Jaffe/Swearingen SA-32T Turbo Trainer

SA-32T Turbo Trainer
Role Training aircraft
National origin USA
Manufacturer Jaffe Aircraft Corporation/Swearingen Aircraft Corporation
Designer Ed Swearingen
First flight 31 May 1989
Status Prototype only
Number built 1
Developed from Swearingen SX300

The Jaffe/Swearingen SA-32T is a prototype American turboprop- powered training aircraft with side-by-side seating. A single example was built in the late 1980s, but no production followed.

Design and development

The SA-32T was developed by Ed Swearingen from his Swearingen SX300 piston-engined homebuilt aircraft on behalf of the Jaffe Aircraft Corporation, who hoped to sell it as a relatively low-cost military trainer.[1][2] The resulting design was a low-wing cantilever monoplane, with a mainly metal structure, but with composite engine cowlings and tips of wings and tails. Skin thicknesses were increased by 50% compared with the SX300 to make the airframe stronger. A laminar flow wing was used, which was claimed to give jet-like handling capabilities,[3] while hardpoints could be fitted to allow weapons to be carried.[2] The pilot and instructor sat side-by-side under a bubble canopy, with provision for ejector seats to be fitted. It had a retractable nosewheel undercarriage. The prototype was powered by a single Allison 250-B17D turboprop engine driving a three-bladed propeller.[3]

A single prototype was built by Swearingen Aircraft Corporation, making its first flight on 31 May 1989,[3] which was displayed at the Paris Air Show in June that year.[4] The design was offered to the United States Air Force as a replacement for its aging Cessna T-37 Tweet trainers, and to West Germany and Turkey.[2] In 1990, a version with tandem seating rather than the side-by-side seating of the prototype was proposed.[5] Development of the SA-32T had been abandoned by 1992,[6] although as of January 2016, the prototype is still registered as airworthy by the Federal Aviation Administration.[7]

Specifications (Performance estimated)

Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1990–91[3]

General characteristics

Performance

References

  1. "SA-32T enters the Fray". Flight International. Vol. 133 no. 4101. 20 February 1988. p. 11.
  2. 1 2 3 "SA-32 offered to West Germany and Turkey". Flight International. Vol. 133 no. 4108. 9 April 1988. p. 14.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Lambert 1990, pp. 519–520
  4. "Jaffetech shows SA-32T prototype". Flight International. Vol. 135 no. 4170. 24 June 1989. p. 17.
  5. "Swearingen-Jaffe advances SA.30". Flight International. Vol. 138 no. 4233. 12–18 September 1990. p. 32.
  6. Lambert 1992, p. 389
  7. "FAA Registry – Aircraft – N-Number Inquiry: N6Y". Federal Aviation Administration. Retrieved 2 January 2016.

External links

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