Epic E1000 Prototype Enters Flight-test Program
The first prototype Epic E1000-FT1-made its first flight on December 19 at
Oregon's Bend Municipal Airport. The maiden flight was flown by chief pilot
David Robinson and lasted 20 minutes. FT1 is the first of two flight-test
articles that will be flown for the E1000 FAA certification program, which is
expected to be completed by year-end 2016. FT1 flight testing will include
general handling qualities, operational performance, systems operations in
normal mode, failure scenarios, extreme conditions and flight-into-known-icing
testing, according to Epic Aircraft. FT2 is under construction and "will focus
on assessing interior and cabin functionality, including fuel, hydraulic,
avionics, navigational and environmental systems."
The $2.95 million, all-composite E1000 is powered by a 1,200-shp
(flat-rated) Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-67A. Performance specifications
include a top speed of more than 325 ktas, range of 1,650 nm, maximum altitude
34,000 feet and full-fuel payload of 1,120 pounds. The flight deck is equipped
with a three-display Garmin G1000 suite.
Epic Aircraft is already working with the FAA on its production certificate
and expects to achieve that late this year, shortly after certification. After
ramping up production, Epic expects to build 50 E1000s per year.
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