Partenavia P.68

P.68 Victor
Partenavia AP.68TP-600 Viator at Darwin Airport (2011)
Role Light transport
Manufacturer Partenavia
Vulcanair
Designer Luigi Pascale
First flight 1970
Number built 431+


Partenavia P.68 (VH-PNT) at Jandakot Airport, Jandakot, Australia
Cockpit of Partenavia P.68 (VH-PNT) at Jandakot Airport, Jandakot, Australia
Vulcanair P68 Observer 2 at Paris Air Show 2007
A Vulcanair P68 Observer of the Hesse State Police (Germany)

The Partenavia P.68, now Vulcanair P68, is an Italian six-seat, twin-engined, high-wing monoplane built by Partenavia and later Vulcanair. Designed by Professor Luigi Pascale and originally put into production in 1972, it was intended for private or business use but has also seen use as both a training and a transport aircraft. It was originally named the Victor, although this name was not used for the production aircraft. The P.68 Observer, which was an Italian/German development, has a transparent nose for use in police work and observation duties.

History

First flown on 25 May 1970, the prototype P.68 was built at Arzano, Italy. It was powered by two 200 hp (149 kW) Lycoming IO-360 piston engines. Production of the P.68 began in 1972 with 14 pre-production aircraft at new facilities in Casoria, Italy. These were followed in 1974 by the P.68B with the fuselage lengthened by 6in (15.2 cm) to create more space in the cockpit. It was superseded in 1979 by the P.68C which had a lengthened nose to accommodate a weather radar. A turbocharged version (the P.68C-TC) was available in 1980. The type license was obtained by Vulcanair, which is still producing the P.68C.

Spartacus

With the help of Aeritalia, development began of a nine-seat turboprop version. The first aircraft, an AP.68TP, first flew in 1978 using Allison 250 turboprops. Although the prototype had a retractable undercarriage, the production aircraft, named the Spartacus, had a fixed undercarriage. Later, a retractable undercarriage version was built as the Viator.

Observer

The German company Sportavia-Putzer modified the P.68 by replacing the nose section with a transparent structure, marketing it as an observation aircraft for law enforcement. Initially, Observers were simply conversions of existing aircraft, but later, they were entirely new aircraft built by Partenavia.

Variants

Operators

Military and government operators

 Bahamas
 Bophuthatswana
 Italy
 Sierra Leone
 United Kingdom
 United States

Civil operators

 Australia
 Germany
 Italy
 Spain
 United States
 Seychelles
 New Zealand
 France

The ICAO designator for all versions with piston engine as used in flight plans is P68, for the versions with turboprops it is P68T

Incidents and accidents

On July 10, 1978, a P68B registered VH-PNW crashed shortly after take-off from Essendon Airport. Six people on the ground were killed, and one person injured. Three people on the aircraft were seriously injured.[2]

On September 11, 1983, a sales representative was flying a P.68C at an airshow in Plainview, Texas, performing high-speed, high-G maneuvers in excess of the aircraft’s design parameters and, during one such maneuver, the wings separated from the rest of the aircraft just outboard of the engine nacelles. The fuselage also twisted longitudinally just before the empennage. The pilot was killed on impact with terrain.[3]

On March 2, 2013, a P.68 Observer registered OY-CAG from BioFlight crashed during landing in Roskilde Airport. The two persons on board were killed.[4][5]

On 21 May 2015 a Partenavia AP68TP landed at Lanseria Airport in South Africa without the nose wheel extended, in what was described as a "perfect emergency landing".[6]

Specifications (P.68C)

Data from Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1982-83[7]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Partenavia P.68.
  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985). Orbis Publishing. 
  • Hatch, Paul F. (July 1985). "Air Forces of the World: Bophuthatswana Air Force". Air Pictorial. Vol. 47 no. 7. p. 249. 
  • Simpson, R.W. (1991). Airlife's General Aviation. Shrewsbury, England: Airlife Publishing. ISBN 1-85310-194-X. 
  • Taylor, John W. R. (1982). Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1982-83. London: Jane's Yearbooks. ISBN 0-7106-0748-2. 
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