Found FBA-2 explained

The Found FBA-2 is a 1960s Canadian four/five-seat cabin monoplane that was produced by Found Aircraft.

Design and development

The Found FBA-2 is an all-metal development of the company's first design, the Found FBA-1. The prototype first flew on 11 August 1960. It is a high-wing monoplane with a fixed tricycle undercarriage. The production version was to be the Found FBA-2B but the aircraft was produced with a conventional tail-wheel landing gear as the Found FBA-2C. The first production FBA-2C first flew on 9 May 1962. It is powered by an Avco Lycoming O-540-A1D engine and had a slightly longer cabin and enlarged cabin doors than the prototype. Originally, float or ski landing gear was available through third parties, and later became a factory option. Production ended in 1965 to concentrate on building the newer and larger Centennial 100. Thirty-four had been built.[1]

Bush Hawk-XP

In 1996 the design was acquired by Found Aircraft Development who developed an improved model the FBA-2C2 Bush Hawk-XP. This model was certified by Transport Canada in March, 1999 and by the Federal Aviation Administration in March, 2000. This version was manufactured between 2000-2007, after which it was replaced by a new version of the same basic airframe designated the Expedition E350 and the Expedition E350XC.[1]

Expedition E350

The E350 is an evolutionary development of the basic FBA-2 aimed at the personal use market. The Expedition E350 was FAA type certified in December 2008. The aircraft can be equipped with four or five seats and has a full fuel payload in excess of 900 pounds. It has a range of 7000NaN0 at a cruise speed of 1560NaN0 and is powered by a Lycoming IO-580 powerplant producing 3150NaN0. The E350 has been designed with rugged landing gear for operating from unprepared surfaces and has STOL performance.[2] [3]

Pacific Aerospace acquired the E-350 program in early 2016 from Found Aircraft. In September 2016, the E-350 Expedition tooling was shipped to its Hamilton, New Zealand plant. Pacific Aerospace planned to relaunch production of the five-seat type in the first half of 2017, but this date was not achieved. It is also planned to produce the E-350 in its joint venture plant in China with Beijing General Aviation Company. The joint venture will be known as Beijing Pan-Pacific Aerospace Technology.[4] [5] [6]

Variants

FBA-2
  • Prototype, one built.
    FBA-2C
  • Initial production variant, 26 built.
    FBA-2C1 Bush Hawk 300
  • Improved variant with a 300hp Lycoming IO-540L, one built.
    FBA-2C1 Bush Hawk XP
  • Production variant of the Bush Hawk 300, 31 built.
    FBA-2C2 Bush Hawk 300XP
  • Minor changes, 6 built.
    FBA-2C3 Expedition E350
  • Tricycle landing gear first flown in 2006, 3 built.
    FBA-2C4 Expedition E350XC
  • Tail-wheel, one built.
    FBA-2D
  • Proposed variant powered by a 290hp Lycoming engine, not built.

    References

    Bibliography

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Found Aircraft - A Brief History. 2008-02-20. Found Aircraft Development. https://web.archive.org/web/20080608094109/http://www.foundair.com/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=6. 8 June 2008.
    2. Web site: Expedition Aircraft. 2009-01-01. Expedition Aircraft. https://web.archive.org/web/20090531035947/http://www.expeditionaircraft.com/. 31 May 2009.
    3. Web site: Canada's Expedition E350 Gets FAA OK . 2008-12-31. Grady. Mary. December 2008.
    4. Web site: Pacific Aerospace's Chinese venture ready for 21 October inauguration. Sarsfield. Kate. Flight Global. 2016-10-15.
    5. Web site: Found Expedition To Resume Production. 14 November 2016. Niles. Russ. AVweb. 13 November 2016.
    6. Web site: Pacific Aerospace: Pacific Aerospace to Build the E-350 Expedition. 21 February 2019. Pacific Aerospace. www.aerospace.co.nz. 1 November 2016.