Cessna NGP

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Key Takeaways:

  • The Cessna NGP (Next Generation Piston/Prop) was a 300-hp, composite-fuselage, metal-wing prototype developed by Cessna out of concern for the Cirrus SR22's market success.
  • Unveiled at Oshkosh AirVenture in 2006, the NGP was intended to form the basis for future single-engine Cessnas and generated significant interest.
  • Development of the NGP was abandoned shortly after its launch because Cessna acquired Columbia Aircraft the following year, which produced a model similar to the Cirrus SR22, making the NGP project redundant.
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When it comes to figuring out why airplanes that seemed promising never made it, sometimes, as is the case with the next plane, the Eclipse EA400, it’s easy to say. In the case of the Cessna NGP (for Next Generation Piston!later changed to Next Generation Prop), the answer isn’t clear. Its origins are pretty easy to guess at, though. Leadership at Cessna likely saw the success of the Cirrus SR22, which was outselling Cessna’s entire piston lineup at the time, and it was concerned that the future might pass it by. So the company came up with a composite fuselage, metal-wing fixed-gear, 300-hp class piston-engine model that would eventually form the basis for single-engine Cessnas to come. In 2006, the company brought the prototype to Oshkosh AirVenture, where it made quite an impression. There was even talk of going in the direction of diesel or even turboprop power. But things stopped happening with the plane shortly after its Oshkosh launch. The following year, Cessna purchased the assets of Columbia Aircraft, which made a model very similar to the Cirrus SR22, and the Cessna NGP was abandoned.

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