Aircraft Finder

PIPER JETPROP(2006)

Specifications

Year2006
Serial Number--
Registration--
Total Hours3,988.2
LocationFORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA
RegionNORTH AMERICA

Broker

AIRTRADE AVIATION

Visit website

AI Description

  • Model: Piper Jetprop
  • Condition: Used
  • Hot Section Inspection: 39 hours since inspection
  • Useful Load: 1,173 lbs
  • Engine: Pratt & Whitney PT6A-21
  • Engine Time: 1,876.7 hours since new (SNEW)
  • Engine TBO: 3,600 hours
  • Propeller: Hartzell HC-E4N-3N
  • Propeller Time: 1,876.7 hours SNEW
  • Number of Blades: 4
  • Avionics:
  • ADS-B Equipped
  • WAAS
  • Aspen 1000 EFD Pro
  • Dual Garmin 530W’s
  • Garmin GTX-330 ES Transponder
  • Garmin GDL-69 w/Weather Link & WAAS
  • King KFC-150 Autopilot
  • Garmin GI-275 Copilot Indicator
  • WX-1000 Stormscope
  • Garmin Aera 560 Panel Mount w/XM
  • King KAS-297B
  • King Yaw Damper
  • King KN-63 DME
  • King KR-87 ADF
  • King Audio Panel
  • Shadin Engine Trend Monitor
  • Pressurized: Yes
  • Flight Into Known Icing (FIKI): Yes
  • Air Conditioning: Yes
  • Interior: 2017, six seats, Tango Cappuccino leather, Philadelphia Taupe carpet
  • Exterior: Painted in 2006, white upper with maroon lower and gold metallic accent stripes, 7/10 rating
  • Maintenance: All ADs/SBs current, complete logs, no known damage history
  • Airworthy: Yes

About this Model

Overview

The Piper Jetprop is a turbine conversion of the Piper PA-46 Malibu/Mirage airframe, replacing the piston engine with a Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6-series turboprop and associated systems changes. In buyer terms, it sits between high-performance pistons and purpose-built single-engine turboprops: it keeps the PA-46’s cabin size, runway footprint, and handling, while aiming for faster, higher-altitude cruise and turbine dispatch characteristics. Performance, avionics, and useful load vary notably by conversion provider, donor airframe, and installed options, so comparing individual aircraft is more meaningful than comparing “the model” in the abstract.

Mission Fit

Typical use cases are 300–900 nm legs with one to three passengers, using flight levels to ride above weather and improve ride quality. It can serve as a step into turbine operations for experienced owner-pilots, but the single-engine turboprop risk profile and insurance/training requirements should match the intended utilization. Because Jetprops are conversions, specific mission suitability depends on the exact PT6 variant, propeller, gross weight limits, and avionics fit.

Cabin

Cabin experience is driven by the PA-46 fuselage: a pressurized, club-style cabin with an aft cabin area and separate baggage volume, generally comfortable for up to four adults on typical stage lengths. Compared with piston PA-46s, turbine conversions can change cabin noise and vibration characteristics depending on propeller type, insulation, and mounts. Environmental and oxygen system details depend on the donor model and conversion kit, so it is worth validating pressurization performance and cabin comfort features on the specific aircraft.