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Featured Plane

Cessna 421: Top-Tier Piston Twin

Cessna 421s are talented machines, capable of fly­ing a variety of missions. When properly equipped, they can be pressed into service as air ambulances, freighters and small package haulers, and even dog transports. I know of a swimming-pool contractor in the Indio, California, area who used to fly retired racing grey­hounds from Mexico all over the country, relocating them to new homes, in a 421.

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Cessna 150: Cessna’s Civilian Stearman

The first 150 included more horsepower, a Continental O-200 engine that pumped out 100 hp versus 90 hp on the later 140s, plus most of the features the 140 lacked. The stock propeller was an all-metal, fixed pitch, two-blade McCauley, not surprising since Cessna owned McCauley in those days.

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Cessna Skylane: Encore Performance

By any measure, the popularity of the Skylane is as well-entrenched among pilots as it is among the uninitiated. Many of today’s aviators flew Skylanes years ago, then climbed the ascendency of types and moved on to gear that retracts and engines that burn jet fuel. Too many have forgotten just how talented Cessna’s medium-weight power lifter truly is. By any measure, the Cessna 182 is an outstanding machine in a number of areas and better than average in most others, not merely an aerodynamic collection of compromises.

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Flying Upper Class

What if the best part of flying is simply going higher? The Turbo Centurion T-210 proves altitude isn’t just a luxury—it’s a game-changer. With impressive speed, range and load-hauling ability, this legendary six-seater shows why pilots still swear by turbocharged performance.

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