flood Archives - FLYING Magazine https://cms.flyingmag.com/tag/flood/ The world's most widely read aviation magazine Thu, 18 Jan 2024 21:35:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 This 1965 Piper PA-24-260 Comanche Is a Sleek, Handsome ‘AircraftForSale’ Top Pick https://www.flyingmag.com/this-1965-piper-pa-24-260-comanche-is-a-sleek-handsome-aircraftforsale-top-pick/ Wed, 03 Jan 2024 03:12:31 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=192002 An efficient traveling machine, the PA-24 is ideal for family adventures and business trips.

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Each day, the team at Aircraft For Sale picks an airplane that catches our attention because it is unique, represents a good deal, or has other interesting qualities. You can read Aircraft For Sale: Today’s Top Pick at FLYINGMag.com daily.

Today’s Top Pick is a 1965 Piper PA-24-260 Comanche.

Piper introduced its PA-24 in 1957, in part as a reply to the Beechcraft Bonanza, the sleek, fast, and futuristic all-metal, four-seat retractable that had entered the market 10 years earlier. The new Piper was very much in line with the Bonanza, but a big departure for the company, which was still turning out Cub-derived, high-wing, rag-and-tube machines at the time. Streamlined, modern, and attractive, the PA-24 took its place as Piper’s flagship model.

If there was a downside to the PA-24, for Piper, at least, it was manufacturing cost. This was, after all, a complex airplane with a lot of parts. Its beautiful, tapered wing, for example, cost more to produce than the constant-chord “Hershey bar” wing of the newer, simpler PA-28 series. The latter had gained popularity by the time the airplane for sale here rolled off the assembly line.

Piper steadily improved the PA-24 with more horsepower, more windows, and a redesigned interior. But when the adjacent Susquehanna River flooded the company’s Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, factory in 1972 and damaged the tooling for PA-24s, Piper ended the model’s production and focused on its more profitable PA-28s.

This 1965 PA-24-260 has 5,210 hours on the airframe, zero hours since overhaul on its Lycoming IO-540-D4A5 engine, and 370 hours on the Hartzell propeller since overhaul. The panel includes a Garmin GTN 650 GPS/Nav/Com/MFD, TKM MX300 Nav/Com, GTX 345 transponder, GMA 350 audio panel, and JPI EDM700 engine monitor.

Pilots looking for a sharp, fast, four-seat traveling airplane with modern looks and vintage appeal should consider this 1965 Piper PA-24-260, which is available for $129,900 on AircraftForSale.

You can arrange financing of the aircraft through FLYING Finance. For more information, email info@flyingfinance.com.

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Piper’s History Found on the Bank of the Susquehanna https://www.flyingmag.com/delving-into-pipers-history-with-a-visit-to-lock-haven-pennsylvania/ Mon, 28 Nov 2022 21:27:40 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=162409 Museum at the site of a former aircraft factory includes a hangar full of significant models.

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When I was learning to fly, my instructor spent a lot of time on pilotage, pointing out rivers, ridges, highways, railways, and other landmarks that could guide me to interesting destinations or, more importantly, back to the airport if all else failed.

I am glad he took the time to do that because I still find myself navigating by sight a lot of the time, finding my way by following terrain features. Among my favorites is the Susquehanna River, which meanders across Pennsylvania, passing near numerous points of interest including airports like Bloomsburg (N13), which is right on the river, and Sunbury (71N), situated on an island in the middle of it.

Of particular interest is William T. Piper Memorial Airport (KLHV) in Lock Haven, former home of Piper Aircraft Corporation. Piper built sleek PA-24 Comanche four-place retracts at the Lock Haven factory from the 1950s until 1972, when a flood resulting from Hurricane Agnes heavily damaged the factory and destroyed dozens of aircraft and tooling.

Piper’s J-3 and other Cub models trained thousands of pilots. [Courtesy: Piper Aviation Museum]

Piper ended Comanche production after the flood, noting it was complicated and expensive to build when compared with its other single-engine models like the PA-28. The company continued building other types at Lock Haven until 1984, when it closed the factory and consolidated its operations in Florida.

When approaching the airport, the Susquehanna’s west branch is a dominant part of the picturesque landscape. Indeed, it guides pilots right to the airport. If you are landing to the west, the river bends right sharply to cross in front of the approach end of Runways 27R (asphalt) and 27L (turf) before turning left to hug the northern edge of the field. It is easy to imagine the river overflowing and wreaking havoc.

The factory is gone but the Piper Aviation Museum maintains the company’s spirit on the field. Visitors can taxi right up to the museum, check out the aircraft on display, and dig into Piper’s history. The museum, which is located in one of the company’s former development buildings, includes models and other small indoor exhibits, a research library and a hangar full of airplanes.

This restored Piper Colt is a recent addition to the museum’s collection. [Courtesy: Piper Aviation Museum].

The collection of full-size aircraft, from evolutions of the Cub to the hotrod eight-cylinder PA-24-400, reflects the diversity of designs the company turned out over the decades. It also illustrates differences in Piper’s approach to designing and building aircraft compared with rivals like Cessna and Beechcraft, and how the companies influenced each other.

While Cessna’s 172 is known for popularizing tricycle landing gear in general aviation, for example, Piper’s Tri-Pacer had the feature years earlier, and the model’s strong sales helped inspire Cessna to try a nose-gear design.

Earlier this year the owner of a version of the Tri-Pacer, called the Colt, donated the beautifully restored aircraft to the museum. That airplane, with fabric covering, barebones interior and austere panel, confirms that general aviation engineering and design have made great strides in the past 60 years. The Colt was built for three years—1961 through 1963.

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