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Cheyenne IIIA, model PA-42-720, equipped with PT6A-61 engines. [7] Cheyenne IV, model PA-42-1000, later the Cheyenne 400LS, and then Cheyenne 400. This is the largest aircraft ever made by Piper, with 43 built. Powered by 1,000 shp (750 kW) Garrett TPE-331 engines, and four-blade props. [1]
A military aircraft crashed near Albuquerque’s main airport and a US Air Force base Tuesday afternoon, and the pilot – having ejected before the wreck – was sent to a hospital with serious ...
The aircraft involved in the accident was a twin engine Piper PA-42-1000 Cheyenne, which was manufactured in 1989 or 1990 by Piper Aircraft and was registered with ANAC with the registration PR-NDN. The aircraft involved had up-to-date documentation and had capacity for two crew members and nine passengers.
A military pilot ejected to safety as their aircraft crashed off of the airfield at the Albuquerque International Sunport, the primary international airport in New Mexico.
A military fighter jet on its way to an Air Force base in California crashed Tuesday near the international airport in New Mexico's largest city, sending up a large plume of smoke and injuring the ...
Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1976–77 General characteristics Crew: 2 Capacity: 4–6 passengers Length: 34 ft 8 in (10.57 m) Wingspan: 42 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 4 in (13.011 m) (over tip tanks) Height: 12 ft 9 in (3.89 m) Wing area: 229 sq ft (21.3 m 2) Airfoil: NACA 63 2 -415 at root, 63A212 at tip Empty weight: 4,870 lb (2,209 kg) Max takeoff weight: 9,000 lb (4,082 kg) Fuel capacity ...
January 21 – A Piper PA-46 Malibu light aircraft transporting footballer Emiliano Sala crashed off Alderney in the Channel Islands. The aircraft had been travelling from Nantes, France, to Cardiff, Wales. The wreckage of the aircraft was found thirteen days later. [77] Sala's remains were recovered on 7 February. [78]
A small, twin-engine aircraft with only the pilot inside crashed near a busy highway in Texas on Wednesday, according to officials. The incident, under investigation by the Federal Aviation ...