Meyers 200

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Meyers 200
Meyers 200 N2987T.jpg
A 1966-built Aero Commander 200D
General information
National originUnited States of America
Manufacturer Meyers Aircraft Company
History
Introduction date1955

The Meyers 200 is a single-engined light aircraft produced in the United States in the 1950s and 1960s.

Contents

Design

It was the brainchild of Al Meyers and was a development of his Meyers MAC-145 design. The holder of a number of speed records in its class, the Meyers 200 is widely admired for its clean lines, and is also known for its exceptionally sturdy airframe. This strength is derived from a tubular 4130 chrome-moly steel truss structure with aluminum skin that protects occupants. [1]

Acquisition by Aero Commander

In 1966, the Aero Commander division of North American Rockwell purchased the rights to the Meyers 145 and 200, as part of a strategy to capture a share of the light aircraft market in the United States. During this time it was in the James Bond film You Only Live Twice . Known briefly as the Aero Commander 200, it soon emerged that the firm could not produce the design economically. Meyers' firm had been virtually hand-building each aircraft and no jigs or tooling for the kind of mass production envisaged by Aero Commander even existed at the time the rights were bought. Having spent US$4 million to produce just US$3 million worth of product, Aero Commander ceased production in 1968 and sold the rights to the Interceptor Corporation, which developed a turboprop-powered version as the Interceptor 400. Ownership of the rights eventually passed to Prop-Jets, Inc., later known as Interceptor Aircraft Corporation. In 2014 the Global Parts Group, via a separately formed affiliate company called Interceptor Aviation Inc, purchased the rights along with all associated assets and intellectual property related to the Meyers 200 and Interceptor 400 model aircraft.

Operational service

The Meyers 200D has never had an in-flight structural failure and has never had an Federal Aviation Administration mandated Airworthiness Directive (AD) issued against the airframe. The 4130 chrome-moly steel tubular roll cage and understructure act like a race car protective cage during a crash. Several Meyers aircraft have been forced down in the trees and off airport runways with documented instances of the occupants walking away with only minor injuries or a broken bone.

Variants

Meyers

Meyers 200A Meyers200A.jpg
Meyers 200A

Aero Commander

An Aero Commander 200D Taxiing Meyers-200.jpg
An Aero Commander 200D Taxiing

Interceptor

Specifications (Meyers 200D)

Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1967–68 [3]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Related development:

Comparable aircraft:

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References

  1. Sport Aviation. June 1960.{{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Air Progress: 19. December 1971.{{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. Taylor 1967, p. 186
  4. Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.