The 'Piper PA32R Saratoga' began life as the ''Piper Lance'', a retractable gear version of the
Piper Cherokee Six. It is a six-seat, high-performance, single engine, all-metal
fixed-wing aircraft produced by
The New Piper Aircraft. The Saratoga competes with the
Beechcraft Bonanza,
Mooney Ovation,
Cirrus SR22,
Cessna 206 Stationair, and
Lancair Columbia.
History
Until 1972, when the assembly line was destroyed in a flood, the
Comanche was Piper's luxury high-performance single. Afterwards, Piper began modifying its heavy lifting single engine
Cherokee Six, adding retractable landing gear and renaming it to the ''Piper Lance'' in 1975, introducing a T-tail version in 1977 and a turbocharged version in 1978. The evolution of the type was completed in late 1979 with the approval of the ''Piper Saratoga'' which introduced a tapered wing and returned to the original straight tail design. The Saratoga's relationship to the
Piper Cherokee Six line of fixed-gear six-place singles was emphasized when the tapered-wing Cherokee Six was also given the moniker "Saratoga." Piper stopped producing the Saratogas in 1985, but reintroduced the aircraft in 1993 as the ''Saratoga II HP''.
The turbocharged 'Saratoga II TC' was introduced in
1997. 1999 models introduce new
Garmin and
S-TEC avionics. A five seat interior with an entertainment/workstation console (similar to that in the
Seneca V) is optional.
The PA-32 was also built under licence in
Brazil as the ''
Embraer EMB-720 Minuano'', and the PA-32R as the ''EMB-721 Sertanejo'', while
Chincul in
Argentina built the PA-32 as ''PA-A-32'', the PA-32R as ''PA-A-32R'', and the PA-32RT as the ''PA-A-32RT''.
The Saratoga is possibly best known outside the aviation community as the aircraft type in which
John F. Kennedy Jr. and two passengers were fatally injured on
July 16 1999.
See also
★
Piper Cherokee Six
External links
★
New Piper Aircraft
★
PA-32 series at Airliners.net