By ANN Correspondent Rob Milford
Four years have flown by since the aircraft was
introduced… and IBIS Aerospace hit NBAA with their Ae-270
"Spirit" this past week.

So much buzz over an 8 passenger, 2 crew, singled engined
turbo-prop, and that buzz has translated into 76 orders on the
books!
The aircraft arrived for the first time in North America on
Saturday, October 4th, landing at Goose bay, Labrador, before
heading south to Orlando. Senior test pilot Ladislav Snydr told a
compelling story about the 33 and a half hours flying from the
Czech Republic to central Florida, covering 4,957 miles and burning
about 1,450 gallons, which translates to 42.5gph.
Snydr said there were no glitches
flying across Europe, to Scotland, and then Iceland on the first
day, to Greenland on the second day, and after a fueling stop,
attempted to make Canada, but were running smack into 140 kt
headwinds! Even with the derated PT-6-66A putting out 750shp,after
5 hours of flight, they turned around, and made Greenland in less
than 2 hours. The second attempt to cross to Canada succeeded, and
a few hours later they were in Toronto, and cleared customs in
Detroit. An easy hop from Motown to Mousetown followed, and even
with it's zinc chromate and ruby red finish, it was easy to see the
lines, and once up the ladder, to see all the space inside the
Spirit.
After 6 years, the first production aircraft arrived "au
natural" to be shown on the ramp in Orlando, before a flight to
Uvalde, Texas and the completion center at Southstar Aircraft
Interiors. Back in the Czech Republic, the first three prototypes
have amassed 760 flight-test hours, with an amazing 60,000 hours of
fatigue testing, or the equivalent of three life cycles of
flight.
Along with the arrival of the first production aircraft, Ibis
continues to add distributors, including East Coast Jet Center in
Stuart, Florida. That brings to 10 the total number of
distributors, worldwide. The company feels pretty confident that
the FAA certification will come by the end of the year, with FAR-23
single-pilot operation, and will be eligible for FAR part 135
operations.
For those operating the Spirit, Orlando-based Simcon will be
providing training for pilots and mechanics.
One of the truly "OH WOW" elements will be a
FlightLogic Synthetic Vision dual screen EFIS system from
Chelton. It combines HUD symbology with a forward-looking 3-D
terrain capability. The company hails it as a "first of it's kind"
unit for this type of aircraft, saying it offers "unprecedented
safety, a dramatically educed pilot workload, and enhanced
situational awareness."
The company says that they are "still tweaking" options, but the
MSRP for the Ibis will be $2,195,000, with an executive interior at
around $2,500,000, described as "very competitive" by Marketing
Manager Jeff Conrad. You can look for the first 6 aircraft to be
delivered sometime in the second half of 2004.

One side note to Snydr flying to Orlando: In his younger days,
he was test pilot for the L-39 Albatross. Once parked at Orlando
Executive, the Spirit was about 50 yards from an L-39 owned and
flown by Jet Warbird Training Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
"Duke" Faust struck up a conversation with Snydr when he came over
for a look, and told me later "I picked his brain on everything
having to do with the L-39. We swapped e-mail addresses…what
a neat guy...what a resource!" A new friendship found on the ramp
at NBAA!