Aircraft Finder

BELL 407(1998)

Specifications

Year1998
Serial Number--
Registration--
Total Hours20,552
LocationSOUTHERN AFRICA, NAMIBIA
RegionAFRICA

Broker

PACIFIC AIRHUB AIRCRAFT SALES

Visit website

Aircraft Details

  • Location: Namibia, Southern Africa
  • Airframe hours: 20,552
  • Engine: Rolls Royce 250-C47B, 20,082 hours since new
  • Passenger/utility configuration
  • Major component times remaining: MGB 2,474 hrs, TGB 4,255 hrs
  • Avionics: Garmin audio panel, Garmin radar altimeter, Garmin GNS 420 GPS/COMM/NAV, Garmin 327 transponder, Artex 406, Bendix King HIS, Bendix King KR87 TSO ADF
  • Interior: VIP light grey leather seats
  • Exterior: White and blue metallic paint with red accent
  • Equipment: Cabin heater system, IBF barrier filter, pre-flight kit (steps), Space Maker cargo hook, dual controls, rotor brake, Concord battery, 7 David Clark headsets
  • Offered by Pacific Airhub Aircraft Sales Ltd

About this Model

Overview

The Bell 407 is a five-place (plus pilot) single-engine light helicopter commonly selected for mixed utility work where speed, hover performance, and straightforward line maintenance matter. It pairs a 4-blade main rotor with a proven turbine powerplant, aiming for predictable handling and good ride quality across a broad range of weights and loading. Typical buyers consider it for business and public-use roles that need quick point-to-point travel, external-load flexibility (as equipped), and access to confined or unimproved landing areas.

Mission Fit

In day-to-day use, the 407 tends to fit operators who want a single-engine platform that can cover passenger movement, light utility, and special-mission profiles with one airframe. It is often used for corporate shuttle, EMS support roles in regions where single-engine is acceptable, public safety, and utility work. If your operating policy, insurance, or customer requirements demand twin-engine capability for overwater, IFR, or critical passenger missions, a twin may align better.

Cabin

The 407’s cabin is designed around easy access and mission flexibility rather than a luxury layout. Large doors and a flat floor support quick loading for passengers or equipment, and typical seating can be configured to balance comfort with payload. Noise and vibration levels are generally acceptable for the class, but the experience will depend heavily on interior specification, soundproofing options, and installed mission equipment.