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2007 CIRRUS SR22-G3
Piston Single Aircraft
(VAT applies to buyers in South Africa)
Although slower and smaller, with lower ceilings and payloads, piston single aircraft remain a cost-effective alternative to turboprops and jets for numerous uses, thanks to their ease of use, and comparatively low operating costs.
Read More (About Piston Single Aircraft)Before aircraft builders first began using jet engines to power their aircraft in the 1930s, it was piston (or reciprocating) engines that propelled aircraft. With single-engine piston aircraft, one piston engine typically situated at the plane’s nose provides the power needed to create lift and enable flight. The principles of piston engine operation are straightforward and similar to those of engines that power automobiles; multiple cylinders, each containing a piston connected to a crankshaft, move up and down as combustion dictates, turning the crankshaft, which in turn spins the aircraft’s propeller.
These days, both single- and twin-engine piston aircraft remain a viable, cost-effective option for numerous usage types thanks to their general availability, ease of use, and friendly upfront purchase cost compared to turboprop and jet aircraft. In addition to being particularly popular with flight training schools and academies, piston singles are used for business and recreational trips, ambulance transport, crop fertiliser application, and other mission types. Examples of popular single-engine piston platforms include the Beechcraft Bonanza, the Cessna 182, and the Diamond DA40, as well as the Piper Arrow.
Although less expensive to acquire upfront than turboprop and jet aircraft, single-engine pistons are smaller, often lack a pressurised cabin, transport fewer passengers (two to six), operate at lower maximum flight altitudes (generally 15,000 feet or less), provide slower cruise speeds (typically 200 knots or lower), and support shorter missions (often less than 400 miles). Compared to piston twins, piston singles omit the redundancy of a second engine and backup components, leaving some experts to consider twins a better option for owners/operators who regularly fly over mountains, large water bodies, or other conditions where such redundancy would prove particularly beneficial.
Piston singles also provide generally slower maximum cruise speeds, lower payload capacities, and less takeoff and climbing performance than piston twins, but require less long-term maintenance, overhaul, repair, and other associated costs due to having one less engine. Both aircraft types, however, enable pilots to access smaller airports with shorter runways, something most jet aircraft are unable to do, giving their operators greater access to more airfields.
You’ll find a large selection of new and used piston single aircraft for sale on ControllerEMEA.com from such leading manufacturers as Beechcraft, Cessna, Cirrus, Diamond, Mooney, and Piper.