Specifications
Broker
HOWARD CAMPBELL
AI Description
- Model: Cessna 441 Conquest II
- Total Time: 4,746 hours
- Engines: Garrett TPE331-10N with Dash-10 upgrade
- Engine No. 1: 1,607 SCMOH
- Engine No. 2: 1,704 SCMOH
- Propellers: 4-blade McCauley
- Propeller No. 1: 211 SCMOH
- Propeller No. 2: 211 SCMOH
- Avionics: Full Garmin flight deck
- Primary Flight Display: Garmin G600 (Pilot & Co-Pilot)
- GPS: Garmin GTN750XI with WASS/LPV
- Transponders: Garmin GTX335R & GTX345R
- Autopilot: Garmin GFC600
- ADS-B equipped
- Backup Instrument: Garmin GI275
- XM Weather: GDL69 Weather Data Link
- Interior: Medium blue, rated 6/10
- Exterior: Chevron white with gamma gray & capri blue stripes, rated 6/10
- Seating: 9 total seats including aft lavatory configuration
- Soundproofing upgraded
- Last inspections completed: August 2025
- Gear up landing in September 1994, repaired by Kal-Aero Inc.
About this Model
Overview
The Cessna 441 Conquest II is a cabin-class, pressurized twin-turboprop designed to bridge the gap between light turboprops and entry-level business jets. It is typically selected for owner-operator and managed operations that value turbine reliability, short-to-medium stage efficiency, and access to airports where jets may be less practical due to runway length, ground infrastructure, or operating costs. Exact performance and equipment vary meaningfully by year, STCs, and avionics/engine programs, so aircraft-by-aircraft configuration review matters.
Mission Fit
The Conquest II tends to fit missions in the few-hundred to roughly thousand-nautical-mile class depending on payload, winds, reserves, and climb/cruise choices. It is well matched to mixed airport networks (large hubs plus smaller fields) and to schedules with multiple stops, where its turboprop economics and ground handling can be advantageous. If your typical trips are consistently long and speed-sensitive, an entry-level jet may align better; if you prioritize maximum short/rough-field capability, some utility turboprops may be a better fit.
Cabin
The cabin is pressurized and generally arranged as a club-style business interior for a small group, with a cockpit separated from the passenger area and typical amenities geared toward regional travel. Expect a narrower, more upright cabin feel than larger cabin-class turboprops and jets; comfort is strongly influenced by interior refurbishment quality, seating density, and noise/vibration treatments. Baggage is typically split between internal and external areas depending on configuration, so verifying real-world luggage capacity with the intended passenger count is important.