Company (KIPCO), a holding company that has business in many other areas, like finances, insurance, telecommunications, real estate, food products and industry. According to information from the site Ame Info, specialized in economics in the Arab world, the group manages assets of US$ 15 billion, employs 12,000 people around the world and had a profit of US$ 130 million last year.

Anba - www.anba.com.br

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Hawker 400 XP, Hawker Beechcraft Plane

Whether you planned your flight months in advance or the travel bug caught you quite by surprise, the Hawker 400 XP is the perfect mode of transport for any kind of trip.















Hawker Beechcraft machines have a reputation for high performance and luxurious comfort and the 400 XP is certainly no exception; with the largest and most luxurious cabin, fitted out in stylish cherry wood, gold inlaid tables and real leather seats, it offers a touch of home comfort in the air. Interior temperature and lighting levels can of course be controlled to create the perfect travelling atmosphere and personal on-board monitors keep you up to date on the flight status for the duration of your time in the air. Capable of speeds up to 867 km/h the 400 XP provides speedy and luxurious travel and is yours for $19m.















Author: Ursula Hannan

Gulfstream G550, Gulfstream Plane

Luxury Business Jets – Limos Of The Sky

Those who spend their average day in a spacious country mansion or townhouse, also require that little dash of luxury in the air and with the popular Gulfstream G550 that’s exactly what you get.

The flagship model of the Gulfstream range, the G550 has also become the jet of choice for Hollywood’s top stars; Tom Cruise and Barbara Streisand swear by the airplane’s high performance and John Travolta has his own baby parked out in the front garden.

Faster than many other business jets of its kind, the G550 is capable of reaching up to Mac 0.87 and performs equally well in strong winds; it can also fly 10,863 km without a stop-off – that’s the equivalent of an uninterrupted passage from New York to Tokyo. Relax in the spacious 15.3m cabin, offering comfortable seating for up to sixteen passengers and enjoy an in-flight DVD or the views from the panorama windows.

In addition, an external camera system provides spectacular
on-board images of take-off and landing. Needless to say, such luxury comes with a price; this time $46m.

www.gulfstream.com

Author: Ursula Hannan

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Piaggio P-180 Avanti plane





























The P180 Avanti II is Piaggio Aero’s flagship product. It is the world’s fastest turboprop business aircraft. It offers customers the speed of a light jet aircraft, the comfort of a large, quiet, midsize cabin, and fuel efficiencies that are nearly 40% higher than most business jets and 25% higher than the most efficient twin turboprops.

The P180 Avanti II is the culmination of an effort by Piaggio Aero engineers to design, without compromise, an aircraft to meet the objectives of jet-like speed, a wide-body, stand-up cabin, and turboprop efficiency. After an intensive aerodynamic analysis and thousands of hours of wind tunnel testing, Piaggio engineers concluded that these goals could not be achieved utilizing conventional aircraft configurations.

Thus the P180 design evolved to include the following:

• PIAGGIO’s patented Three-Lifting-Surface Configuration (3LSC), which permits a 34-percent reduction in total wing area over conventional designs, thereby reducing weight and drag;

• A non-cylindrical, low-drag fuselage shapedeveloped through extensive wind tunnel testing to allow a large cabin cross section without a large drag penalty;

While its surface appearance is radically different from other aircraft, there is much to the
P.180 that pilots and maintenance personnel will find conventional and familiar:

• Well known and widely used systems;
• 95-percent aluminium construction;
• Conventional flight controls.

Thanks to this unique combination of the innovative and the conventional, you can enjoy the P.180’s exhilarating performance and exceptional comfort, while flying with confidence in the Avanti II’s proven technologies and systems.

As you read through the following aircraft specifications, you will reach the inevitable conclusion. The Avanti II offers more performance, more comfort and greater efficiency at a lower price than any other business aircraft available today.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

DC-3 planes












The Transportation Security Administration is writing some rules (.pdf) it says will increase the security of general aviation, a category so broad it covers everything that isn't a military or scheduled commercial flight. The edict, if adopted, would hold the operators of small planes to a rash of new regulations, some of which mirror those now in place for commercial aircraft.

The TSA puts a forward spin on the regs, which would, among other things, require fingerprinting and background-checking of flight crews, cross-referencing pasenger manifests with no-fly lists and conducting "safety threat assessments" on passengers and crew members. "General aviation operators are excellent security partners and this will give them a strong common framework for security," TSA Administrator Kip Hawley said in announcing the proposed rules. "This will reduce risk while supporting the open nature of the general aviation industry."

The people who will have to follow the new rules don't see it that way.

The new guidelines would apply to all general aviation aircraft over 12,500 pounds, a category that by some estimates includes more than 10,000 aircraft nationwide. The feds would tap an unspecified third party to establish and run a "compliance assurance program." In other words, aircraft operators would face annual inspections.

The general aviation community bristles at many of the proposed rules because not only will they be time consuming and annoying, but some of them will incur financial costs. For example, nearly 300 general aviation airports will be required to adopt potentially expensive security programs and they'll almost certainly pass those costs on to those who use those airports.

The Experimental Aircraft Association, which represents private pilots and aircraft enthusiasts, has had a look at the TSA proposal and isn't happy with it. “These new regulations would compel many operators of large vintage aircraft, warbirds, turboprops and others over 12,500 pounds to comply with new, costly, and burdensome requirements which, frankly, do not appear to equate with their risk assessment profiles,” says Douglas Macnair, vice president of government relations. “General aviation aircraft are not carrying the public and are in all instances pilots are personally acquainted with their passengers."

The EAA also plays the patriotism card, saying the proposed rules would bring restrictive requirements to range of aircraft "flown in tribute to those who fought to secure the very freedoms now being threatened." Take that, TSA.

The EAA has compiled a fairly comprehensive list of aircraft that would fall under the new rules. It includes the DC-2 and DC-3, the Sikorsky S-61 helicopter and the Convair CV-240, the last of which was manufactured in 1956. The TSA will seek 60 days of public comment before moving forward.

It's likely to get an earful.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Cessna 310 planes










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