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The PA-28-161 Warrior II flying in the livery of the Singapore Youth Flying Club. At the time of the Cherokee's introduction, Piper's primary single-engined, all-metal aircraft was the Piper PA-24 Comanche, a larger, faster aircraft with retractable landing gear and a constant-speed propeller.
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PA-28-140 Cherokee: 1964 10,089 Two-seat training variant PA-28 Warrior: 1974 4,842 Improved PA-28 PA-28-235 Cherokee/Dakota: 1964 2,913 Higher-power PA-28 PA-28R Arrow: 1967 6,694 Retractable landing gear variant of the PA-28 PA-28R-300 Pillán: 1982 2 [a] Two-seat military trainer designed for ENAER of Chile PA-29 Papoose: 1962 1
The PA-44-180T Turbo Seminole version was certified on November 29, 1979. It features two turbocharged 180 hp (135 kW) Lycoming TO-360-E1A6D engines, which offer a significant improvement in performance at high density altitude. The Turbo Seminole had its takeoff gross weight raised to 3925 lb (1780 kg), while the landing weight remained at ...
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 12:48, 4 September 2017: 3,852 × 2,564 (3.55 MB): Arpingstone {{Information |Description=The cockpit of a Piper Aircraft Corporation PA-28-151 at Bristol Airport, England.
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Piper Aircraft Company factory in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania during the 1930s, with the Piper Cub logo superimposed at the top Piper PA-18-150 Super Cub.Built 1958. Piper PA-28-161 Warrior II Piper PA-34 Seneca-200T Piper PA-31 Navajo airframe used for crash testing by NASA after a 1972 flood inundated Piper's factory Early-production PA-31 Navajo Piper PA-32-RT-300T Turbo Lance II Piper PA-44 ...
The PA-32 series was developed to meet a requirement for a larger aircraft than the four-seat Piper PA-28 Cherokee. [3] The first prototype PA-32 made its initial flight on December 6, 1963, with the type being publicly announced in October 1964, with Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) aircraft_type certification following on March 4, 1965. [4]