Cessna 172 Skyhawk

The Cessna 172 Skyhawk is the most successful mass produced light aircraft in history, also possibly the most popular flight trainer in the world. Over 40,000 of this four-seat, single-engine, high-wing aircraft have been built, more than any other Western plane. The prototype first flew in November 1955.
The 172 was an overnight sales success, with over 1,400 built during its first full year of production in 1965. It began as a relatively simple tricycle landing gear upgrade from the taildragger Cessna 170, with a fairly basic level of standard equipment. Early models of the 172 looked almost identical to the 170, with the same straight aft fuselage and tall gear legs, although the 172 sported a straight vertical tail while the 170 had a rounded fin and rudder. Later versions incorporated revised landing gear and a lowered rear deck that allowed an aft window, marketed as “Omni-Vision”. The final aesthetic development in the mid-1960s was the sweptback tail which is still in use today.
A variant of the 172, the T-41 is used as a trainer with the United States Air Force and Army. Because of its high-wing design, stability at low airspeeds, and relatively low stall speed, the aircraft is an excellent platform for search and rescue operations and is the primary platform for the Civil Air Patrol’s operations. The US Border Patrol also uses a fleet of 172s for aerial surveillance along the Mexican-American border.
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