All
|
Comments
Not a Cherokee as most would know but a PA-22 Tri-Pacer
Piper Colt?
What is that?
The Colt was a two seat TriPacer without flaps and did not have a window behind the door.
Built in the 1961-62 era as a stop gap trainer until the Cherokee production got sorted out.
Built in the 1961-62 era as a stop gap trainer until the Cherokee production got sorted out.
I owned a 1957 Tri-Pacer. It is a 4 place 150hp aircraft covered in cotton fabric. It was named the Tri-Pacer since this was Piper's first nosewheel airplane having three wheels. The nosewheel was a hit and outsold the Pacer 6 to 1. The Tri-Pacer has the nick-name as "the flying milk stool".
I belive it is a PA22-108 Colt. I soloed in one of these at Elmendorf AFB in 1962. Had 2 in the flying club at the base. $8.00 an hour wet. How about those days.
Agree with Joel. it's a 'standard' Tripacer. The Colt didn't have flaps - the photo clearly shows flaps extended. The Colt also didn't have the window behind the rear doorpost.
This is a Tri-Pacer
Not a Cherokee! It’s a Tri- Pacer.
come on guys, get your act together and correct the type designations of many of your pics.
Definitely a Tri-Pacer. I learned to fly in one just like it.
The Tri-Pacer was the first airplane I ever flew in, at Northfield Airport in Richmond, Va., Ray Tyson was the pilot. Flew as a Cub Scout, his wife was the den mother. About 1957 or 1958.
FlightAware's picture identification screwed up again!
FlightAware's picture identification screwed up again!
ACTIVITY LOG
Want a full history search for N3563A dating back to 1998? Buy now. Get it within one hour.
|
Date | Aircraft | Origin | Destination | Departure | Arrival | Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No Recent History Data | ||||||
Basic users (becoming a basic user is free and easy!) view 3 months history. Join |
Please log in or register to post a comment.