New Avio C205

C205
Role Two seat ultralight aircraft
National origin Italy
Manufacturer New Avio, Gruppo NewCar, Trevi
Status Lits in production



The New Avio C205 is an aerobatic ultralight aircraft, seating two in tandem and produced by New Avio, Gruppo NewCar of Italy.

Design and development

The C205 is a low wing, single engine aircraft with a retractable conventional undercarriage. It has a wooden structure with a mixture of wood and carbon composite skinning. The low, trapezoidal wings, built around two spars, are entirely wooden apart from Kevlar reinforced leading edges. They have Hoerner-type tips; the trailing edge carries ailerons and electrically driven flaps. The main undercarriage legs are attached to the main spar and have a track of 2.23 m (7 ft 4 in).[1] The main gear is retracted hydroelectrically; the tailwheel is fixed.

The fuselage has a wooden structure, reinforced with steel plates and roll-bar, and tapers to the rear. The fin and rudder are straight edged, tapered and swept; the rudder and elevators are all horn balanced. A long, single piece canopy covers both seats, with a separate windscreen. Ahead, the engine is under a polycarbonate cowling: the standard power plant is a 60 kW (80 hp) Rotax 912 UL flat four, driving a variable-pitch propeller with a choice of two or three blades.[1]

The C205 can be built from kits, with two levels of pre-completion.[1]

Operational history

By mid-2010 there were at least four C205s on the European registers, all Italian.[2] Three of these have been used by the aeroclub at Trevi, where New Avio is based. They have been flown by the three-man Walter's Bad aerobatic team.[1]

Variants

C205
Original model
C205 Evo
Flying by 2007

Specifications (Evo)

Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 2010/11[1]

General characteristics

Performance



References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to New Avio C205.
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Jackson, Paul (2010). Jane's All the World's Aircraft 2010-11. Coulsdon, Surrey: IHS Jane's. pp. 398–9. ISBN 978-0-7106-2916-6.
  2. Partington, Dave (2010). European registers handbook 2010. Air Britain (Historians) Ltd. ISBN 978-0-85130-425-0.