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Cessna 152

The Cessna 152 is an American two-seat, fixed-tricycle-gear, general aviation airplane, used primarily for flight training and personal use. It was based on the earlier Cessna 150 incorporating a number of minor design changes and a slightly more powerful engine with a longer time between overhaul.

Cessna 152
Cessna 152
Role Basic trainer,
GA private aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer Cessna
Introduction 1977
Primary users Mexican Navy
Bangladesh Army
Bolivian Air Force
Produced 1977–1985
Number built 7,584
Developed from Cessna 150

The Cessna 152 has been out of production for almost forty years, but many are still airworthy and are in regular use for flight training.

Development

 
One of the first Cessna 152s produced, a 1978 model year built in 1977
 
1978 Cessna 152

First delivered in 1977 as the 1978 model year, the 152 was a modernization of the proven Cessna 150 design. The 152 was intended to compete with the new Beechcraft Skipper and Piper Tomahawk, both of which were introduced the same year.[1] Additional design goals were to improve useful load through a gross weight increase to 1,670 lb (760 kg), decrease internal and external noise levels and run better on the then newly introduced 100LL fuel.[2]

As with the 150, the great majority of 152s were built at the Cessna factory in Wichita, Kansas. A number of aircraft were also built by Reims Aviation of France and given the designation F152/FA152.[1]

Production of the 152 was ended in 1985 when Cessna ended production of all of their light aircraft; by that time, a total of 7,584 examples of the 152, including A152 and FA152 Aerobat aerobatic variants, had been built worldwide.

In 2007 Cessna announced that it would build a light-sport successor, designated the Model 162 Skycatcher,[3] although production ended in 2013.

Design

Powerplant

All Cessna 152s were manufactured with a Lycoming O-235 engine which has been in production since 1942. The Lycoming provided not only an increase in engine power over the Cessna 150, but also was more compatible with the newer 100LL low-lead fuel.[1]

Cessna 152s produced between 1977 and 1982 were equipped with Lycoming O-235-L2C engines producing 110 hp (82 kW) at 2,550 rpm. This engine still suffered some lead-fouling problems in service. In 1983, it was succeeded by the 108 hp (81 kW) O-235-N2C which featured a different piston design and a redesigned combustion chamber to reduce this problem. The N2C engine was used until 152 production ended in 1985.[1]

Airframe

The airframe is mainly of metal construction. being primarily of 2024-T3 aluminum alloy with riveted skin. Components such as wingtips and fairings are made from glass-reinforced plastic. The fuselage is a semi-monocoque with vertical bulkheads and frames joined by longerons running the length of the fuselage. The wings are of a strut-braced design and have a 1 degree dihedral angle. The tapered (outboard) portion of each wing has one degree of washout (the chord of the tip section has one degree lower angle of attack than the chord at the end of the constant-width section). This allows greater aileron effectiveness during a stall.[4]

The 1978 model has a one piece cowling nose bowl that requires removing the propeller to remove it. The 1979 model introduced a split-nose cowling nose bowl that can be removed without removing the propeller.[5]

Flying controls

 
Instrument panel

Dual controls are available as optional equipment on the Cessna 152[4] and almost all 152s have this option installed.

The Cessna 152 is equipped with differential ailerons that move through 20 degrees upwards and 15 degrees downwards. It has single-slotted fowler flaps which are electrically operated and deploy to a maximum of 30 degrees. The rudder can move 23 degrees to either side and is fitted with a ground-adjustable trim tab. The elevators move up through 25 degrees and down through 18 degrees. An adjustable trim tab is installed on the right elevator and is controlled by a small wheel in the center of the control console. The trim tab moves 10 degrees up and 20 degrees down relative to the elevator chordline.[4]

Landing gear

The Cessna 152 is equipped with fixed tricycle landing gear. The main gear has tubular steel legs surrounded by a full-length fairing with a step for access to the cabin. The main gear has a 7 ft 7 in (2.31 m) wheelbase.[1]

The nosewheel is connected to the engine mount and has an oleo strut to dampen and absorb normal operating loads. The nosewheel is steerable through 30 degrees either side of neutral and can castor under differential braking up to 30 degrees. It is connected to the rudder pedals through a spring linkage.[4]

The braking system consists of single disc brake assemblies fitted to the main gear and operated by a hydraulic system. Brakes are operated by pushing on the top portion of the rudder pedals. It is possible to use differential braking when taxiing and this allows very tight turns to be made.[4]

The 152 is also fitted with a parking brake system. It is applied by depressing both toe brakes and then pulling the "Park Brake" lever to the pilot's left. The toe brakes are then released but pressure is maintained in the system thereby leaving both brakes engaged.[4]

The standard tires used are 600 X 6 on the main gear and 500 X 5 on the nosewheel.[1]

Modifications

There are hundreds of modifications available for the Cessna 152. The most frequently installed include:

Tailwheel landing gear

Taildragger conversions are available and have been fitted to some 152s. It involves strengthening the fuselage for the main gear being moved further forward, removing the nosewheel and strengthening the tail area for the tailwheel. This greatly improves short field performance and is claimed to give up to a 10 kn (19 km/h) cruise speed increase.[6][7]

STOL kits

The wings can be modified using a number of STOL modification kits, some improving high speed/cruise performance but most concentrating on STOL performance. Horton's STOL kit is one of the better-known of the latter. It involves fitting a more cambered leading edge cuff to increase the maximum coefficient of lift, fitting fences at the aileron/flap intersection and fitting drooped wingtips. Stalls with these modifications are almost off the airspeed indicator, since instrument error is high at high angles of attack.[6][7] It has been said that landings can be achieved in two fuselage lengths with the kit installed in addition to a taildragger modification, by balancing power against drag.[7] Takeoff performance is also improved by varying degrees depending on the surface.

Engine

The engine's power can be increased by various modifications, such as the Sparrow Hawk power package, increasing it to 125 hp (93 kW).[6][7] The disadvantage of the Sparrow Hawk conversion is that it uses pistons from the O-235-F series engine and therefore the engine recommended time between overhauls is reduced from 2,400 hours to 2,000 hours.[8]

Other modifications

Other popular modifications include:

  • Flap gap seals to reduce drag and increase rate of climb.[6]
  • Different wingtips, some of which claim various cruise speed increases and stall speed reductions.[6]
  • Auto fuel STCs, which permit the use of automobile fuel instead of the more expensive aviation fuel.
  • Auxiliary fuel tanks for greater range.[6]
  • Door catches to replace the factory ones that often fail in service.[6]
  • Belly fuel drain valves to drain fuel from the lowest point in the fuel system.[6]

Variants

 
A 1978 Cessna 152 landing
 
A 1980 A152 Aerobat with its distinctive factory paint scheme
 
A 1985 Reims-built F152
 
Front view of a Cessna 152

Cessna 152 has only 4 model variants: 152, F152, A152, FA152 (all equipped with the Lycoming O-235):

152
Two-seat light touring aircraft, fitted with a fixed tricycle landing gear, powered by a 110 hp (82 kW) Lycoming O-235-L2C piston engine, 6628 built.[9] Available with a number of avionic options, aside from the standard Model 152 there was a 152 II with an enhanced package of standard avionics and trim features. [1] Type approved in 1977 and produced as 1978 to 1985 model years.[10]
A152 Aerobat
Two-seat aerobatic-capable aircraft, 315 built.[9] Certified for +6/-3 Gs and had standard four-point harnesses, skylights and jettisonable doors, along with a checkerboard paint scheme and removable seat cushions to allow parachutes to be worn by the crew.[1][2] Type approved in 1977 and produced as 1978 to 1985 model years.[10] The following aerobatic maneuvers are approved: chandelles, steep turns, barrel rolls, snap rolls, loops, vertical reversements, lazy eights, spins, aileron rolls, Immelmann turns, Cuban eights and stalls (except whip stalls).[10]
F152
Reims-built Model 152, 552 built.[9]
FA152 Aerobat
Reims-built Model A152, 89 built.[9]
C152 II
Not a special model but with Nav Pac equipment package, which included better quality avionics for IFR flying and additional interior equipment, which makes it a little more basic weight.[1]
C152 T
Not a special model but flight school equipment package, with "T" denoting "trainer" and not a sub-model.[1]
C152 Aviat
Not a special model but a general overhaul and rebuilt of Cessna 152s by Aviat.[11]

Operators

Civilian operators

The 152 is popular with flight training organizations and is also widely operated by private individuals.

Military operators

 
A 1981 Reims-built FA152 Aerobat
  Argentina
  Bangladesh
  Bolivia
  Botswana
  Gabon
  Lesotho
  Mexico

Incidents and accidents

  • On 9 May 1989, a man who had murdered his ex-wife earlier that evening stole a Cessna 152T at gunpoint from an employee at Beverly Municipal Airport. During the flight, which lasted over three hours, Alfred James Hunter III fired a semi-automatic AK-47 rifle[19][20][21] at the ground below, buzzed the South Postal Annex in Boston several times, and briefly touched down at Logan International Airport before taking off again. He was arrested when he finally landed with just five minutes' worth of fuel remaining.[22]
  • On 24 May 2001, a Cessna 152 violated Israeli airspace and was shot down by an IAF AH-64 Apache. Estephan Nicolian, a Lebanese student pilot, was shot down after ignoring repeated warnings by Israeli ATC to turn back. This is one of the two only-known operational air-to-air kills using an AGM-114 Hellfire missile.[23][24]

Specifications (Cessna 152)

 
View of the underside of a Cessna 152

Data from Cessna 152 Pilot's Operating Handbook[4]

General characteristics

  • Crew: one
  • Capacity: one passenger (plus two children not exceeding 120 lb (54 kg) on optional baggage compartment bench seat)
  • Length: 24 ft 1 in (7.34 m)
  • Wingspan: 33 ft 4 in (10.16 m)
  • Height: 8 ft 6 in (2.59 m)
  • Wing area: 160 sq ft (15 m2)
  • Empty weight: 1,081 lb (490 kg)
  • Gross weight: 1,670 lb (757 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Lycoming O-235-L2C flat-4 engine, 110 hp (82 kW)
  • Propellers: 2-bladed fixed pitch, 69-inch (180 cm) McCauley or 72-inch Sensenich propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 126 mph (203 km/h, 109 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 123 mph (198 km/h, 107 kn)
  • Stall speed: 49 mph (79 km/h, 43 kn) (power off, flaps down)
  • Range: 477 mi (768 km, 415 nmi)
  • Ferry range: 795 mi (1,279 km, 691 nmi) with long-range tanks
  • Service ceiling: 14,700 ft (4,500 m)
  • Rate of climb: 715 ft/min (3.63 m/s)

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Clarke, William ‘Bill’ (1987), Cessna 150 and 152 (1st ed.), TAB Books, pp. 26–95, ISBN 0-8306-9022-0.
  2. ^ a b "1978 Aircraft Directory", Plane and Pilot, Santa Monica, CA: Werner & Werner, p. 23, 1977, ISBN 0-918312-00-0.
  3. ^ (press release). Cessna Aircraft. July 22, 2007. Archived from the original on August 25, 2007. Retrieved September 28, 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Cessna Aircraft Company: 1978 Cessna 152 Pilot's Operating Handbook Change 1, pp. 7-3 to 7-33. Cessna Aircraft Company, Wichita, Kansas, 1977.
  5. ^ Phillips, Edward H.: Wings of Cessna, Model 120 to the Citation III, p. 12, Flying Books, 1986. ISBN 0-911139-05-2
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Clarke, Bill: Cessna 150 and 152 first edition, pp. 197–212. TAB Books, 1987. ISBN 0-8306-9022-0.
  7. ^ a b c d Grimstead, Bob: Texas Taildragger 152, pp. 14–22. Pilot Magazine UK, January 2007.
  8. ^ Lycoming, "Lycoming Service Instruction No. 1009AU" January 2, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.Lycoming, November 18, 2009.
  9. ^ a b c d Simpson 1991, p. 97.
  10. ^ a b c "Type Certificate Data Sheet 3A19" (PDF). Federal Aviation Administration. March 28, 2008. Retrieved November 30, 2011.
  11. ^ Aviat Aircraft (2021). "152 Reimagined". aviataircraft.com. from the original on May 6, 2021. Retrieved May 28, 2021.
  12. ^ Chris Thornburg. . Worldairforces.com. Archived from the original on July 4, 2013. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  13. ^ "Training Aircraft Inducted in Bangladesh Army". Inter-Services Public Relations (in Bengali). December 12, 2019. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  14. ^ Siegrist 1987, pp. 175, 194.
  15. ^ Andrade 1982, p. 28.
  16. ^ Andrade 1982, p. 77.
  17. ^ Andrade 1982, p. 147.
  18. ^ Chris Thornburg. . Worldairforces.com. Archived from the original on January 25, 2012. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  19. ^ "COMMONWEALTH vs. ALFRED J. HUNTER, THIRD".
  20. ^ "HUNTER, COMMONWEALTH vs., 427 Mass. 651".
  21. ^ "Suspect steals plane, fires down on city before giving up".
  22. ^ "Man kills wife, steals plane". Associated Press. May 10, 1989. Retrieved August 12, 2011.
  23. ^ Horesh, Amikam, Sharon Roffe, Jonathan Lis, Raanan Ben-Zur and Ali Waked. (July 2011). "Lebanese Cessna plane was shot down over the trawl (Hebrew language)". Yedioth Internet. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  24. ^ "Israel shoots down Lebanese civilian plane". Cable News Network (CNN). May 24, 2001. Retrieved July 27, 2017.
  • Andrade, John (1979). US Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909. Midland Counties Publications. ISBN 0-904597-22-9.
  • Phillips, Edward H. (1986). Wings of Cessna, Model 120 to the Citation III. Flying Books. ISBN 0-911139-05-2.
  • Siegrist, Martin (October 1987). "Bolivian Air Power — 70 Years On". Air International. Vol. 33, no. 4. pp. 170–176, 194. ISSN 0306-5634.
  • Simpson, RW (1991). Airlife's General Aviation. England, UK: Airlife Publishing. ISBN 1-85310-194-X.

External links

  • Cessna 150 & 152 page on Airliners.net
  • , Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.

cessna, american, seat, fixed, tricycle, gear, general, aviation, airplane, used, primarily, flight, training, personal, based, earlier, cessna, incorporating, number, minor, design, changes, slightly, more, powerful, engine, with, longer, time, between, overh. The Cessna 152 is an American two seat fixed tricycle gear general aviation airplane used primarily for flight training and personal use It was based on the earlier Cessna 150 incorporating a number of minor design changes and a slightly more powerful engine with a longer time between overhaul Cessna 152Cessna 152Role Basic trainer GA private aircraftNational origin United StatesManufacturer CessnaIntroduction 1977Primary users Mexican NavyBangladesh ArmyBolivian Air ForceProduced 1977 1985Number built 7 584Developed from Cessna 150The Cessna 152 has been out of production for almost forty years but many are still airworthy and are in regular use for flight training Contents 1 Development 2 Design 2 1 Powerplant 2 2 Airframe 2 3 Flying controls 2 4 Landing gear 2 5 Modifications 2 5 1 Tailwheel landing gear 2 5 2 STOL kits 2 5 3 Engine 2 5 4 Other modifications 3 Variants 4 Operators 4 1 Civilian operators 4 2 Military operators 5 Incidents and accidents 6 Specifications Cessna 152 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDevelopment Edit One of the first Cessna 152s produced a 1978 model year built in 1977 1978 Cessna 152 First delivered in 1977 as the 1978 model year the 152 was a modernization of the proven Cessna 150 design The 152 was intended to compete with the new Beechcraft Skipper and Piper Tomahawk both of which were introduced the same year 1 Additional design goals were to improve useful load through a gross weight increase to 1 670 lb 760 kg decrease internal and external noise levels and run better on the then newly introduced 100LL fuel 2 As with the 150 the great majority of 152s were built at the Cessna factory in Wichita Kansas A number of aircraft were also built by Reims Aviation of France and given the designation F152 FA152 1 Production of the 152 was ended in 1985 when Cessna ended production of all of their light aircraft by that time a total of 7 584 examples of the 152 including A152 and FA152 Aerobat aerobatic variants had been built worldwide In 2007 Cessna announced that it would build a light sport successor designated the Model 162 Skycatcher 3 although production ended in 2013 Design EditPowerplant Edit All Cessna 152s were manufactured with a Lycoming O 235 engine which has been in production since 1942 The Lycoming provided not only an increase in engine power over the Cessna 150 but also was more compatible with the newer 100LL low lead fuel 1 Cessna 152s produced between 1977 and 1982 were equipped with Lycoming O 235 L2C engines producing 110 hp 82 kW at 2 550 rpm This engine still suffered some lead fouling problems in service In 1983 it was succeeded by the 108 hp 81 kW O 235 N2C which featured a different piston design and a redesigned combustion chamber to reduce this problem The N2C engine was used until 152 production ended in 1985 1 Airframe Edit The airframe is mainly of metal construction being primarily of 2024 T3 aluminum alloy with riveted skin Components such as wingtips and fairings are made from glass reinforced plastic The fuselage is a semi monocoque with vertical bulkheads and frames joined by longerons running the length of the fuselage The wings are of a strut braced design and have a 1 degree dihedral angle The tapered outboard portion of each wing has one degree of washout the chord of the tip section has one degree lower angle of attack than the chord at the end of the constant width section This allows greater aileron effectiveness during a stall 4 The 1978 model has a one piece cowling nose bowl that requires removing the propeller to remove it The 1979 model introduced a split nose cowling nose bowl that can be removed without removing the propeller 5 Flying controls Edit Instrument panel Dual controls are available as optional equipment on the Cessna 152 4 and almost all 152s have this option installed The Cessna 152 is equipped with differential ailerons that move through 20 degrees upwards and 15 degrees downwards It has single slotted fowler flaps which are electrically operated and deploy to a maximum of 30 degrees The rudder can move 23 degrees to either side and is fitted with a ground adjustable trim tab The elevators move up through 25 degrees and down through 18 degrees An adjustable trim tab is installed on the right elevator and is controlled by a small wheel in the center of the control console The trim tab moves 10 degrees up and 20 degrees down relative to the elevator chordline 4 Landing gear Edit The Cessna 152 is equipped with fixed tricycle landing gear The main gear has tubular steel legs surrounded by a full length fairing with a step for access to the cabin The main gear has a 7 ft 7 in 2 31 m wheelbase 1 The nosewheel is connected to the engine mount and has an oleo strut to dampen and absorb normal operating loads The nosewheel is steerable through 30 degrees either side of neutral and can castor under differential braking up to 30 degrees It is connected to the rudder pedals through a spring linkage 4 The braking system consists of single disc brake assemblies fitted to the main gear and operated by a hydraulic system Brakes are operated by pushing on the top portion of the rudder pedals It is possible to use differential braking when taxiing and this allows very tight turns to be made 4 The 152 is also fitted with a parking brake system It is applied by depressing both toe brakes and then pulling the Park Brake lever to the pilot s left The toe brakes are then released but pressure is maintained in the system thereby leaving both brakes engaged 4 The standard tires used are 600 X 6 on the main gear and 500 X 5 on the nosewheel 1 Modifications Edit There are hundreds of modifications available for the Cessna 152 The most frequently installed include Tailwheel landing gear Edit Taildragger conversions are available and have been fitted to some 152s It involves strengthening the fuselage for the main gear being moved further forward removing the nosewheel and strengthening the tail area for the tailwheel This greatly improves short field performance and is claimed to give up to a 10 kn 19 km h cruise speed increase 6 7 STOL kits Edit The wings can be modified using a number of STOL modification kits some improving high speed cruise performance but most concentrating on STOL performance Horton s STOL kit is one of the better known of the latter It involves fitting a more cambered leading edge cuff to increase the maximum coefficient of lift fitting fences at the aileron flap intersection and fitting drooped wingtips Stalls with these modifications are almost off the airspeed indicator since instrument error is high at high angles of attack 6 7 It has been said that landings can be achieved in two fuselage lengths with the kit installed in addition to a taildragger modification by balancing power against drag 7 Takeoff performance is also improved by varying degrees depending on the surface Engine Edit The engine s power can be increased by various modifications such as the Sparrow Hawk power package increasing it to 125 hp 93 kW 6 7 The disadvantage of the Sparrow Hawk conversion is that it uses pistons from the O 235 F series engine and therefore the engine recommended time between overhauls is reduced from 2 400 hours to 2 000 hours 8 Other modifications Edit Other popular modifications include Flap gap seals to reduce drag and increase rate of climb 6 Different wingtips some of which claim various cruise speed increases and stall speed reductions 6 Auto fuel STCs which permit the use of automobile fuel instead of the more expensive aviation fuel Auxiliary fuel tanks for greater range 6 Door catches to replace the factory ones that often fail in service 6 Belly fuel drain valves to drain fuel from the lowest point in the fuel system 6 Variants Edit A 1978 Cessna 152 landing A 1980 A152 Aerobat with its distinctive factory paint scheme A 1985 Reims built F152 Front view of a Cessna 152 Cessna 152 has only 4 model variants 152 F152 A152 FA152 all equipped with the Lycoming O 235 152 Two seat light touring aircraft fitted with a fixed tricycle landing gear powered by a 110 hp 82 kW Lycoming O 235 L2C piston engine 6628 built 9 Available with a number of avionic options aside from the standard Model 152 there was a 152 II with an enhanced package of standard avionics and trim features 1 Type approved in 1977 and produced as 1978 to 1985 model years 10 A152 Aerobat Two seat aerobatic capable aircraft 315 built 9 Certified for 6 3 Gs and had standard four point harnesses skylights and jettisonable doors along with a checkerboard paint scheme and removable seat cushions to allow parachutes to be worn by the crew 1 2 Type approved in 1977 and produced as 1978 to 1985 model years 10 The following aerobatic maneuvers are approved chandelles steep turns barrel rolls snap rolls loops vertical reversements lazy eights spins aileron rolls Immelmann turns Cuban eights and stalls except whip stalls 10 F152 Reims built Model 152 552 built 9 FA152 Aerobat Reims built Model A152 89 built 9 C152 II Not a special model but with Nav Pac equipment package which included better quality avionics for IFR flying and additional interior equipment which makes it a little more basic weight 1 C152 T Not a special model but flight school equipment package with T denoting trainer and not a sub model 1 C152 Aviat Not a special model but a general overhaul and rebuilt of Cessna 152s by Aviat 11 Operators EditCivilian operators Edit The 152 is popular with flight training organizations and is also widely operated by private individuals Military operators Edit A 1981 Reims built FA152 Aerobat ArgentinaArgentine National Gendarmerie operated three from 2004 12 BangladeshBangladesh Army A152 Aerobat 13 BoliviaBolivian Air Force 12 in service as of 1987 14 BotswanaBotswana Defence Force Air Wing two A152 15 GabonGabonese Air Force one F152 16 LesothoLesotho Defence Force one A152 17 MexicoMexican Navy operated seven from 1979 18 Incidents and accidents EditOn 9 May 1989 a man who had murdered his ex wife earlier that evening stole a Cessna 152T at gunpoint from an employee at Beverly Municipal Airport During the flight which lasted over three hours Alfred James Hunter III fired a semi automatic AK 47 rifle 19 20 21 at the ground below buzzed the South Postal Annex in Boston several times and briefly touched down at Logan International Airport before taking off again He was arrested when he finally landed with just five minutes worth of fuel remaining 22 On 24 May 2001 a Cessna 152 violated Israeli airspace and was shot down by an IAF AH 64 Apache Estephan Nicolian a Lebanese student pilot was shot down after ignoring repeated warnings by Israeli ATC to turn back This is one of the two only known operational air to air kills using an AGM 114 Hellfire missile 23 24 Specifications Cessna 152 Edit View of the underside of a Cessna 152 Data from Cessna 152 Pilot s Operating Handbook 4 General characteristicsCrew one Capacity one passenger plus two children not exceeding 120 lb 54 kg on optional baggage compartment bench seat Length 24 ft 1 in 7 34 m Wingspan 33 ft 4 in 10 16 m Height 8 ft 6 in 2 59 m Wing area 160 sq ft 15 m2 Empty weight 1 081 lb 490 kg Gross weight 1 670 lb 757 kg Powerplant 1 Lycoming O 235 L2C flat 4 engine 110 hp 82 kW Propellers 2 bladed fixed pitch 69 inch 180 cm McCauley or 72 inch Sensenich propellerPerformance Maximum speed 126 mph 203 km h 109 kn Cruise speed 123 mph 198 km h 107 kn Stall speed 49 mph 79 km h 43 kn power off flaps down Range 477 mi 768 km 415 nmi Ferry range 795 mi 1 279 km 691 nmi with long range tanks Service ceiling 14 700 ft 4 500 m Rate of climb 715 ft min 3 63 m s See also Edit Aviation portalRelated development Cessna 140 Cessna 150 Cessna 172Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Alpha 2000 Robin R2000 Beechcraft Skipper Diamond DA20 Grumman American AA 1 Liberty XL2 Piper PA 38 Tomahawk Symphony SA 160Related lists List of aircraft List of civil aircraft List of most produced aircraftReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j Clarke William Bill 1987 Cessna 150 and 152 1st ed TAB Books pp 26 95 ISBN 0 8306 9022 0 a b 1978 Aircraft Directory Plane and Pilot Santa Monica CA Werner amp Werner p 23 1977 ISBN 0 918312 00 0 Cessna Announces Light Sport Aircraft Details press release Cessna Aircraft July 22 2007 Archived from the original on August 25 2007 Retrieved September 28 2007 a b c d e f g Cessna Aircraft Company 1978 Cessna 152 Pilot s Operating Handbook Change 1 pp 7 3 to 7 33 Cessna Aircraft Company Wichita Kansas 1977 Phillips Edward H Wings of Cessna Model 120 to the Citation III p 12 Flying Books 1986 ISBN 0 911139 05 2 a b c d e f g h Clarke Bill Cessna 150 and 152 first edition pp 197 212 TAB Books 1987 ISBN 0 8306 9022 0 a b c d Grimstead Bob Texas Taildragger 152 pp 14 22 Pilot Magazine UK January 2007 Lycoming Lycoming Service Instruction No 1009AU Archived January 2 2013 at the Wayback Machine Lycoming November 18 2009 a b c d Simpson 1991 p 97 a b c Type Certificate Data Sheet 3A19 PDF Federal Aviation Administration March 28 2008 Retrieved November 30 2011 Aviat Aircraft 2021 152 Reimagined aviataircraft com Archived from the original on May 6 2021 Retrieved May 28 2021 Chris Thornburg World Air Forces Argentina Air Force Worldairforces com Archived from the original on July 4 2013 Retrieved December 24 2013 Training Aircraft Inducted in Bangladesh Army Inter Services Public Relations in Bengali December 12 2019 Retrieved February 21 2021 Siegrist 1987 pp 175 194 Andrade 1982 p 28 Andrade 1982 p 77 Andrade 1982 p 147 Chris Thornburg World Air Forces Mexico Air Force Worldairforces com Archived from the original on January 25 2012 Retrieved December 24 2013 COMMONWEALTH vs ALFRED J HUNTER THIRD HUNTER COMMONWEALTH vs 427 Mass 651 Suspect steals plane fires down on city before giving up Man kills wife steals plane Associated Press May 10 1989 Retrieved August 12 2011 Horesh Amikam Sharon Roffe Jonathan Lis Raanan Ben Zur and Ali Waked July 2011 Lebanese Cessna plane was shot down over the trawl Hebrew language Yedioth Internet Retrieved July 31 2011 Israel shoots down Lebanese civilian plane Cable News Network CNN May 24 2001 Retrieved July 27 2017 Andrade John 1979 US Military Aircraft Designations and Serials since 1909 Midland Counties Publications ISBN 0 904597 22 9 Phillips Edward H 1986 Wings of Cessna Model 120 to the Citation III Flying Books ISBN 0 911139 05 2 Siegrist Martin October 1987 Bolivian Air Power 70 Years On Air International Vol 33 no 4 pp 170 176 194 ISSN 0306 5634 Simpson RW 1991 Airlife s General Aviation England UK Airlife Publishing ISBN 1 85310 194 X External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cessna 152 Cessna 150 amp 152 page on Airliners net Cessna 152 Aerobat Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Cessna 150 152 Model History Cessna 150 The Generic Trainer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cessna 152 amp oldid 1149524651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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