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The F406 Caravan II is a twin turboprop engined, fourteen-seat low-wing monoplane of conventional aluminium (airframe) and steel (engine internal parts, exhaust, landing gear) construction. It is a development of the Cessna 404 Titan with two Pratt & Whitney PT6A turboprop engines.
Thus, a pilot of a jet aeroplane needs both an airspeed indicator and a Machmeter, with appropriate red lines. An ASI will include a red-and-white striped pointer, or "barber's pole", that automatically moves to indicate the applicable speed limit at any given time. [2]: 15–7
In March 2018, Pacific Aerospace launched an updated variant, the Super-Pac XL, with a 900 hp (670 kW) PT6A-140A up from 750 hp and a four-blade 108in (270 cm) Hartzell propeller. It competes with the Supervan 900 re-engined Cessna 208 Caravan with a 900 hp Honeywell TPE331 and 110in four-blade Hartzell propeller. A modified P-750 is ground ...
Dramatic video shows the moment the pilot of a small plane made a “textbook” emergency landing on just one wheel. Footage from Tuesday afternoon shows the Cape Air Cessna 402C heading back to ...
The Cessna 208 Caravan is a utility aircraft produced by Cessna. The project was commenced on November 20, 1981, and the prototype first flew on December 9, 1982. The production model was certified by the FAA in October 1984 and its Cargomaster freighter variant was developed for FedEx. The 4 ft (1.2 m) longer 208B Super Cargomaster first flew ...
1956 Cessna 182 on floats Cessna R182 Skylane RG, one of two variants with retractable landing gear Cockpit of Cessna 182M Skylane 1958 Cessna 182A landing 1967 model Cessna 182K belonging to the Canadian Owners and Pilots Association A Cessna 182P Reims Cessna F182Q Cessna 182Q fitted with the SMA SR305-230 engine Cessna T182T Cessna 182J 1981 Cessna 182R Skylane T182T cockpit with Garmin G1000
Pages in category "Accidents and incidents involving the Cessna 208 Caravan" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The horizontal situation indicator (commonly called the HSI) is an aircraft flight instrument normally mounted below the artificial horizon in place of a conventional heading indicator. It combines a heading indicator with a VHF omnidirectional range - instrument landing system (VOR-ILS) display.