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T-41 Mescalero

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T-41 Mescalero
The T-41 Mescalero
Description
RolePrimary Pilot Trainer
Crew1 or 2
Dimensions
Length26.92 ft8.21 m
Wingspan35.83 ft10.92 m
Height8.83 ft2.69 m
Wing area159 ft²14.77 m²
Weights
Empty1,363 lb618 kg
Loaded2,300 lb1,043 kg
Powerplant
EnginesOne Continental IO-360-D (C variant)
Power210 hp160 kW
Performance
Maximum speed144 mph232 km/h
Combat range720 mi1,158.7 km
Service ceiling17,000 ft (C)5,180 m
Rate of climb880 ft/min (C)268 m/min

The T-41 Mescalero is a military version of the popular Cessna 172 used by the United States Air Force and the United States Army as a pilot training aircraft.

In 1964, the Air Force decided to use the off-the-shelf Cessna 172 as a preliminary flight screener for pilot candidates and ordered 237 T-41As from Cessna. The T-41B was the US Army version. In 1968, the Air Force acquired 52 more powerful T-41Cs for use at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs.

In 1996, the aircraft were further upgraded to the T-41D, which included an upgrade in avionics.

Beginning in 1993, the United States Air Force replaced much of the T-41 fleet with the Slingsby T-3A Firefly for the flight screening role and aerobatics training, which the T-41 was not capable of. The T-3A fleet was indefinitely grounded in 1997 and scrapped in 2006 following a series of fatal accidents at the United States Air Force Academy and further engine problems. The Air Force no longer trains non-fliers, so no longer has a replacement for this type.

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