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Piper PA-25 Pawnee

The PA-25 Pawnee is an agricultural aircraft produced by Piper Aircraft between 1959 and 1981. It remains a widely used aircraft in agricultural spraying and is also used as a tow plane, or tug, for launching gliders or for towing banners. In 1988, the design rights and support responsibility were sold to Latino Americana de Aviación of Argentina.

PA-25 Pawnee
PA-25-260 Pawnee C glider tug
Role Agricultural aircraft
National origin United States
Manufacturer Piper Aircraft
Designer Fred Weick
First flight 1957
Introduction August 1959
Produced 1959-1981
Number built 5167

Design and development

Most agricultural aircraft before 1949 were converted military aircraft and it was in that year that Fred Weick, based at Texas A&M University, designed a dedicated agricultural aircraft: the AG-1. The AG-1 first flew on 1 December 1950.[1]

During 1953, Fred Weick was approached by Piper to become a consultant on the agricultural version of the PA-18, the PA-18A, in particular to design and test a distributor for dust and seeds.[1] A few weeks later, Piper sponsored Texas A&M University to design a dedicated agricultural aircraft based on the AG-1 but to use as many PA-18A and PA-22 components as possible. The resulting design, the AG-3, was smaller than the AG-1 and had a steel tube fuselage which was fabric covered.[1] The AG-3 was a single-seat, low-wing monoplane with the wings braced to the fuselage with struts. It had a conventional landing gear with a tailwheel and was powered by a 135 hp engine.[1] The single seat was placed high in the fuselage to give the best visibility and an 800 lb-capacity hopper was fitted in front of the cockpit.[1]

The AG-3 made its maiden flight in November 1954.[2] The aircraft's flying tests were successful and, in 1957, Weick was invited to join Piper at Vero Beach, and the AG-3 was renamed the PA-25 Pawnee. The engine was upgraded to a 150 hp Lycoming O-320-A1A engine.[1] Two pre-production aircraft were built at Vero Beach in 1957 and production started at Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, in May 1959.[1]

In 1962, another prototype was built at Vero Beach with a 235 hp Lycoming O-540-B2B5 engine and production aircraft were produced at Lock Haven from 1962.[1] In 1964, the Pawnee B was introduced with a larger hopper and improved dispersal gear. The Pawnee C of 1967 was fitted with oleo shock-absorbers and other improvements; also in 1967, a 260 hp variant was introduced.[1]

Early models of the Pawnee had a single fuel tank located between the agricultural hopper and the engine. The National Transportation Safety Board recommended to Piper Aircraft that the early model PA-25's with a fiberglass fuel tank be retrofitted with a rubber fuel cell to minimize the chance of catastrophic failure and fire resulting from a crash.[3]

In 1974, the Pawnee D was introduced, with the fuel tanks moved from the fuselage to the wings; the 260 hp variant was also available with either a fixed pitch or constant-speed propeller.[1] Although still the same design as the "D", the 1980 and 1981 production aircraft were marketed as the Pawnee.[1] The final production aircraft was completed at Lock Haven on 22 March 1981, the last of 5,167 Pawnees.[1]

A useful design aspect was the ability to carry a mechanic on a jump seat fitted in the hopper to assist with operations at remote stations.[4]

On April 15, 1988, Piper Aircraft, Inc. officially sold the PA-25 series aircraft to Latino Americana de Aviación S.A in Argentina. The sale included all drawings, engineering data, parts inventory, tools, catalogs, and manuals. All support of any nature became the responsibility of the new owners.[5]

In 2019, Australia's Civil Aviation Safety Authority formally approved the issuing to eTugs of Certificates of Airworthiness in the Limited category for the purpose of glider towing. An etug is a PA-25 where the Lycoming engine has been replaced with a General Motors LS automotive engine. The advantages for glider towing, compared to a Lycoming powered PA-25, include a greater rate of climb, reduced fuel consumption, the elimination of shock cooling (since the LS is water-cooled rather than air-cooled) and a less costly maintenance regime.[6][7]

Variants

AG-3
Prototype built at Texas A&M University.
PA-25-150 Pawnee
Initial production version fitted with a 150 hp (110 kW) Lycoming O-320 engine. Payload of 800 lb (360 kg) powders or 145 US gal (121 imp gal; 550 L) liquids.[8]
 
PA-25-235 Pawnee B towing a glider
 
The Swift Aerobatic Display Team at Kemble Battle of Britain Weekend 2009. A Swift glider is performing continuous full rolls while being towed by a Pawnee
PA-25-235 Pawnee B
Fitted with a 235 hp (175 kW) Lycoming O-540-B2B5 six-cylinder engine. The Pawnee B featured a larger hopper and an increased payload of 1,200 lb (540 kg).[9]
PA-25-235 and PA-25-260 Pawnee C
The Pawnee C was an upgraded version of the 'B' model and was available with a 235hp or a 260hp high compression version of the O-540 engine and either a fixed pitch or constant speed propeller. The fuselage of the Pawnee C featured a quickly detachable 'turtledeck' panel to ease the rinsing out of spilt corrosive agents from the fuselage structure and to facilitate servicing and inspection of components housed in the rear section of the fuselage.
PA-25-235 and PA-25-260 Pawnee D
The Pawnee D was also powered by a Lycoming O-540 of 260hp but featured fuel tanks fitted in the outer wings and metal covered ailerons and flaps. From 1980 it was known as the PA-25-235 Pawnee.
eTug
A modified PA-25 powered by a General Motors LS automotive engine driving a three-bladed propeller.[10] Other differences include a belted propeller speed reduction unit.[citation needed]

Accidents and incidents

  • 9 August 1974 a crop-spraying Pawnee was involved in a fatal mid-air collision in Norfolk, UK with a Royal Air Force McDonnell Douglas Phantom II FGR2.
  • 24 April 1996 a Piper PA-25-150 (modified by extending the canopy forward and installing a passenger seat in the hopper area) being used to develop a supplemental type certificate (STC) was involved in a fatal crash near Buffalo, MO in which an FAA flight test engineer was killed but the test pilot survived.[11]
  • 29 February 2004 a glider tug Pawnee crashed and was destroyed by post-crash fire soon after takeoff at Parham Airfield, West Sussex, England. The investigation concluded that the pilot, who was 71, had died in flight from an undiagnosed heart condition. When the Pawnee diverted from its expected course the glider instructor took control from the student, released the tow cable, and landed their aircraft safely; the tug pilot was the only fatality.[12]
  • 6 February 2010 a glider-towing PA-25-235 Pawnee was involved in a multiple-fatality accident near Boulder Municipal Airport (in Colorado, USA), after colliding with a Cirrus SR20. All occupants of both powered craft died; one in the Pawnee, two in the Cirrus; however, the Schweizer 2-32 glider released and landed safely.[13][14]
  • 1 March 2019 a Piper PA-25 towing a banner crashed into a condominium building in Fort Lauderdale Florida. The pilot was killed.[15]
  • 7 May 2022 a Piper PA-25-235, owned by the Wanganui Manawatu Gliding Club in New Zealand, and operating out of the Feilding Aerodrome, encountered difficulties when towing a glider aloft, and crashed into trees.[16] The pilot, 74 year old Ronald Sanders, died of his injuries on 30 May 2022.[17]

Specifications (PA-25-235 Pawnee)

 
A British registered PA-25-260 Pawnee D in use as a glider tug
 
PA-25-235 Pawnee C at the Celje Airport

Data from: Macdonald Aircraft Handbook [4]

General characteristics

  • Crew: One
  • Capacity: 150 US gal (568 L) or 1,500 lb (545 kg) of chemicals
  • Length: 24 ft 9 in (7.55 m)
  • Wingspan: 36 ft 2 in (11.02 m)
  • Height: 7 ft 2 in (2.19 m)
  • Wing area: 183 ft2 (17.0 m2)
  • Empty: 1,457 lb (662 kg)
  • Loaded: 2,900 lb (1,317 kg)
  • Maximum takeoff: 2,900 lb (1,317 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 x Lycoming O-540-B2B5, 235 hp (175 kW)

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 107 kts or 124 mph (188 km/h)
  • Range: 300 miles (500 km)
  • Service ceiling: 13,000 ft (3,963 m)
  • Rate of climb: 630 ft/min (192 m/min)(at MTOW)
  • Wing loading: 15.9 lb/ft2 (77.5 kg/m2)
  • Power/Mass: 0.0810 hp/lb (0.133 kW/kg)

See also

Related development:

Comparable aircraft:

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Peperell/Smith 1987, pp.113-120
  2. ^ Bridgman 1958, p. 380.
  3. ^ National Transportation Safety Board A-87-99, July 22, 1987
  4. ^ a b Macdonald,1964. p. 137.
  5. ^ Piper Service Spares Letter No. 413, May 8, 1988
  6. ^ Infrastructure. "CASA EX53/14 - Exemption — for certain aircraft to tow gliders". www.legislation.gov.au. Retrieved 2019-11-09.
  7. ^ "Gliding Australia issue 49" (PDF). September 2019.
  8. ^ Taylor 1962, p. 264.
  9. ^ "Newsreel: New Piper Pawnee". Flying. Vol. 70, no. 5. May 1962. p. 69.
  10. ^ "eTug". Glider Club of Victoria. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  11. ^ NTSB Investigation No. CHI96FA141
  12. ^ "Piper PA-25-235 Pawnee, G-ASKV" (PDF). AAIB Bulletins. Air Accidents Investigation Branch. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  13. ^ Ranter, Harro. "Mid-air collision Accident Piper PA-25-235 Pawnee N8718L, 06 Feb 2010". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
  14. ^ "3 killed when two planes collide near Colorado airport - CNN.com". www.cnn.com. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
  15. ^ Archived from the original on 2019-03-02.
  16. ^ Ranter, Harro. "Accident Piper PA-25-235 Pawnee B ZK-CIG, 07 May 2022". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
  17. ^ Karaitiana, Karla (2022-05-29). "Police name man who died in Feilding plane crash". Stuff. Retrieved 2022-06-04.

Bibliography

  • Bridgman, Leonard (1958). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1958–59. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Ltd.
  • Goodrum, Alastair (January–February 2004). "Down Range: Losses over the Wash in the 1960s and 1970s". Air Enthusiast (109): 12–17. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Green, William. Aircraft Handbook. London. Macdonald & Co. (Publishers) Ltd., 1964.
  • Peperell, Roger and Smith, Colin. Piper Aircraft and their forerunners Tonbridge, Kent, England Air-Britain 1987. ISBN 0 85130 149 5
  • Taylor, John W. R. Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1962–63. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, Ltd., 1962.

External links

    piper, pawnee, pawnee, agricultural, aircraft, produced, piper, aircraft, between, 1959, 1981, remains, widely, used, aircraft, agricultural, spraying, also, used, plane, launching, gliders, towing, banners, 1988, design, rights, support, responsibility, were,. The PA 25 Pawnee is an agricultural aircraft produced by Piper Aircraft between 1959 and 1981 It remains a widely used aircraft in agricultural spraying and is also used as a tow plane or tug for launching gliders or for towing banners In 1988 the design rights and support responsibility were sold to Latino Americana de Aviacion of Argentina PA 25 PawneePA 25 260 Pawnee C glider tugRole Agricultural aircraftNational origin United StatesManufacturer Piper AircraftDesigner Fred WeickFirst flight 1957Introduction August 1959Produced 1959 1981Number built 5167 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Variants 3 Accidents and incidents 4 Specifications PA 25 235 Pawnee 4 1 General characteristics 4 2 Performance 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Bibliography 8 External linksDesign and development EditMost agricultural aircraft before 1949 were converted military aircraft and it was in that year that Fred Weick based at Texas A amp M University designed a dedicated agricultural aircraft the AG 1 The AG 1 first flew on 1 December 1950 1 During 1953 Fred Weick was approached by Piper to become a consultant on the agricultural version of the PA 18 the PA 18A in particular to design and test a distributor for dust and seeds 1 A few weeks later Piper sponsored Texas A amp M University to design a dedicated agricultural aircraft based on the AG 1 but to use as many PA 18A and PA 22 components as possible The resulting design the AG 3 was smaller than the AG 1 and had a steel tube fuselage which was fabric covered 1 The AG 3 was a single seat low wing monoplane with the wings braced to the fuselage with struts It had a conventional landing gear with a tailwheel and was powered by a 135 hp engine 1 The single seat was placed high in the fuselage to give the best visibility and an 800 lb capacity hopper was fitted in front of the cockpit 1 The AG 3 made its maiden flight in November 1954 2 The aircraft s flying tests were successful and in 1957 Weick was invited to join Piper at Vero Beach and the AG 3 was renamed the PA 25 Pawnee The engine was upgraded to a 150 hp Lycoming O 320 A1A engine 1 Two pre production aircraft were built at Vero Beach in 1957 and production started at Lock Haven Pennsylvania in May 1959 1 In 1962 another prototype was built at Vero Beach with a 235 hp Lycoming O 540 B2B5 engine and production aircraft were produced at Lock Haven from 1962 1 In 1964 the Pawnee B was introduced with a larger hopper and improved dispersal gear The Pawnee C of 1967 was fitted with oleo shock absorbers and other improvements also in 1967 a 260 hp variant was introduced 1 Early models of the Pawnee had a single fuel tank located between the agricultural hopper and the engine The National Transportation Safety Board recommended to Piper Aircraft that the early model PA 25 s with a fiberglass fuel tank be retrofitted with a rubber fuel cell to minimize the chance of catastrophic failure and fire resulting from a crash 3 In 1974 the Pawnee D was introduced with the fuel tanks moved from the fuselage to the wings the 260 hp variant was also available with either a fixed pitch or constant speed propeller 1 Although still the same design as the D the 1980 and 1981 production aircraft were marketed as the Pawnee 1 The final production aircraft was completed at Lock Haven on 22 March 1981 the last of 5 167 Pawnees 1 A useful design aspect was the ability to carry a mechanic on a jump seat fitted in the hopper to assist with operations at remote stations 4 On April 15 1988 Piper Aircraft Inc officially sold the PA 25 series aircraft to Latino Americana de Aviacion S A in Argentina The sale included all drawings engineering data parts inventory tools catalogs and manuals All support of any nature became the responsibility of the new owners 5 In 2019 Australia s Civil Aviation Safety Authority formally approved the issuing to eTugs of Certificates of Airworthiness in the Limited category for the purpose of glider towing An etug is a PA 25 where the Lycoming engine has been replaced with a General Motors LS automotive engine The advantages for glider towing compared to a Lycoming powered PA 25 include a greater rate of climb reduced fuel consumption the elimination of shock cooling since the LS is water cooled rather than air cooled and a less costly maintenance regime 6 7 Variants EditAG 3 Prototype built at Texas A amp M University PA 25 150 Pawnee Initial production version fitted with a 150 hp 110 kW Lycoming O 320 engine Payload of 800 lb 360 kg powders or 145 US gal 121 imp gal 550 L liquids 8 PA 25 235 Pawnee B towing a glider The Swift Aerobatic Display Team at Kemble Battle of Britain Weekend 2009 A Swift glider is performing continuous full rolls while being towed by a Pawnee PA 25 235 Pawnee B Fitted with a 235 hp 175 kW Lycoming O 540 B2B5 six cylinder engine The Pawnee B featured a larger hopper and an increased payload of 1 200 lb 540 kg 9 PA 25 235 and PA 25 260 Pawnee C The Pawnee C was an upgraded version of the B model and was available with a 235hp or a 260hp high compression version of the O 540 engine and either a fixed pitch or constant speed propeller The fuselage of the Pawnee C featured a quickly detachable turtledeck panel to ease the rinsing out of spilt corrosive agents from the fuselage structure and to facilitate servicing and inspection of components housed in the rear section of the fuselage PA 25 235 and PA 25 260 Pawnee D The Pawnee D was also powered by a Lycoming O 540 of 260hp but featured fuel tanks fitted in the outer wings and metal covered ailerons and flaps From 1980 it was known as the PA 25 235 Pawnee eTug A modified PA 25 powered by a General Motors LS automotive engine driving a three bladed propeller 10 Other differences include a belted propeller speed reduction unit citation needed Accidents and incidents Edit9 August 1974 a crop spraying Pawnee was involved in a fatal mid air collision in Norfolk UK with a Royal Air Force McDonnell Douglas Phantom II FGR2 24 April 1996 a Piper PA 25 150 modified by extending the canopy forward and installing a passenger seat in the hopper area being used to develop a supplemental type certificate STC was involved in a fatal crash near Buffalo MO in which an FAA flight test engineer was killed but the test pilot survived 11 29 February 2004 a glider tug Pawnee crashed and was destroyed by post crash fire soon after takeoff at Parham Airfield West Sussex England The investigation concluded that the pilot who was 71 had died in flight from an undiagnosed heart condition When the Pawnee diverted from its expected course the glider instructor took control from the student released the tow cable and landed their aircraft safely the tug pilot was the only fatality 12 6 February 2010 a glider towing PA 25 235 Pawnee was involved in a multiple fatality accident near Boulder Municipal Airport in Colorado USA after colliding with a Cirrus SR20 All occupants of both powered craft died one in the Pawnee two in the Cirrus however the Schweizer 2 32 glider released and landed safely 13 14 1 March 2019 a Piper PA 25 towing a banner crashed into a condominium building in Fort Lauderdale Florida The pilot was killed 15 7 May 2022 a Piper PA 25 235 owned by the Wanganui Manawatu Gliding Club in New Zealand and operating out of the Feilding Aerodrome encountered difficulties when towing a glider aloft and crashed into trees 16 The pilot 74 year old Ronald Sanders died of his injuries on 30 May 2022 17 Specifications PA 25 235 Pawnee Edit A British registered PA 25 260 Pawnee D in use as a glider tug PA 25 235 Pawnee C at the Celje Airport Data from Macdonald Aircraft Handbook 4 General characteristics Edit Crew One Capacity 150 US gal 568 L or 1 500 lb 545 kg of chemicals Length 24 ft 9 in 7 55 m Wingspan 36 ft 2 in 11 02 m Height 7 ft 2 in 2 19 m Wing area 183 ft2 17 0 m2 Empty 1 457 lb 662 kg Loaded 2 900 lb 1 317 kg Maximum takeoff 2 900 lb 1 317 kg Powerplant 1 x Lycoming O 540 B2B5 235 hp 175 kW Performance Edit Maximum speed 107 kts or 124 mph 188 km h Range 300 miles 500 km Service ceiling 13 000 ft 3 963 m Rate of climb 630 ft min 192 m min at MTOW Wing loading 15 9 lb ft2 77 5 kg m2 Power Mass 0 0810 hp lb 0 133 kW kg See also EditRelated development Texas A amp M College AG 1 Gippsland Aeronautics PA 25 235 A9 Fatman Piper PA 36 Pawnee BraveComparable aircraft Aero Boero 260AG Air Tractor AT 300 Ayres Thrush CallAir A 9 Cessna 188 AgWagon Embraer EMB 202 Ipanema Grumman Ag Cat PZL 106 Kruk PZL Mielec M 18 Dromader Zlin Z 37 CmelakNotes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Peperell Smith 1987 pp 113 120 Bridgman 1958 p 380 National Transportation Safety Board A 87 99 July 22 1987 a b Macdonald 1964 p 137 Piper Service Spares Letter No 413 May 8 1988 Infrastructure CASA EX53 14 Exemption for certain aircraft to tow gliders www legislation gov au Retrieved 2019 11 09 Gliding Australia issue 49 PDF September 2019 Taylor 1962 p 264 Newsreel New Piper Pawnee Flying Vol 70 no 5 May 1962 p 69 eTug Glider Club of Victoria Retrieved November 9 2019 NTSB Investigation No CHI96FA141 Piper PA 25 235 Pawnee G ASKV PDF AAIB Bulletins Air Accidents Investigation Branch Retrieved 22 October 2019 Ranter Harro Mid air collision Accident Piper PA 25 235 Pawnee N8718L 06 Feb 2010 aviation safety net Retrieved 2022 06 04 3 killed when two planes collide near Colorado airport CNN com www cnn com Retrieved 2022 06 04 1 dead after small plane crashes into Fort Lauderdale condo Archived from the original on 2019 03 02 Ranter Harro Accident Piper PA 25 235 Pawnee B ZK CIG 07 May 2022 aviation safety net Retrieved 2022 06 04 Karaitiana Karla 2022 05 29 Police name man who died in Feilding plane crash Stuff Retrieved 2022 06 04 Bibliography EditBridgman Leonard 1958 Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1958 59 London Sampson Low Marston amp Company Ltd Goodrum Alastair January February 2004 Down Range Losses over the Wash in the 1960s and 1970s Air Enthusiast 109 12 17 ISSN 0143 5450 Green William Aircraft Handbook London Macdonald amp Co Publishers Ltd 1964 Peperell Roger and Smith Colin Piper Aircraft and their forerunners Tonbridge Kent England Air Britain 1987 ISBN 0 85130 149 5 Taylor John W R Jane s All the World s Aircraft 1962 63 London Sampson Low Marston amp Company Ltd 1962 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Piper PA 25 Pawnee PA 25 Pawnee fliegerszene de Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piper PA 25 Pawnee amp oldid 1125658442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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