Aircraft Finder

MITSUBISHI SOLITAIRE(1980)

Asking Price
$1,100,000

Specifications

Year1980
Serial Number--
Registration--
Total Hours2,600
LocationGOIANIA, GOIAS, BRAZIL
RegionSOUTH AMERICA

Broker

QUICK AVIACAO

+5562981172083

AI Description

  • Model: MITSUBISHI SOLITAIRE
  • Type: Turboprop Aircraft
  • Condition: Used
  • Flight Rules: IFR
  • Total Airframe Time: 2,650 hours
  • Engine: Honeywell TPE331-10-511M
  • Engine Time: 2,600 hours SNEW
  • TBO: 5,000 hours
  • Propellers: Hartzell, 4-blade
  • Seating Capacity: 6 passengers
  • Interior and Exterior Refurbished: 2012
  • Maintenance: Up to date, with a recent VTI (Initial Technical Inspection) process completed with ANAC
  • No accident history; ready for pre-purchase inspection
  • Performance: Capable of cruising speeds over 300 knots
  • Additional Features:
  • Pressurized cabin
  • Flight Into Known Icing (FIKI)
  • Inadvertent Ice Protection
  • ADS-B Equipped
  • Weather Radar Standard
  • Location: Goiania, Goias, Brazil

About this Model

Overview

The Mitsubishi Solitaire name is not associated with widely published, in-service production specifications in mainstream aircraft references. For a buyer, that means the evaluation hinges less on headline performance claims and more on verifying what the aircraft actually is (concept, prototype, one-off, or low-volume production), its certification basis, and the availability of spares, maintenance documentation, and approved service providers. If your interest is tied to a specific serial number or registry entry, the practical purchasing workflow starts with confirming identity and configuration, then building an operating and maintenance plan around documented capabilities rather than assumptions.

Mission Fit

Because publicly verifiable performance and support details are limited, mission fit should be defined from the aircraft’s actual documentation: approved flight manual data, weight-and-balance, and installed equipment. If the airframe is properly certified and supported, it may suit point-to-point business travel within its confirmed range and payload envelope. If documentation or supportability is uncertain, it is better viewed as a niche or special-purpose asset rather than a day-to-day corporate shuttle.

Cabin

Cabin expectations should be set from the specific aircraft’s interior completion rather than model-wide norms. Where information is limited, buyers should validate seating count, berth capability, baggage volume/access in all seating configurations, lavatory type (fully enclosed vs. belted), galley equipment, and noise/pressurization comfort through inspection and logbook/installation records.