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PIPER MALIBU JETPROP(1985)

Asking Price
$705,560

Specifications

Year1985
Serial Number46-8508085
RegistrationVH-BGK
Total Hours3,910
LocationAustralia
RegionAUSTRALIA & OCEANIA

Broker

Airflite Pty. Ltd.

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AI Description

  • Damage status: Yes (nose gear collapse, repaired)
  • Annual inspection due date: September 10, 2025
  • Engine model: PT6A-35
  • Engine TBO: 3600 hours
  • Additional equipment: Heated windshield, 4-blade prop
  • Avionics:
  • ADF: King KR-87
  • Autopilot: King KFC-150 IFCS
  • Communication Radios: Garmin GNS-430, Garmin GNS-530
  • DME: King KN-62A
  • Flight Director: King KFC-150 IFCS
  • GPS: Garmin GNS-430, Garmin GNS-530
  • Hi Frequency: Kodan 2000
  • Navigation Radios: Garmin GNS-430, Garmin GNS-530
  • Stormscope: BFGoodrich WX-10A
  • Transponder: Garmin GTX-327, Garmin GTX-330
  • Weather Radar: King KWX-56 (color)
  • Features:
  • Heated Windshield: Equipped
  • ADS-B Capable: Equipped
  • Traffic Collision Avoidance System: Standard
  • Weather Radar: Standard
  • Interior configuration: Executive
  • Exterior: New in 2018

About this Model

Overview

The Piper Malibu Jetprop is a turboprop conversion of the pressurized Malibu/Mirage platform, typically replacing the original piston engine with a Pratt & Whitney PT6A variant under a supplemental type certificate (STC). The result is a high-altitude, known-ice-capable (when equipped) traveling airplane with turboprop start reliability and strong climb performance in a cabin-class, single-engine format. It sits between high-performance pistons and purpose-built cabin turboprops, trading cabin volume and systems redundancy for lower fuel burn and simpler single-pilot operations.

Mission Fit

Mission fit is strongest for one to four adults with bags, moving quickly in the flight levels and leveraging the Malibu’s pressurized cabin. The Jetprop’s value proposition is most evident when you routinely need turbine reliability, ice protection capability, and short-to-mid stage lengths rather than maximum cabin space. Compared with larger turboprops, payload and baggage flexibility can be the limiting factor before range.

Cabin

The cabin is based on the Malibu/Mirage: a pressurized six-seat layout in a relatively narrow cross-section, typically with two front seats and club-style seating aft. Expect a car-like, cockpit-forward environment rather than a stand-up cabin; comfort is good for small groups, while boarding and in-cabin movement are constrained by the airframe size. Pressurization supports high-altitude cruise with improved passenger comfort versus unpressurized singles, and noise/thermal comfort depend heavily on insulation, prop condition, and the specific conversion details.