Specifications
AI Description
- Engine: Pratt & Whitney PT6A-114A
- Engine Time: 3,141 SMOH
- Engine TBO: 3,600 hours
- Propeller Time: 48.7 SMOH, overhauled on 06/01/2020
- Airframe Total Time: 10,614.4 hours, 8,323 cycles
- Hot Section Inspection: 10/18/2023 at 3,139.5 TSO
- Exterior: New paint in 2023, colors - Matterhorn white with gray cargo pod
- Interior: 12 passenger configuration, charcoal leather seating, refurbished in 2018
- Equipped with cargo pod and ADS-B capability
- Avionics: Includes Garmin GTN-750, King KFC-150 IFCS autopilot, dual King KR-87 ADF, and weather radar
- Damage History: Repaired after tornado damage in July 1997 at Cessna maintenance facility in Anchorage, AK
- Logbooks available from 2010 onwards, all 337s verified
- Recently imported from South America
About this Model
Overview
The Cessna 208B Grand Caravan is a high-wing, fixed-gear turboprop designed around payload, simplicity, and off-airport practicality rather than speed or high-altitude cruise. It is commonly operated as a commuter, charter, freight, medevac, and special-mission platform, where quick turnarounds, rugged handling, and a large, reconfigurable cabin are more important than jet-like trip times.
Mission Fit
The Grand Caravan fits missions that value access and payload over speed: short-to-medium legs, frequent stops, and airfields with limited infrastructure. It is especially well suited to operators needing a single type to cover scheduled commuter runs, ad-hoc charter, and freight with minimal changeover time. For longer legs, passengers may experience more cabin noise and weather variability than in pressurized twins or jets.
Cabin
Cabin comfort is utilitarian and highly dependent on the interior and operator configuration. The wide, boxy cross-section supports a range of seat layouts and quick conversion between passengers and cargo. The high wing and tall cabin volume help with headroom and loading, while the large cargo door and low sill height (relative to many aircraft) make bulky items easier to handle. Noise and vibration levels are typical of single-engine turboprops and vary with insulation packages and propeller configuration.