Close

Member Login

Logging In
Invalid username or password.
Incorrect Login. Please try again.

not a member? sign-up now!

Signing up could earn you gear and it helps to keep offensive content off of our site.

Cessna Moving Skycatcher Out of LSA Category

By Stephen Pope / Published: Jul 26, 2012
Rate it! or
Cessna Skycatcher

Cessna Skycatcher

Cessna announced it is moving its 162 Skycatcher out of the light sport category and into the primary category. But before you lose any sleep worrying what the change will mean for you – if you fly a Skycatcher, that is – rest assured, the shift is nothing more than a way to ease approval of the two-seater in Europe, and will have no affect on U.S. buyers or operators, Cessna assures us.

Cessna said it will work with the FAA to move the Skycatcher to the Part 21 primary category to make the airplane easier to sell in Europe, which is in the process of adopting new LSA rules. After gaining approval, Cessna will apply for certification under criteria recently announced by the European Aviation Safety Agency.

In the meantime, Cessna has halted Skycatcher sales in Europe and is refunding deposits as it seeks to comply with Europe’s LSA rules. The company says the Skycatcher will continue to meet the definition of a light sport aircraft and can still be flown by those holding a sport pilot license.

Comments (3) Post a comment

All Comments

johnbpatson's picture

So for Europe, the Flycatcher will have the same status as a 150, that is, only be worked on by certified mechanics, only use recognized airfields etc etc... Plus a full pilots license (€10,000 for training as opposed to €2,000 for microlight status..)
No wonder they returned the deposits (and upset their European distributors who had forked out at least €100,000 in promoting it.).

FirstFlightMike's picture

Does this mean the 162 would no longer be limited to the weight and performance limitation of the LSA category? In theory, could Cessna put a few more horsepower under the hood and increase the useful load?

elmog's picture

LSA or not, this thing is expensive. You will get much more for your dollar by buying a used 150/152. You could actually buy a rental fleet's worth of 152's for the price of one Skycatcher.

Top Rated

Your Comment
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
All submitted comments are subject to the license terms set forth in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use