* Australia and New Zealand are not noted as aircraft manufacturers, but they have developed a number of interesting aircraft -- including the "Nomad" twin-engine utility transport; the "Fletcher" series of agricultural aircraft; the "Seeker" light observation aircraft; and the eccentric "PL-12" agricultural aircraft. This document provides a history and description of these machines.
* In 1965, the Australian Government Aircraft Factory (GAF), began studies for a medium utility transport aircraft, leading the government to provide funding for two prototypes of what was designated the "N2 Nomad", with initial flight of the first prototype on 23 July 1971 -- leading to the initial production "N22" for the Australian Army. It was later dignified with the name "Missionmaster", to emphasize its distinction from purely civil variants of the Nomad.
The N22 Nomad provides a baseline for the series. It was a boxy aircraft, made primarily of aircraft aluminum alloy, with a high, straight, braced wing; a tall tailfin with a steep forward fillet; and a straight tailplane mounted above the fuselage topline. Flight controls were generally conventional -- ailerons, flaps, elevators, rudder, and trim tabs -- and all manually actuated. The only peculiarity was that the double slotted flaps were in two sections, together spanning the wing, with the outboard section being "flaperons" that doubled as ailerons. De-icing boots were optional.
The aircraft was powered by twin Allison 250-B17B turboprops, with 300 skW (400 sHP) each, driving metal three-bladed reversible Hartzell props. There were fuel tanks in the wings, with a total capacity of 1,018 liters (269 US gallons); integral wingtip tanks could be fitted to add 337 liters (85 US gallons) of capacity. Ferry tanks could be fitted in the cargo bay as well.
The N22 had tricycle landing gear -- the steerable single-wheel nose gear retracting backwards, each of the twin-wheel main gear retracting into a pod mounted on a stub wing on the lower fuselage. The wing struts connected to the pods. Retraction was electrically driven.
The N22 had dual controls, and could carry 12 passengers. The cockpit side windows doubled as front-hinged doors, with built-in steps / handholds below the windows to provide access. There was a double door on the left rear fuselage, with an emergency escape hatch opposite on the right. The rear double-door was the passenger door, with a tilt-down steps. The front door was front-hinged into the forward door -- which was front-hinged as well, the two folding up together when opened. Originally, it was supposed to have a tail that pivoted to allow drive-in loading of cargoes, but that didn't happen. The N22 was heated and ventilated; air-conditioning was optional.
_____________________________________________________________________ GAF N22 NOMAD: _____________________________________________________________________ wingspan: 16.46 meters (54 feet 2 inches) wing area: 30.1 sq_meters (324 sq_feet) length: 12.57 meters (41 feet 3 inches) height: 5.52 meters (18 feet 2 inches) empty weight: 2,150 kilograms (4,730 pounds) MTO weight: 3,855 kilograms (8,500 pounds) cruise speed: 310 KPH (195 MPH / 170 KT) take-off run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet): 320 meters (1,050 feet) landing run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet): 225 meters (740 feet) service ceiling: 6,400 meters (21,000 feet) range: 1,350 kilometers (840 miles / 730 NMI) _____________________________________________________________________
There was a baggage hold in the nose, with doors on both sides; the nose could alternatively accommodate systems such as radar or survey cameras. The military variants of the Nomad had two stores hardpoints under each wing, for a total of four, each hardpoint with a capacity of 225 kilograms (500 pounds). The military versions also had removeable armor, and could be fitted with self-sealing fuel tanks.
A total of about 50 Missionmasters was built. It led to other variants:
The civil N22B was followed by the "N24A", which featured a fuselage stretched by a 1.4-meter (3 foot 9 inch) fuselage plug and a longer nose, with more baggage capacity. Overall length was increased to 14.34 meters (47 feet 1 inch), with empty weight increased to 2,375 kilograms (5,240 pounds). Passenger capacity was 17 seats; it had the solid roof and rear baggage compartment. 40 were built.
The last Nomad was delivered in 1984, with 172 built, including the two prototypes. Military users of the Nomad included:
Other military users included Thailand, the Philippines, and several Pacific Ocean nations, though details are scarce. There were a number of civil / commercial operators Down Under, most prominently the Royal Flying Doctors Service, and a smattering of operators elsewhere.
Although the Nomad looked like a clean and utilitarian aircraft, it acquired a bad reputation, with about a fifth of those built lost in accidents. It appears that the worst problem was the Allison 250 engines, said to be unreliable -- which is puzzling, since the Rolls-Royce / Allison 250 engine has a long history, has been widely used, and is still in production. To be sure, it is primarily sold as a helicopter turboshaft, but it's fairly common for turboshafts to have turboprop counterparts; and no reason to think an engine that works well as a turboshaft should work poorly as a turboprop. However, it is true that the mating of an engine to an aircraft can be tricky, with much that can go wrong.
It appears that another difficulty was that the Nomad only had a rudder trim tab which, along with the lack of autopilot, made it tiring to fly for long periods. A fair number of Nomads are still in service, including four flown by Air Safaris of New Zealand for air tours; it doesn't appear that the Nomad is seen as a hangar queen, much less a deathtrap. One might suspect there was nothing wrong with the Nomad that couldn't have been readily fixed, but GAF didn't do so. GAF became part of Aerospace Technologies of Australia in 1986, which is now Boeing Australia. There has been talk of new production of the Nomad, but it hasn't gone anywhere.
BACK_TO_TOP* In the early 1950s, the Fletcher Aviation Company of Pasadena, California, -- founded by the brothers Wendell, Frank, & Maurice Fletcher in 1941 -- flew a light attack aircraft, the "FD-25 Defender", the brainchild of designer John Thorp. The FD-25 was a very light attack aircraft, being an all-metal single-seat design with fixed taildragger landing gear, powered by a Continental E-225-8 flat-six air-cooled piston engine with 170 kW (225 HP), driving a two-bladed fixed-pitch propeller. There was a fuel tank inboard on each wing, total capacity 230 liters (60 US gallons), with a refueling point on top of each tank.
The low-mounted wings were rectangular in configuration, the inboard panel being flat, the outboard having a noticeable dihedral. Flight control surface arrangement was conventional -- one-piece flaps, ailerons, elevators, rudder, and trim tabs -- all being manually actuated. The pilot sat under a raised canopy that slid back to open. There was a 7.62-millimeter (0.30-caliber) Browning machine gun in each wing, plus four stores pylons under each wing, for a total of eight. A typical external warload was 40 70-millimeter (2.75-inch) unguided rockets.
_____________________________________________________________________ FLETCHER FD-25 DEFENDER: _____________________________________________________________________ wingspan: 9.14 meters (30 feet) wing area: 14 sq_meters (150 sq_feet) length: 6.38 meters (20 feet 11 inches) height: 1.91 meters (6 feet 3 inches) empty weight: 555 kilograms (1,225 pounds) MTO weight: 1,135 kilograms (2,500 pounds) max speed: 300 KPH (185 MPH / 160 KT) cruise speed: 260 KPH (160 MPH / 140 KT) service ceiling: 5,000 meters (16,500 feet) range: 1,015 kilometers (630 miles / 545 NMI) _____________________________________________________________________
Three prototypes were built, including two "FD-25A" single-seaters and one "FD-25B" tandem two-seat trainer. The sporty Defender looked like it would have been fun to fly, but it was very dubious as a battlefield "mudfighter", not up to handling an environment notoriously dense in flying metal. Toyo of Japan bought up rights to the design and sold ten, including six to Cambodia and 4 to South Vietnam. It is not clear what happened to these machines -- though one Defender has survived and is in flying condition, appearing at airshows in the USA.
* The Defender led to a series of new designs. A group of New Zealand agricultural aircraft operators visited the United States in the early 1950s, seeking an agricultural aircraft to replace the war surplus De Havilland Tiger Moth trainers that were being used in that role with something more effective. They spoke with the Fletcher company, with Wendel Fletcher and John Thorp then coming up with a design for an agricultural aircraft, based on the Defender, to be designated the "FU-24".
The New Zealanders liked the design and took out options on a hundred. A New Zealand farming company, Cable Price Corporation, provided funding to the Fletcher company to build two prototypes, while the New Zealand Meat Producers Board provided financial guarantees. Initial flight of the prototype of the "FU-24" was on 14 June 1954. The prototype was then broken down and shipped to New Zealand, along with a breakdown kit of an unflown second prototype. The two aircraft were assembled and flown by James Aviation of Hamilton.
The prototype design featured an open cockpit, and was powered by a Continental O-470-E flat-four engine with 165 kW (225 HP), driving a two-bladed propeller. General configuration of the FU-24 was like that of the FU-25 Defender, notably featuring the distinctive wing with flat inner panels and dihedral outer panels -- but with fixed tricycle landing gear and a capacious rear fuselage, the cockpit being set well forward.
Initial service deliveries were in 1955. The next 70 machines were shipped to New Zealand in breakdown kits. Production machines had an enclosed cockpit with a back-sliding canopy, as well as a more powerful engine. The engine fit would be progressively uprated in service:
The engine drove a two-bladed variable-pitch propeller. There was a fuel tank in the inboard leading edge of each wing, total usable fuel capacity being 166 liters (44 US gallons). The FU-24 had a hopper in mid-fuselage, with a feed hole on top, and dispersal gear underneath. The airframe was heavily corrosion-protected to protect against agricultural chemicals. There was a bench seat for two in the cockpit; dual controls were optional, machines fitted with them being designated "FU-24A". Some machines would be built for the utility role, with a forward-hinged door on the left, five removeable passenger seats, and passenger windows on each side behind the cockpit. The door would eventually become standard in all production.
The type became popularly known just as the "Fletcher". The primary role was "top dressing", which was aerial dispersal of fertilizer, with aerial seeding being a secondary role. From 1957, sales were through a new firm named "Air Parts", with assembly by James Aviation at the outset. There were many minor tweaks to the design through production, and many confusing variations in configuration; sometimes it seems that no Fletchers were alike, or at least it wouldn't be a good bet that any two of them picked at random were exactly the same.
Significantly, after the 257th aircraft the engine was changed to a Lycoming IO-720-A1A flat-eight with 300 kW (400 HP), with many earlier machines updated to the same engine. Fuel supply was increased to 253 liters (67 US gallons), or 481 liters (127 US gallons) with optional auxiliary tanks, with their own refueling points. The first of these "FU-24-950" Fletchers were delivered in 1967, with manufacture wholly performed by Air Parts, which had bought the rights to the design from Fletcher in 1964. A utility version with seven passenger seats was also available.
_____________________________________________________________________ PAC FU-24 FLETCHER: _____________________________________________________________________ wingspan: 12.8 meters (42 feet) wing area: 27.31 sq_meters (294 sq_feet) length: 9.7 meters (31 feet 10 inches) height: 2.84 meters (9 feet 4 inches) empty weight: 1,190 kilograms (2,620 pounds) MTO weight: 2,465 kilograms (5,430 pounds) max speed: 235 KPH (145 MPH / 125 KT) cruise speed: 210 KPH (130 MPH / 115 KT) take-off run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet) 290 meters (950 feet) landing run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet) 275 meters (900 feet) service ceiling: 4,900 meters (16,000 feet) range: 710 kilometers (440 miles / 385 NMI) _____________________________________________________________________
One Fletcher was temporarily test-fitted with a geared Continental GIO-470A engine with 230 kW (310 HP), but that engine was never used in production. There were various conversions of FU-24s with the Pratt & Whitney Canada (PWC) PT6A turboprop, the Garrett / AiResearch (now Honeywell) TPE331 turboprop, a Walter turboprop, and even V8 truck engines. Over 300 FU-24s were built to the end of production in the mid-1990s, with the type exported to Australia, Bangladesh, Dubai, Iraq, Pakistan, Thailand, Uruguay, and the USA.
* From the mid-1960s, Air Parts tinkered with a production turboprop-powered derivative of the FU-24, first flying a "Fletcher 1060" in 1967 featuring a PWC PT6A-20 turboprop, driving a three-bladed variable-pitch propeller; a fuselage stretch immediately behind the cockpit; plus longer and stronger wings with more fuel capacity. Later in the same year, they flew a "Fletcher 1160" that was much the same, but had a TPE331 turboprop.
The Cresco was initially powered by a Lycoming LTP101-700A-1A turboprop, with 445 kW (600 SHP) -- this variant being named the "Cresco 08-600" -- but later production was fitted with a PWC PT6A-34AG engine, with 560 kW (800 HP), this variant being the "Cresco 08-750". The engine drove a three-bladed variable-pitch propeller; there were two fuel tanks in each wing, each with its own refueling point, total capacity being 545.5 liters (144 US gallons).
_____________________________________________________________________ PAC CRESCO 08-600: _____________________________________________________________________ wingspan: 12.8 meters (42 feet) wing area: 27.31 sq_meters (294 sq_feet) length: 11.07 meters (36 feet 4 inches) height: 3.63 meters (11 feet 10 inches) empty weight: 1,270 kilograms (2,800 pounds) MTO weight: 3.175 kilograms (7,000 pounds) max speed: 275 KPH (170 MPH / 150 KT) cruise speed: 250 KPH (155 MPH / 135 KT) take-off run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet) 235 meters (1,065 feet) landing run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet) 425 meters (1,400 feet) service ceiling: 5,485 meters (18,000 feet) range: 850 kilometers (530 miles / 460 NMI) _____________________________________________________________________
The Cresco was primarily intended as an agricultural aircraft, but it also was sold as a skydiving platform, with a roll-up side door, carrying up to nine, somewhat cramped, sky-divers. It was also used as an air tanker -- that is, aerial fire-fighter, and one has been used for geosurvey, featuring a tailboom for a magnetometer. The Cresco went out of production after the turn of the century; it hadn't proved popular, with only somewhat more than 30 sold.
* The Cresco, it appears, was a bit much for the ag-aircraft market, but not enough for the utility market -- and so it was rethought with a new fuselage as the "PAC 750XL" -- originally "Cresco 750XL", though it was never sold under that name -- with first flight on 5 September 2001, and deliveries from 2004. It was later redesignated as "P-750 XSTOL", for "extreme short take-off / landing", emphasizing its short-field operation; it is generally called "P-750" here for simplicity.
The P-750 was more in a league with the Caravan utility aircraft, and compared favorably to it -- though the P-750 was smaller, with an empty weight about 75% that of the Caravan. The P-750, unlike the Cresco, had:
Like the Caravan, the P-750 could be fitted with a ventral cargo pannier. It had a fixed ventral fin, presumably to compensate for the pannier.
The original P-750 was powered by a PT6A-34 turboprop with 560 kW (750 SHP), driving a three-bladed Hartzell reversible propeller. There were four fuel tanks in the wing center section, total usable fuel capacity being 841 liters (222 US gallons). The wings had distinctive triangular root extensions. The P-750 featured a Garmin glass cockpit.
_____________________________________________________________________ PAC P-750 XSTOL: _____________________________________________________________________ wingspan: 12.8 meters (42 feet) wing area: 24.88 sq_meters (267.8 sq_feet) length: 11.07 meters (36 feet 4 inches) height: 3.88 meters (12 feet 9 inches) empty weight: 1,633 kilograms (3,600 pounds MTO weight: 3,400 kilograms (7,500 pounds max speed: 315 KPH (195 MPH / 170 KT) cruise speed: 260 KPH (160 MPH / 140 KT) take-off run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet): 460 meters (1,500 feet) landing run: 290 meters (950 feet) service ceiling: 6,100 meters (20,000 feet range: 2,185 kilometers (1,355 miles / 1,180 NMI) _____________________________________________________________________
Although it was initially sold for skydiving -- being able to carry up to 17 skydivers -- the P-750 is also used in passenger-cargo service, medevac, agriculture, photo survey, and geosurvey roles. An armed version has been offered, being named "Defender II" in honor of its distant ancestor, though there doesn't seem to have been any takers yet. An improved "Super-PAC XL" variant was introduced in 2018, featuring a Honeywell TPE331 engine with 670 kW (900 HP) and a four-bladed propeller. An air tanker / fire-fighting variant, the "F-25", was introduced in 2021.
* In 2016, Pacific Aerospace Limited -- PAL, the current manifestation of PAC -- signed a joint venture agreement with the Beijing General Aviation Company (BGAC), a subsidiary of the Beijing Automotive group. The joint venture, named "Beijing Pan-Pacific Aerospace Technology (BPAT)", set up a manufacturing facility at Changzhou Airport to roll out the PAC P-750 XSTOL.
A Chinese manufacturer of drones -- more formally "unpiloted aerial vehicles (UAV)" -- named Longxing UAV Systems, working with the Institute of Engineering Thermophysics of China -- has used the type as a basis for a cargo drone, the "AT200", which performed its first flight in October 2017. It looked just like the PAC 750 XSTOL, except for the fact that all its windows are blanked out. The idea was to provide a short-haul service for time-dependent cargoes like fruits and vegetables, to serve small and relatively inaccessible towns. It made a bit of a splash at its introduction, but nothing more has been said about it since then.
BACK_TO_TOP* In the 1980s, a retired Australian pilot named Don Adams -- who had run a flying company that did agricultural work and light air cargo delivery -- got bored with the retired life, and decided to start a company named "Seabird" to develop his own aircraft. What he ended up building was the two-seat observation aircraft, with first flight of the "SB5N Sentinel" prototype on 1 October 1989, this machine being powered by a Norton rotary (Wankel) engine, hence the "N" suffice.
It was followed in 1991 by a second prototype, the "SB5E Sentinel", with an Emdair engine; a static-test airframe followed. The Norton and Emdair engines didn't prove satisfactory, so the machine was redesigned for Lycoming power, with an "SB7L-235 Seeker" prototype flying later in 1991 -- this machine being powered by a Lycoming O-235 flat-four air-cooled engine with 90 kW (115 HP). The full-spec "SB7L-360 Seeker 2" performed its initial flight in 1993, this machine being powered by a Lycoming O-360 flat-six air-cooled engine. Production machines were designated "SB7L-360A".
The Seeker was intended for roles like pipeline inspection and border security. It was seen as a lower-cost alternative to a helicopter for users who could operate a fixed-wing aircraft off of dirt roads or the like. It is a tidy, endearingly toylike, simple, and relatively inexpensive design.
The latest production standard "SB7L-360A2" Seeker was an all-metal aircraft -- except for a composite upper engine cowling and fabric-covered elevators / rudder -- with a layout similar to the Seabee amphibian sold by Republic in the US after World War II. Like the Seabee, the Seeker had:
Of course, the Seeker was not an amphibian, instead having fixed taildragger landing gear, the main gear legs being of spring steel configuration, acting as shock absorbers. The flight-control surface arrangement was conventional, including ailerons, one-piece slotted flaps, rudder, elevators, and trim tabs -- all manually actuated. The leading edge of each wing was drooped outboard, and there was a small wing fence inboard, these two features being added in later production. The tailplane had finlets at its ends, and there were two fixed ventral strakes under the tail. It seems the turbulent airflow from the pusher prop dictated the additions to the tail surfaces.
The standard powerplant was a Lycoming O-360-B2C with 125 kW (170 HP), driving a two-bladed fixed-pitch wooden prop. The "SB7L-36A3" variant was powered by a Lycoming IO-390-A1A6 engine with 150 kW (200 HP). Engine cooling was a problem with the Sentinel prototypes -- that being a common difficulty with pusher aircraft, since the engine isn't in the prop wash; but the Seeker replaced the ineffective underwing airscoops with a much more effective topside scoop scheme. There was a fuel tank in each wing, with its own topside refueling point, total usable capacity being 172 liters (45.4 US gallons).
There were two seats, both adjustable. In principle, the right seat could be removed to allow fit of a stretcher, a photosurvey module, or other payload -- but apparently that's rarely or never done. There were split doors on each side of the cockpit; the doors could be removed if desired. There was cargo space behind the seats. An imaging turret or other sensor could be fitted under the forward fuselage; the pusher prop and taildragger landing gear gave it an unobstructed forward view. The sensor could be datalinked to a ground station.
_____________________________________________________________________ SEABIRD SEEKER ER SB7L-360A: _____________________________________________________________________ wingspan: 11.07 meters (36 feet 4 inches) wing area: 13.1 sq_meters (141 sq_feet) length: 7.01 meters (23 feet) height: 2.49 meters (8 feet 2 inches) empty weight: 590 kilograms (1,300 pounds) MTO weight: 975 kilograms (2,145 pounds) cruise speed: 200 KPH (130 MPH / 115 KT) take-off run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet): 510 meters (1,670 feet) landing run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet): 490 meters (1,605 feet) service ceiling: 4,575 meters (15,000 feet) range: 830 kilometers (515 miles / 450 NMI) _____________________________________________________________________
There was a stores attachment point under each wing, each having a payload capacity of 60 kilograms (132 pounds). The stores attachments were "wet" and could carry external fuel tanks, but it doesn't appear many or any users have exploited that feature. The Seeker could be armed, with machine-gun / cannon pods, 7-round rocket pods, or other light munitions. It is not clear that they have ever been flown armed, or that they have ever been flown with turrets featuring a laser target designator for smart munitions.
A joint venture was established in Jordan in 2003, with "Seabird Jordan" to assemble, fit out, and ultimately build Seekers. Only about 20 Seekers were sold up to 2014, with users including the Jordanian Air Force, Iraq Air Force, Ghana police, South Africa Park Service, Tanzania Air Force, and Yemen Border Guards. Two A3 machines were obtained by Ergon Energy of Australia, these being "optionally piloted", capable of being flown as drones, being designated "Remote Observation Automated Modeling Economic Simulation (ROAMES)". They had a distinctive belly pack behind the main gear, presumably to haul additional avionics.
The company was bought out in 2014 by Seeker Aircraft America, a subsidiary of CSI Aviation -- a firm out of Albuquerque, New Mexico, that arranges charters for Federal agencies, and operates a fleet of King Airs for medevac and other missions. The CSI operation is better-connected, not merely with US agencies, but also with foreign governments in Africa and elsewhere. However, there hasn't been much activity out of Seeker Aircraft to date.
BACK_TO_TOP* Although Australian aircraft tend toward the unusual, none was more so than the Transavia "Airtruk", an agricultural aircraft of highly unorthodox configuration.
The story began in the mid-1950s, when aircraft designer Luigi Pellarini -- who had emigrated from Italy to Australia in 1952, feeling the prospects for developing aircraft better there than in Italy -- designed a demonstrator agricultural aircraft designated the "PL.7" for the Kingsford Smith Aviation Service, It was an awkward-looking aircraft, a biplane with unequal-span wings -- stub lower wings, long upper wings -- a twin-boom tail, and fixed tricycle landing gear. It was powered by a 7-cylinder air-cooled Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah X radial engine with 300 kW (400 HP), driving a two-blade fixed pitch propeller.
The cockpit was at the rear of the fuselage pod. Length was 12.2 meters (40 feet 10 inches), length was 7.47 meters (24 feet 6 inches), and loaded weight was 2,270 kilograms (5,000 pounds). Initial flight was on 21 September 1956; the PL.7 seems to have flown well enough, but the Kingsford Smith company decided to convert Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation (CAC) Wackett trainers to the agricultural role instead, the conversions being given the name of "Yeoman Cropmaster". The PL.7 went into storage, to be destroyed in a fire in 1958.
* Pellarini wasn't done with the concept, designing the "PL-11 Airtruck" agricultural aircraft for the Bennett Aviation firm of New Zealand, the first example flying on 2 August 1960. Its general configuration was much like that of the PL.7 -- biplane with short bottom wings, fixed tricycle landing gear, and a twin-boom tail -- but it had two noticeable differences:
The PL-11 leveraged off assemblies from the North American Harvard trainer -- that being the name of the T-6 Texan trainer in British Commonwealth service, Bennett Aviation having accumulated a stockpile of Harvards. The PL-11 was powered by the Harvard's Pratt & Whitney R-1340 nine-cylinder air-cooled radial engine, with 410 kW (550 HP), driving a variable-pitch two-bladed prop. The Airtruck could either be fitted with a fertilizer hopper, or accommodations for five people.
Only two Airtrucks were built, the first prototype being lost in a crash in 1963. The second machine flew in 1965, being designated the "Waitomo PL-11" due to a change in organization structure; it went into service in early 1967, only to soon crash. There are unconfirmed rumors that a third Airtruck was almost completed, but never flew.
* However, the PL-11 was seen as promising, with Transavia Corporation picking up the design, which was then altered to eliminate all the Harvard assemblies. Initial flight of the "PL-12 Airtruk" -- the spelling of the name was altered to avoid conflict with the PL-11 -- on 22 April 1965. It was certified in early 1966.
The PL-12's configuration was generally the same as that of the PL-11, the most noticeable difference being that the PL-12 was powered by a Rolls-Royce Continental IO-520-D flat-six air-cooled engine, with 225 kW (300 HP), driving a variable-pitch two-bladed propeller. There was a fuel tank in each upper wing, total capacity being 189 liters (50 US gallons); there were optional upper wing auxiliary tanks that doubled fuel capacity. There was a refueling point on top of each wing.
_____________________________________________________________________ TRANSAVIA PL-12 AIRTRUK: _____________________________________________________________________ wingspan: 11.98 meters (39 feet 4 inches) wing area: 23.8 sq_meters (256 sq_feet) length: 6.4 meters (21 feet) height: 2.74 meters (9 feet) empty weight: 610 kilograms (1,340 pounds) MTO weight: 975 kilograms (2,145 pounds) max speed: 190 KPH (120 MPH / 105 KT) cruise speed: 175 KPH (110 MPH / 95 KT) take-off run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet): 510 meters (1,670 feet) landing run (relative to 15 meters / 50 feet): 490 meters (1,605 feet) service ceiling: 4,575 meters (15,000 feet) range: 830 kilometers (515 miles / 450 NMI) _____________________________________________________________________
The aircraft featured a welded steel tube frame, with aluminum alloy covering, as well as some fiberglass assemblies. Flight control surface arrangement was conventional, with ailerons, flaps, rudders, tailplanes, and trim tabs -- there were no flight control surfaces in the lower stub wings. There were prominent wing fences in each wing, one on each side of the front of the tailboom, to ensure proper airflow over the tail assemblies. The PL-11 didn't feature the wing fences.
The fuselage was built around a chemical / seed hopper in the center, the hopper being made of corrosion-resistant materials. The engine was in front of hopper on the aircraft's lower deck, with the cockpit on the upper deck. There was a loading hole for the hopper on top of the fuselage behind the cockpit. There was a passenger compartment on the rear lower deck, which could be used to carry two passengers and gear.
The cockpit had a forward-hinged door on the right, with the pilot climbing up on top of the wing to get inside using steps / handholds built into the left rear fuselage. The passenger compartment had a front-hinged door on the left side of the fuselage. The aircraft was ventilated and heated.
From the late 1970s, Transavia introduced variants of the PL-12 that only differed significantly in fit of powerplant:
A utility version, the "PL-12U", was introduced in 1980. It was the same as the PL-12, except that the chemical hopper was removed, with two front-hinged doors on the top deck -- the passenger in the rear of the top deck sat backwards -- and seating for four on the lower deck. A total of 118 Airtruks of all variants was built to end of production in 1993, the exact breakdown of variant production being unclear. Two variants were considered, but not built:
The AirTruk was even more toylike in appearance than the Seeker, if not anywhere near as tidy -- some regarding it as not exceeded by any other aircraft in ugliness; others as cute in an ungainly sort of way. It's a bit disappointing it didn't play a role in the Disney PLANES movies as a cartoon character. However, it was, in spite of its comical appearance, a cleverly-designed aircraft, very effective, as sturdy as a flying tractor, and by all appearances great fun to fly.
One was used in the 1985 post-apocalypse movie MAX MAX BEYOND THUNDERDONE, and a number are still flying today, with others set up as static museum exhibits. One at the Australian Aviation Museum in Sydney is a PL-12U put together from several Airtruks, painted up with camouflage and red crosses as a PL-12 MIL air ambulance -- though the Airtruk never had a military career.
BACK_TO_TOP* Finding data on these aircraft was troublesome. I leveraged off the online Wikipedia for starters, found some other sources online and on Youtube, but ended up relying heavily on my set of JANE'S ALL THE WORLD'S AIRCRAFT.
Illustrations details:
* Revision history:
v1.0.0 / 01 mar 19 v1.0.1 / 01 jan 21 / Review & polish. v1.0.2 / 01 nov 22 / Review & polish. v1.0.3 / 01 sep 24 / Review & polish. (+)BACK_TO_TOP