Epic Aircraft receives FAA type certification for E1000 GX aircraft
The new E1000 GX is equipped with the Hartzell five-blade composite propeller, offering improved performance, safety, comfort and versatility.
Private aviation company Epic Aircraft (Bend, Ore., U.S.) announced it has received FAA type certification(TC) for its E1000 GX model. The new E1000 GX is equipped with the Garmin GFCTM 700 automated flight control system and a Hartzell Propeller (Piqua, Ohio, U.S.) five-blade composite propeller, offering improved performance, safety, comfort and versatility.
“We are seeing benefits from the Hartzell five-blade, including improved speed, climb, range, payload and take-off performance. Plus, we are experiencing quieter operations inside and outside the cabin,” comments Epic CEO, Doug King. Hartzell’s composite propeller is said to provide stronger, composite resin-injected blades that allow for a thinner, wider airfoil, reportedly optimizing flight performance and offering faster take-off acceleration.
Epic Aircraft received FAA TC for its original E1000 model in November 2019. Powered by the Pratt & Whitney (East Hartford, Conn., U.S.) 1,200-horsepower PT6A-67A engine, the all-carbon fiber single-engine turboprop delivers cruise speeds over 333 knots, climbs at 4,000 feet per minute and operates up to 34,000 feet, with a maximum payload that is more than 2,200 pounds and a full fuel payload of 1,100 pounds.
The Epic E1000 reportedly received Flying Magazine’s 2020 Flying Innovation Award, which recognizes the most innovative product to have reached the general aviation market in the previous year. The E1000 was also selected by Plane & Pilot Magazine as its 2020 Plane of the Year.
The E1000 GX, which replaces the original E1000 model, is priced at $3.85 million. Customer deliveries will begin this month.
Related Content
-
Jeep all-composite roof receivers achieve steel performance at low mass
Ultrashort carbon fiber/PPA replaces steel on rooftop brackets to hold Jeep soft tops, hardtops.
-
Welding is not bonding
Discussion of the issues in our understanding of thermoplastic composite welded structures and certification of the latest materials and welding technologies for future airframes.
-
Novel dry tape for liquid molded composites
MTorres seeks to enable next-gen aircraft and open new markets for composites with low-cost, high-permeability tapes and versatile, high-speed production lines.