Lancair
unveils turboprop kit
By James Wynbrandt
|
Lancair introduces
its latest kit design, the four-place, pressurized Evolution. Photo by Dave
Higdon
|
Lancair
International, which helped pioneer the high performance kit aircraft industry
in the 1980s with its composite aircraft, introduced the Lancair Evolution, the
latest and highest performing member of its family, at a ceremony at the
company’s display area at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2007 yesterday.
More
than three years in development, the Evolution is a four-place single-engine
turboprop with a projected top speed of 385 mph.
"We
did not take the fast-track approach with this design," said Lancair International
president and CEO Joe Bartels at the unveiling ceremony, contrasting the
Evolution’s development timeline with that of aircraft such as the
Eclipse Concept Jet and the Epic Victory personal jet, which were also
introduced this year at AirVenture. "I can’t tell you we went from
concept to development in six months, nor would I want to. I can tell you we
took the time necessary to come up with the best and safest four-place turbine
powered aircraft available today."
Powered
by a Pratt & Whitney PT6A-135A engine developing 927 hp, the Evolution is
projected to have a maximum cruise speed of 338 knots at 25,000 feet while
burning 35 gallons of Jet A per hour. An economy cruise setting yields 270
knots at 28,000 feet with a 23 gallon-per-hour fuel burn. With full fuel (140
gallons), the Evolution will be able to carry 814 pounds.
"We
could have made more seats, but we chose to make a four-place that could truly
handle four passengers, a full load of fuel and 150 pounds of baggage,"
Bartels said.
The
baggage area, like the rest of the aircraft, is pressurized.
"We
found quite a few of our customers have dogs they like to bring with them so we
wanted to make that [part of the aircraft] pressurized," said Tim Ong,
Lancair’s general manager and chief engineer. "And it also allows
toothpaste not to mess everything up every time you put it in the back."
The
Evolution can be equipped with either a Chelton EFIS or Garmin G-900X avionics
suite.
With
safety a primary design concern, the Evolution is built to FAA Part 23
standards, including a 61-knot stall speed, and is equipped with a BRS
parachute system. The company also worked to simplify construction and
estimates build time is about 1,000 hours. Five kits are expected to be
completed for sale by the end of the year and, at the new model’s
introduction, Bartels announced the company has already sold four of them.
The
kit is priced at $250,000. The first 10 will be available at a 10 percent
discount of $225,000. Powerplant and avionics are sold separately, and the
company estimates the completed aircraft will cost from $750,000 to $1 million,
depending on whether customers buy a new or used engine.
Absent
from the ceremony was Lance Neibauer, founder of the Bend, Oregon-based
company, who sold Lancair to Bartels, a Lancair IV-P customer, in 2003.
However, Neibauer retains emotional ties to the company. Ong noted that
Neibauer examined the mockup of the Evolution at the company’s factory
before it was shipped to Oshkosh
for the unveiling.
"He
sat in the airplane right before we left and he said, ‘Wow, it’s a
lot bigger than I thought it was going to be,’" Ong related Neibauer
saying. "’It looks good.’"
The
mockup of the Evolution is on view at the Lancair International display, Booths
448, 449, 456, 457.