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Piper Aircraft


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Piper Aircraft
Type
Subsidiary
Industry General aviation
Founded 1927
Founder William Piper
Headquarters
Vero Beach, Florida,
United States
Key people
Simon Caldecott (CEO)
John Calcagno (CFO)
Owner
Brunei Ministry of Finance
Website www.piper.com

Piper Aircraft, Inc., is a manufacturer of general aviation aircraft, located at the Vero Beach Municipal Airport in Vero Beach, Florida, United States and owned since 2009 by the Government of Brunei.[1] Along with Beechcraft and Cessna, it was at one time considered one of the "Big Three" in the field of general aviation manufacturing.[2]


Between its founding in 1927 and the end of 2009, the company produced 144,000 aircraft in 160 certified models, of which 90,000 are still flying.[3]




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 1930s


    • 1.2 1940s


    • 1.3 1950s


    • 1.4 1960s


    • 1.5 1970s


    • 1.6 1980s and 1990s


    • 1.7 2000s


    • 1.8 2010s




  • 2 Aircraft


    • 2.1 List of Piper aircraft




  • 3 See also


  • 4 References


  • 5 Sources


  • 6 External links





History[edit]




Piper Aircraft Company factory in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, with the Piper Cub logo superimposed at the top





Piper PA-18-150 Super Cub. Built 1958.




Piper PA-28-161 Warrior II





Piper PA-34 Seneca-200T




Piper PA-31 Navajo airframe used for crash testing by NASA after a 1972 flood inundated Piper's factory




Early-production PA-31 Navajo




Piper PA-32-RT-300T Turbo Lance II




Piper PA-44-180 Seminole


The company was founded as the Taylor Brothers Aircraft Manufacturing Company in September 1927 by Clarence Gilbert Taylor and Gordon A. Taylor in Rochester, New York. The company was renamed Taylor Brothers Aircraft Corporation in April 1928, shortly before Gordon Taylor died in an aircraft accident on April 24, 1928. The company was enticed to move to Bradford, Pennsylvania, with the promise of larger facility and investment capital from local businessmen, including an initial investment of $400 from local oil industry engineer William T. Piper. The move was completed in September 1929.[4]



1930s[edit]


In late 1930, the company filed for bankruptcy and William T. Piper purchased the assets of the company for $761.[4] Reorganized as the Taylor Aircraft Company, Piper effectively took control of the firm when he assumed the position of corporate secretary-treasurer, although he retained C. G. Taylor in the role of president.[4] Piper, often called the "Henry Ford of Aviation", firmly believed a simple-to-operate, low-cost, private airplane would flourish, even in the darkest depths of the Great Depression.[5] This aircraft was the E-2 Cub.[5]


In December 1935, after a series of clashes, William Piper bought out C. G. Taylor, who left the company and went on to form the Taylorcraft Aircraft Company. On March 16, 1937 a fire destroyed the Bradford factory and the company relocated to an abandoned silk mill in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania. In 1937, it was renamed Piper Aircraft Corporation.[6]



1940s[edit]


Piper continued operations in Lock Haven throughout World War II, building military versions of its J-3 Cub as the L-4 Grasshopper. A total of 5,941 powered aircraft were built by the company for the US armed forces during the war, as well as training gliders, and aircraft components for other manufacturers,[7] but its main contribution to the war effort was in the fabrication of steel masts for mounting radar antennas.[8] In 1946, the company opened a new factory in Ponca City, Oklahoma and transferred production of the Cub from Lock Haven. That year, Piper led the American industry in light aircraft production. Almost 7,800 of the 35,000 civil aircraft built in the United States that year were Pipers, but a strike led to a shortage of steel tubing, interrupting production, and 1,900 workers had to be suspended as a result.[9][10]


The following year, the postwar general aviation boom ended. Piper's output reached 3,500 aircraft, less than half its 1946 total, and the company suffered an operating loss of more than $560,000.[9][11] The board of directors replaced William Piper with William Shriver, a former Chrysler executive.[11] Under Shriver, the product line was expanded with the introduction of the PA-14 Family Cruiser and PA-15 Vagabond.[11] Piper introduced the "Taxicub" light charter concept at 1500 dealers and 52 distributors.[12] In 1948, with two thirds of its workforce laid off, Piper only lost $75,000, but it found itself no longer the leader in a shrinking market, falling behind Cessna, which itself only delivered 1,600 aircraft; the Ponca City factory was closed.[9][11] At the end of 1948, Piper bought the Stinson Aircraft Company for $3 million and Shriver left the company.[13]



1950s[edit]


The outbreak of the Korean War in 1950 helped to stimulate production at Piper, which again won large orders for military versions of the Cub.[13] William Piper regained control of the company the same year, and the decision was made to develop a twin-engine aircraft. The company initially investigated producing the Baumann Brigadier, but later decided to develop a Stinson design, which became the PA-23 Apache.[13] In its business planning following the war, it became clear the Lock Haven facility would not support larger manufacturing efforts, and in 1955 it acquired rights to property at the Vero Beach Municipal Airport.[citation needed] Vero Beach was initially used as a center for design work under Fred Weick, with the first aircraft developed there being Piper's first agricultural aircraft, the PA-25 Pawnee, announced in 1958 and entering production the following year at Lock Haven.[14]



1960s[edit]


In 1960, the line of Piper aircraft consisted of an agricultural- and two-passenger variants of the Super Cub; the Caribbean, Colt and Tri-Pacer; two versions of the PA-24 Comanche; the Pawnee; and the Apache and its new larger derivative the Aztec.[15] The following year, the PA-28 Cherokee was the first type to enter production at the new Vero Beach factory.[16][17] The Cherokee replaced the Tri-Pacer and Colt, which ended their production runs in 1961 and 1964 respectively.[16] By the later part of the decade, Vero Beach was building 7,000 Cherokees per year.[18]


In September 1964, Piper flew the prototype of its new PA-31 Navajo cabin-class twin for the first time, after two-and-a-half years of development.[19][20]


In 1969, the Piper family agreed to sell Piper Aircraft to Bangor Punta Corporation, which started an eight-year court battle with the losing bidder, Chris-Craft Industries, culminating in a Supreme Court decision in 1977.[21]



1970s[edit]


Piper discussed a merger with Swearingen but the deal was not completed.[22] The Lock Haven facility was nearly destroyed in 1972 when torrential rains from Hurricane Agnes caused the Susquehanna River to flood in June. The manufacturing plant was flooded to a depth of 16 feet (4.9 m), effectively destroying about 100 aircraft and causing an estimated $23 million in damage.[23][24] Much of the tooling necessary for production of several designs, including the Aztec, Navajo, and Comanche, was also destroyed,[citation needed] and the Piper PA-31T Cheyenne program received a setback when the prototype was damaged just after the Federal Aviation Administration awarded it Type Certification.[25] Initial deliveries of the new PA-31-350 Chieftain were also delayed by several months.[26] After the flood, Piper gave 32 written-off PA-28s, PA-31s and PA-23 Aztecs to NASA, which used them for crash tests at the Langley Research Center, using a rig originally built to simulate spacecraft landings on the moon for the Apollo program.[27]


As a result of the flood, the company decided to end production of the Piper PA-24 Comanche.[28] Piper opened a manufacturing division in Lakeland, Florida, in 1972 and through the 1970s, the Piper PA-31 Navajo, Chieftain, and Cheyenne III were manufactured at the more than 710,000-square-foot (66,000 m2) facility on the Lakeland municipal airport.[29]



1980s and 1990s[edit]


Piper opened its T1000 Airline Division at the Lakeland, Florida, location in May 1981, with 20 people. Employment at both of Piper's Lakeland divisions peaked at 2,200 later that year. The Piper PA-42 Cheyenne IV and the Piper T-1020/Piper T-1040 aircraft were manufactured in Lakeland during that time. Piper also maintained a fully staffed research and development center in Lakeland, including the "X" shop, which developed the Piper PA-48 Enforcer. The Airline Division provided aircraft for commuter airlines in the United States including Air New Orleans, Desert Sun in Long Beach, Shasta Air and Sun West Airlines, as well as internationally for Vickers for corporate transport use in the United Kingdom, Cameroon's Avia Services and to Piper's distributor in Colombia, Aero Leaver.[29] In 1984, Piper changed hands when parent company Bangor Punta was acquired by Lear Siegler.[30] Lear Siegler, in turn, was acquired by Forstmann Little in 1986.[31] Forstmann Little then sold Piper to M. Stuart Millar in 1987.[32]


Manufacture of light aircraft was impacted in the mid-1980s when increasing product liability insurance premiums made operation financially difficult for Piper Aircraft and other American manufacturers of light aircraft. In a bid to improve sales, Piper cut prices for its aircraft and the company became unprofitable. In 1991 the Lakeland, Florida factory was sold and closed and by July that year the workforce had shrunk to 45; with only $1,000 in available cash remaining, Piper filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after a proposed takeover by competing French manufacturer Socata failed over the issue of product liability.[33][34] Production of the flagship Cheyenne 400 ended in February 1993 with only 43 being built since its inception a decade earlier.[35] In 1995, the company emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy and was renamed The New Piper Aircraft. As part of the end of bankruptcy protection, the company was sold to Newco Pac Inc., itself owned by Piper's creditors (including major creditor, aircraft engine manufacturer Teledyne Continental Motors) and a Philadelphia-based investment firm.[33][36]



2000s[edit]


In July 2003, American Capital Strategies, Ltd. bought 94% of Piper's voting equity.[citation needed]


In July 2006, a partnership with Honda was announced to market the new HA-420 HondaJet.[37] The following month, the firm dropped the "New" from its name, reverting to Piper Aircraft.


In response to the late 2000s recession, the company announced in November 2008 that it was reducing its work-week to save money while avoiding lay-offs. Piper is party to an agreement with the state of Florida that will see the company benefit from $32 million in incentives in exchange for increasing its work force to 1400 people and building the PiperJet in the state.[38]


In December 2008, the company announced it will defer the $10 million incentive that would have required it to hire 400 new workers by 2012 for the PiperJet project and retain 1,417 employees through 2015. The company stated the move was precautionary. Piper spokesman Mark Miller said: "While this year has been a good one for Piper, we have taken measures to keep the company healthy and to weather any future adversity."[39]


In February 2009, the company announced it was laying off an additional 300 workers without notice immediately and the 650 remaining workers would be given unpaid weeks off in April and July to reduce unsold inventory. Piper spokesman Mark Miller stated company regretted the pain caused by the layoffs and indicated the employees would be rehired when the economy improves. He also said: "Even the willing buyers that we have find it incredibly difficult to get financing...We can't keep a full workforce on at this point when people aren't buying planes...If market conditions continue to deteriorate, it may be necessary for the company to take additional actions". On 24 February 2009, the company announced it would add two more weeks of unpaid furlough for its employees in May and June, bringing the total to four weeks in 2009, citing a need to reduce inventory and cut expenses. In June 2010, the company announced it would shut down for a further week in August to save money. The lay-off affected all workers except those on the PiperJet program and some critical company business functions.[40][41][42][43]


On 1 May 2009, American Capital Strategies sold the company to Singapore-based investment strategy company Imprimis, making a profit of US$31 million on the sale. Imprimis is funded by the Government of Brunei and has offices in Bangkok, Singapore and Brunei Darussalam.[44][45][46]


In June 2009, James Bass, CEO of Piper Aircraft since 2005, announced he would step down effective that same month. He was succeeded by VP of operations Kevin Gould. During his four years at Piper, Bass oversaw development of the PiperJet, the Meridian G1000 and the Matrix, and negotiated a new business partnership with Honda. He also negotiated $32 million in incentives from the state and county that retained Piper's factory in Vero Beach, Florida.[47]


On 2 November 2009, another Piper executive resigned. Company president John Becker announced his resignation effective 1 December 2009 "to pursue other career opportunities". Becker was replaced as president by CEO Kevin Gould.[48][49]



2010s[edit]


On 4 January 2010, the company announced Boeing subsidiary Aviall would act as Piper's sole global parts distributor.[3]


In July 2010, CEO Kevin Gould resigned for unspecified reasons, having served just over a year in the post. Gould was replaced on an interim basis by Geoffrey Berger, managing director of Imprimus in Brunei, on behalf of the government of Brunei. Also in July 2010, longtime Piper media spokesman Mark Miller left the company.[50]


In September 2010, Piper announced the lay-off of an additional 60 production workers. Piper's interim CEO Geoffrey Berger stated: "Piper remains challenged by overall market weakness". The company hired 140 workers for the PiperJet program in 2009–10.[51]


Piper started renovation of a 75,000 sq ft (7,000 m2) factory in Vero Beach in October 2010, with a completion goal of 2011. The facility was intended to be used to build the PiperJet.[52]


On 17 October 2011, the company announced Simon Caldecott had replaced Geoff Berger as interim CEO. At the same time, Executive Vice President Randy Groom also resigned from the company and it was announced that the Piper Altaire program was "under review".[53] Only one week later, on 24 October 2011, Piper Aircraft announced it had "indefinitely suspended" all work on the Altaire project and would be laying off 150 of its 850 employees, plus 55 contract workers, due to the program's cancellation.[54]


In December 2011, Piper announced it was attempting to renegotiate the 2008 deal it had made with the state of Florida and Indian River County for incentives. The company did not meet its contractual requirements to employ 1,100 people by the end of 2009; instead, employment fell to 600, and as a result, the company owed US$1.5 million. Piper is looking for forgiveness of the debt.[55] Also in December, Piper came under the direct ownership of the government of Brunei.[56]


In July 2015 the company announced it was laying off 15-20% of its workers, about 150 people, as sales were faltering amongst world markets, especially Asia, Latin America and Europe.[57]


In February 2018, Piper announced the largest order of trainer aircraft in the company's history. Fanmei Aviation Technologies, which is Piper's exclusive dealer in China, placed an order for 152 aircraft. The deliveries will take place over a period of seven years.[58]



Aircraft[edit]




PA-34 Seneca


Piper's J-3 Cub, a single-engine, high-wing, two-seater, was the first inexpensive training aircraft produced in large numbers. Many former military examples were sold to civilian owners over the 1950-1995 period and seem certain to see many more years in recreational use.


The PA-28 Cherokee has been one of the company's most successful products. Both this design and the twin-engined PA-34 Seneca are used for pilot training around the world. The PA-23 Apache was one of the first aircraft associated with the term "air taxi", although it was superseded in that role by faster and more spacious designs from competitors Beechcraft and Cessna.


Beginning production in 1965, the PA-32 series provided six- or seven-seat, single-engine designs based on the smaller Cherokee. Variously named Cherokee Six, Lance, and Saratoga, these were available as both fixed- and retractable-gear models and also with normally aspirated, fuel-injected, and turbocharged engines. The PA-32s proved popular with private owners, air taxi, and freight companies. Production of the Saratoga-II HPs and Saratoga TCs ended in 2009.[59]


On 21 January 2010 the company announced it had licensed the CZAW SportCruiser and intended to market it as the PiperSport. Piper CEO Kevin Gould said, "The PiperSport is an amazing entry-level aircraft that will bring new customers into Piper and lead the way for those customers to step up into more sophisticated and higher performance aircraft within our line over time."[60] In January 2011, the licensing agreement with Piper was abruptly ended with Piper CEO Geoffrey Berger saying "the company has a different business perspective and approach to the market than Czech Sport Aircraft".[61][62]



List of Piper aircraft[edit]



































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Summary of aircraft built by Piper Aircraft
Model name
First flight
Number built
Type

J-2 Cub
1936
1207
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane

J-3 Cub
1938
19,888
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane

J-4 Cub Coupe
1939
1251
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane

J-5 Cub Cruiser
1940
1507
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane
P-1 Applegate Duck
1940
1

Amphibian
P-2 Cub
1941
1
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane
P-3
1939
1
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane, also known as J-4RX
P-4 Cub
1941
1
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane
P-5
1944
1
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane, also known as J-3X

PT-1 Trainer
1942
1
Two-seats in tandem, low-wing monoplane

PWA-1 Skycoupe
1943
1
Two-seat low wing twin-boom monoplane, later became PA-7

PWA-8 Cub Cycle
1944
1
Single-seat, mid-wing single-engine monoplane

LBP
1945
35
Single-seat, optionally-piloted glider bomb

PA-6 Sky Sedan
1945
2
Four-seat, low-wing retractable gear monoplane

PA-7 Skycoupe
1944
1
Two-seat low wing twin-boom monoplane, was PWA-1,

PA-8 Skycycle
1945
2
Single-seat, mid-wing single-engine monoplane
PA-9

None
Single-engined high-wing observation and liaison design
PA-10

None
Single-engined low-wing side-by-side two-seater design

PA-11 Cub Special
1947
1541
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane

PA-12 Super Cruiser
1946
3760
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane
PA-13
-
-
Designation not used

PA-14 Family Cruiser
1948
238
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane

PA-15 Vagabond
1948
387
Side-by-side two-seat high-wing monoplane

PA-16 Clipper
1949
736
Four-seat version of the PA-15

PA-17 Vagabond
1948
214
Dual-control variant of the PA-15

PA-18 Super Cub
1950
10,222
Single-engined high-wing cabin monoplane

PA-19 Super Cub
1949
3
Initial designation for military version of the PA-18,
reverted to PA-18 designation after three built

PA-20 Pacer
1950
1120
Re-designed PA-16
PA-21

None
Proposed production version of the Baumann Brigadier

PA-22 Tri-Pacer
1951
9490
Updated version of the PA-20 with nose wheel

PA-23 Apache
1954
2047
Twin-engined low-wing cabin monoplane

PA-24 Comanche
1958
4717
Single-engine four-seat low-wing cabin monoplane

PA-24-400 Comanche
1964
148
Re-engined PA-24 development

PA-25 Pawnee
1959
5167
Single-engined agricultural monoplane
PA-26

None
Proposed higher-power version of the PA-24

PA-27 Aztec
1960
4929
Improved version of the PA-23, kept PA-23 designation

PA-28 Cherokee
1961
10,896
Single-engined low-wing cabin monoplane

PA-28-140 Cherokee
1964
10,089
Two-seat training variant

PA-28 Warrior
1974
4842
Improved PA-28

PA-28-235 Cherokee/Dakota
1964
2913
Higher-power PA-28

PA-28R Arrow
1967
6694
Retractable landing gear variant of the PA-28

PA-28R-300 Pillán
1982
2,
plus kits for final assembly in Chile and Spain
Two-seat military trainer designed for ENAER of Chile

PA-29 Papoose
1962
1
Small trainer of fiberglass construction

PA-30 Twin Comanche
1963
2001
Four-seat twin-engined low wing cabin monoplane

PA-31 Navajo
1967
1785
Eight-seat twin-engined low wing cabin monoplane

PA-31-350 Chieftain
1973
1825
Stretched Navajo

PA-31P Pressurized Navajo
1970
309
Pressurized version of Navajo with more powerful engines

PA-31P-350 Mojave
1983
~50[63]
Lower-power successor to Pressurized Navajo,
piston-engine Cheyenne/Chieftain hybrid

PA-31T Cheyenne
1974
847
Turboprop powered derivative of Pressurized Navajo

PA-32 Cherokee Six
1966
4373
Six-seat Cherokee derivative with wider cabin

PA-32R Lance/Saratoga
1976
2721
Retractable landing gear variant of the PA-32

PA-33 Comanche
1966
1
Pressurized Comanche

PA-34 Seneca
1972
5000+
Twin-engine derivative of PA-32R

PA-35 Pocono
1968
1
Twin-engined pressurized commuter airliner

PA-36 Pawnee Brave
1973
938
Single-engined agricultural monoplane
PA-37

None
Proposed twin-engined PA-33

PA-38 Tomahawk
1978
2519
Two-seat basic trainer

PA-39 Twin Comanche C/R
1970
155
Improved PA-30 with counter-rotating propellers

PA-40 Arapaho
1973
3 built,
5 not completed
PA-39 replacement
PA-41P
1974
1
Pressurized Aztec

Piper PA-42 Cheyenne
1980
175
T-tail derivative of PA-31T Cheyenne
PA-43

None
Proposed piston-engined PA-42

PA-44 Seminole
1979
469
Twin-engined derivative of PA-28R
PA-45

None
Proposed six-seat T-tailed aircraft family

PA-46 Malibu/Malibu Mirage
1983
1250
Six-seat pressurized single; production of 310P and 350P from 1983 thru 2014

PA-46 Matrix
2008
215
Six-seat non-pressurized version of the PA-46 Malibu; introduced as a 2008 model

PA-47 Piperjet
2008
1
seating for 6 or 7 based on configuration

PA-48 Enforcer
1971
4
Single-seat counter-insurgency aircraft based on the Cavalier Mustang/North American P-51 Mustang

PA-60 Aerostar
1967
1010
Six-seat pressurized twin,
Piper purchased the design from Ted R. Smith

PiperSport
2010
40
Two-seat light-sport aircraft marketed by Piper between January 2010 and January 2011.
It was produced by Czech Sport Aircraft and previously known as the SportCruiser

Piper M350
2015
69
Six-seat pressurized piston single; formerly named Malibu Mirage; only M350 production listed

Piper M500/Malibu Meridian
2000
624
Six-seat pressurized turboprop single; formerly named Mailbu Meridian; M500 and Meridian production listed

Piper M600
2016
57
Six-seat pressurized turboprop single


See also[edit]




  • Hacienda Nápoles, mounted atop the entrance gate to Pablo Escobar's ranch is a replica of the Piper airplane (tail number HK-617-P) that flew the drug lord's first shipment of cocaine to the United States

  • Piper Aircraft Co. v. Reyno



References[edit]





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  46. ^ Sobie, Brendan (July 2009). "New owner brightens outlook for Piper". Retrieved 2009-07-27.


  47. ^ Grady, Mary (June 2009). "Bass To Step Down As Piper CEO". Retrieved 2009-06-11.


  48. ^ Vanderhoof, Nadia (November 2009). "Piper President John Becker is resigning". Retrieved 2009-11-02.


  49. ^ Niles, Russ (November 2009). "Piper Names New President, VPs". Retrieved 2009-11-06.


  50. ^ Niles, Russ (July 2010). "Gould Out As Piper CEO". Retrieved 22 July 2010.


  51. ^ Grady, Mary (September 2010). "More Jobs Lost, At Piper And Hawker Beechcraft". AvWeb. Retrieved 11 October 2010.


  52. ^ Niles, Russ (October 2010). "Work Starts On PiperJet Factory". AvWeb. Retrieved 14 October 2010.


  53. ^ Grady, Mary (October 2011). "Another New CEO At Piper". AVweb. Retrieved 20 October 2011.


  54. ^ Trautvetter, Chad (October 2011). "Piperjet Altaire Program Suspended 'Indefinitely'". AINonline. Retrieved 4 November 2011.


  55. ^ Pew, Glenn (8 December 2011). "Piper Seeks Forgiveness". AVweb. Retrieved 9 December 2011.


  56. ^ "Piper Aircraft now directly owned by Sultan of Brunei". VeroNews. Archived from the original on 23 February 2015. Retrieved 18 July 2015.


  57. ^ "Piper To Lay Off Up To 150 Workers". AVweb. Retrieved 18 July 2015.


  58. ^ "Piper Receives Largest Trainer Order In Company History From Fanmei Aviation Technologies". Piper Company. Retrieved 24 February 2018.


  59. ^ Piper Aircraft (2009). "Discontinued Aircraft". Archived from the original on 2009-06-21. Retrieved 2009-06-03.


  60. ^ Niles, Russ (January 2010). "Piper Unveils PiperSport LSA". Retrieved 2010-01-21.


  61. ^ Niles, Russ (January 2011). "Piper Terminates PiperSport Relationship". AvWeb. Retrieved 13 January 2011.


  62. ^ Piper Aircraft (January 2011). "Piper to Terminate PiperSport Distributor Business Relationship". Archived from the original on 17 January 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2011.


  63. ^ "Piper PA-31 Mojave & Chieftain", Frawley (1997), p. 162




Sources[edit]




  • Bowers, Peter M. (1993). Piper Cubs. McGraw Hill. ISBN 0-8306-2170-9.


  • Brady, Tim (2000). The American Aviation Experience: A History. Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-2371-0.


  • Frawley, Gerard (1997). The International Directory of Civil Aircraft, 1997/98. Fyshwick, ACT: Aerospace Publications. ISBN 1 875671 26 9.


  • Gilbert, James (September 1965). "Mr. Piper's Cub". Flying. Ziff-Davis Publishing Company. 77 (3): 30–35.


  • Hayduck, Robert J. NASA Technical Memorandum 80102: Comparative Analysis of PA-31-350 Chieftain (N44LV) Accident and NASA Crash Test Data (PDF). Hampton, Virginia: NASA Langley Research Center. Retrieved 10 August 2012.

  • Lambert, Mark and Pugh, Alastair. "The Pied Pipers: In the Air with the Colourful Comanche, Tri-Pacer and Super Cub", Flight (Iliffe and Sons), Vol. 76, No. 2644, 13 November 1959, pp. 550–552


  • Mondey, David, ed. (1978). The Complete Illustrated Encyclopaedia of the World's Aircraft. London: New Burlington Books. ISBN 0 906286 39 5.


  • Pattillo, Donald M. (1998). A History in the Making: 80 Turbulent Years in the American General Aviation Industry. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-049448-7.


  • Piper Aircraft and their forerunners, R. W. Peperell & Colin M. Smith, Air-Britain, Tonbridge Kent, 1987,
    ISBN 0-85130-149-5

  • The New Piper Aircraft: Soaring High


  • Phillips, Edward H. (1993). Piper - A Legend Aloft. Flying Books International. ISBN 0-911139-14-1.


  • Trimble, William F. (1982). High Frontier: A History of Aeronautics in Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 0822953404.



External links[edit]







  • Piper website

  • Piper Aviation Museum

  • Aircraft-Info.net - Piper












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