Interceptor 400

Interceptor 400
Role Light aircraft
Manufacturer Interceptor Corporation
First flight 27 June 1969
Number built 1
Developed from Aero Commander 200

The Interceptor 400 was a turboprop-powered single-engined light aircraft developed from the Meyers 200 single engine piston plane.[1] It attracted buyers but was unable to obtain adequate manufacturing financing, and was perhaps too far ahead of its time. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, at the time of its development, the market for single-engined turboprops was still a decade away.

Design and development

Development of the aircraft commenced when Lymon Lyon approached Aero Commander to build him a one-off modification of the 200, to be powered by a turboprop. His request came just as Aero Commander was realizing that the 200 piston engine aircraft was not economically viable in volumes they sought, and instead, offered to sell Lyon the 200 type certificate and work that Aero Commander had begun on a turbine engine conversion model 400 instead. Lyon and a group of investors assembled by entrepreneur and merger and acquisition expert Thomas W Itin, then formed the Interceptor Corporation to develop and market the 400 turbine engine version, the Interceptor 400 aircraft.

The plant was moved from the Aero Commander site in Albany Ga to Norman Oklahoma where the engineering was completed for the Interceptor 400 type certificate

Its first flight was on June 27, 1969, and certification was obtained in 1971. However, without adequately funded buyers, major Interceptor investor Paul Luce eventually took possession of the company's intellectual property and the prototype Interceptor 400 when the firm could not repay capital he had loaned it. The rights are now owned by Prop-Jets Inc, in which Luce has a 50% stake. There is one Interceptor 400 plane still registered and still flying.

A militarized version, the Interceptor I400-M reached at least the planning stage. It was envisaged for a wide variety of roles, including training, reconnaissance, Forward Air Control, and Counter-Insurgency, as well as general utility duties.

On May 22, 2014 GlobalParts Group, of Augusta, Kansas announced they had acquired the type certificate of the Interceptor 400 and two other Meyers Aircraft designs.[2]

Specifications (Interceptor 400)

Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1971–72[3]

General characteristics

Performance

Related content

Related development: Meyers 145 - Meyers 200

Comparable aircraft: SOCATA TBM - Pilatus PC-12 - Piper Malibu Meridian

Designation sequence:

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Related lists

References

  1. Air Progress: 19. December 1971. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. "Meyers Revival Eyed". Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  3. Taylor 1971, p. 324.
  4. flaps and gear down

External links

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