Soloy Pathfinder 21

Soloy Pathfinder 21
Role Twin Turboprop
Manufacturer Cessna/Soloy
Status uncertified test bed
Number built 1
Developed from Cessna 208

The Soloy Pathfinder 21 is a twin-engine, single propeller turboprop aircraft manufactured by Aviation Solutions, and based on the successful Cessna 208 airframe. The aircraft is essentially a stock Cessna 208 airframe that has been stretched by 72 inches, with structural reinforcement, and is powered by twin Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6D-114A engines in a side-by-side Dual Pac configuration.

Design and development

Soloy modified a Cessna 208 to construct a prototype Pathfinder 21, with its first flight in 1995. The Dual Pac PT6D-114A engine used in the Pathfinder 21 gained its FAA Supplemental Type Certificate in 1997.[1] Soloy was attempting to obtain FAA certification for the aircraft conversion, but after completing over 80 percent of the certification work Soloy announced that it was halting the entire program. The CEO explained that the FAA requires aircraft with more than nine passengers to have the airframe meet tougher restrictions required by Federal Aviation Regulation (FAR) Part 25, which is a practical impossibility, since the Cessna 208 does not meet those requirements. This requirement makes it unfeasible to market the airplane as the expanded passenger cabin is a major reason for the stretch to begin with.[2] The prototype has not flown since 1999.

Specifications

Data from Soloy[3]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Related Development

References

  1. STC No. SE00482SE
  2. Mike Vines Cessna Caravan Story (Part Two) AvBuyer (last accessed April 12, 2007)
  3. "Pathfinder Specs". Soloy Corporation. Retrieved 2006-07-19.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/23/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.