Van's Aircraft RV-14 explained

The Van's Aircraft RV-14 is an American aerobatic kit aircraft designed by Richard VanGrunsven and produced by Van's Aircraft. It was introduced at AirVenture in July 2012. The aircraft is supplied as a kit for amateur construction.[1] [2]

As of November 2022, 207 RV-14s have been completed and flown.

Design and development

Derived from the four-seat RV-10, RV-14 design work was commenced several years before its 2012 debut. It is an aerobatic two-seater designed to accommodate large pilots and offer greater baggage space, to comply with the US experimental amateur-built aircraft rules. The design goals included improved visibility, a wider cabin, a low landing speed achieved by larger and more effective flaps, good rate-of-climb and glide ratio, landing gear that meets FAR Part 23 certification standards and an airframe designed to accommodate the Lycoming IO-390 powerplant. It features a cantilever low-wing, a two-seats-in-side-by-side configuration enclosed cockpit under a bubble canopy, fixed tricycle landing gear and a single engine in tractor configuration.

The RV-14 is built from aluminum sheet. The prototype was fitted with a 2100NaN0 Lycoming IO-390 four-stroke powerplant. The kit is intended to be easier to assemble than earlier Van's designs through the use of pre-punched and pre-formed fuselage longerons, pre-installed wiring, plug-in avionics, a pre-trimmed and ready-to-install bubble canopy, pre-welded canopy frame, pre-fitted engine baffles as well as matched pre-punched holes. The RV-14 offers several instrument panel choices, including one designed to take modern electronic flight instrument systems (EFIS), like the Dynon SkyView, without any additional cutting, as well as a blank panel that can be customized by the builder.

In July 2020 Van's introduced a new version of the Lycoming IO-390, designated as the IO-390-EXP119 and optimized for the RV-14. The engine has new exhaust and induction systems and puts out 2150NaN0. It has a revised oil sump, aluminum induction pipes, oil pump and accessory case that saves 100NaN0 of weight. With this powerplant the RV-14 is 110NaN0 faster in cruise speed and climbs 2502NaN2 faster.[3]

The manufacturer offers aircraft type transition training and has built an RV-14 for this purpose.

Variants

RV-14
  • Two-seat conventional landing gear variant with tailwheel.[4]
    RV-14A
  • Two-seat tricycle landing gear variant.[4]

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Van's Introduces RV-14, Up-sized Two-Place. 25 July 2012. Grady. Mary . 24 July 2012.
    2. Bernard, Mary and Suzanne B. Bopp: Van's Aircraft: RV-14, Kitplanes, Volume 29, Number 12, December 2012, page 19-21. Belvoir Publications.
    3. Web site: Van's Aircraft Updates RV-14 Engine Options. 29 July 2020. Cook. Marc. AVweb. 28 July 2020. https://archive.today/20220211184139/https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/turbo-skylane-returns-to-textron-lineup/. February 11, 2022. live.
    4. Web site: RV-14/14A General Information. Van's Aircraft. vansaircraft.com. 25 March 2016.