Flight
Tests Begin for New Personal Jet That Fits In Your Garage
Plans call for the Flaris LAR 1 to be initially sold in the United States as an
experimental aircraft.
The Flaris LAR 1, a single-pilot, four-passenger personal jet that was unveiled
five years ago, was set to begin flight tests in July in Poland. Its first
flight follows two years of ground tests, which were completed in June. (Not
unexpectedly, it's a little behind schedule. When the LAR 1 debuted at the 2013
Paris Air Show, the company behind it projected that the plane would make its
first flight in 2015.)
The aircraft-billed as the "world's smallest business jet"-is being
developed by Metal-Master, a company based in Podgórzyn, Poland, that produces
technologies used in manufacturing automobile parts. Metal-Master has been in
business since 2000. It established Flaris as its aircraft brand in 2012.
The LAR 1 will be equipped with an American-built Williams International
FJ33-5A turbofan, the same engine that powers the Cirrus Vision SF50 personal
jet. The aircraft will have a cruising speed of 437 mph and a maximum range of
1,990 miles, according to the company's projections. When the aircraft is carrying
its maximum payload (five people plus baggage), the range will be 1,380 miles.
The LAR 1 will be able to take off from paved or grass runways that are as
short as 820 feet, and it will have an operating ceiling of 46,000 feet. It
will be equipped with a Garmin G600 glass flight deck and a whole-aircraft
parachute system similar to the one found in the Cirrus Vision and SR22 models.
The projected price of the LAR 1 is about $2 million, and the target market
includes air-taxi companies and owner-pilots. The latter won't have to find a
hangar for the aircraft, because it is designed with detachable wings that
enable you to store the plane in your garage-if it's large enough to
accommodate the LAR 1's 27-foot length-and transport on a trailer it to an airport
or landing strip.
Ultimately, Flaris/Metal-Master will seek full certification for the LAR 1 from
the Federal Aviation Administration and its European counterpart, the European
Aviation Safety Agency. However, initially the company will try to secure experimental-status
certification for the aircraft from the Polish Civil Aviation Authority and
then begin deliveries of fewer than a dozen examples in Poland. It also expects
to sell the LAR 1 in the United States as an experimental aircraft initially,
and it plans to bring the plane to the Experimental Aircraft Association
AirVenture Oshkosh show in Wisconsin next July, by which time it could be
taking orders.
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