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RV-10

Incredible Four-Seat Comfort, Speed and Capacity.

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Four Real Seats
Unlike many four-place aircraft, the RV-10 will allow you to fly with four actual, full-sized adults on board - in comfort and with plenty of room to spread out and relax.
Truly Useful Load
It's a real hauler: Load up the family, up to a hundred pounds of baggage and a full load fuel - all while maintaining that great RV climb rate and speed.
Total Performance
Want to get there quickly? Need to land or take off short? The RV-10 cruises near 200 mph while delivering great short-field performance, even at maximum gross weight.

Overview

The performance, handling and cost of the RV-10 make it the obvious choice in the limited field of four-seat kit airplanes, and a viable alternative to four-seat production airplanes – singles or twins – as well.

The RV-10 is a true four-person airplane, not just an airplane with four seats. It will carry four FAA standard adults, full fuel and sixty pounds of baggage while remaining at or below max gross weight. The cabin accommodates four full-sized adults. Both front and back seats will hold people 6’4″ tall and provide them with truly comfortable leg and headroom. Pilot seats can be adjusted in the cabin while seated. Composite gull-wing doors let the occupants board from both sides.

If your mission includes more than two people, and you like airplanes that perform and handle well, you really owe yourself a ride in an RV-10.

RV-10
Your Mission: Transport four people, take off and land short, get there quickly and in comfort, look great while doing it. With tricycle gear and plenty of room in the spacious cabin for four, the RV-10 will take you and the family where you want to go both quickly and in style.

Highlights

The RV-10 is designed to fly well on the bulletproof six-cylinder Lycoming O-540 engine, developing 260 hp. In our prototype, power is provided by a fuel-injected 260 hp Lycoming IO-540.

When many pilots say “performance” they really mean “speed.” The RV-10 is a fast airplane – it will cruise just under 200 mph – but speed is only part of the story.

The RV-10 derives its high cruise speed from a clean, light airframe instead of from a big, consumptive engine. This means cruise at lower speeds can be very economical. Company pilots often choose to cruise at 50-55% power and take advantage of the economy available there. At 175 mph, the RV-10 is covering more miles per gallon than most of the luxury cars, pickup trucks and SUVs it is flying over.

RVs are known for short-field capability and the RV-10 is no exception. Even at gross weight, the RV-10 can operate out of very short runways and climb well at high density altitudes. At the end of a flight, the generous wing area, big slotted flaps and robust steel rod landing gear allow the RV-10 to land at virtually any small airport — grass, gravel or pavement. If you can land closer to your destination, you can gain a lot of time over “faster” airplanes that must use big paved airports a long way from town.

Occupant protection is an important design criterion. The composite cabin top provides roll-over protection. The cabin interior is designed around Oregon Aero seats and seat cushions, (provided in the kit) which provide the best available impact mitigation — and comfort. Like all other RVs, the RV-10 has impressively low stall and landing speeds. If necessary, it can be safely landed in very small spaces at speeds that give the occupants the best possible chance of escaping injury.

The baggage compartment will accept 100 pounds of “stuff” loaded through the baggage door on the left side. If fewer than four people are traveling, the rear seatbacks may be removed in a couple of minutes for extra baggage space.

History

Up until the point at which the RV-10 was conceived, Van’s Aircraft was a two-seat aircraft company. Over time it became apparent there was a real market for a four-place RV. If we’re being honest, the decision to create the RV-10 was a big one, with some significant risk that represented stepping outside the then-current footprint of the business and into a new segment. The decision was made to invest the time and effort, and the company dove right in.

In the end, it worked out – and quite well.

With the mission of carrying four actual, real, grown adults and a full load of fuel, plus some baggage, the RV-10 was designed taking into account a number of things we’d learned from prior models. The metal portions of the kit were planned to be totally matched-hole, similar to the RV-7/9 kits we were already selling. We hoped to make the standard-build kits even easier to build, and of course we knew we would eventually offer RV-10 QB kits.

We also knew the wing would have to be a different design than we’d used previously. We’d had some recent experience with thicker-chord, high-lift wing designs in the RV-9/9A. Taking what we knew, a new airfoil was chosen to best meet the requirements we’d set forth while still ensuring we nailed Van’s signature “Total Performance” criteria. It had to perform like an RV, and it had to safely carry a real four-person load.

Ask any RV-10 owner or pilot and they will tell you, we hit that target.

If you were one of the folks who called Van’s at about 8:30 in the morning on May 29, 2003 and the phone rang and rang… Well, we had the best possible excuse.  Most of the company was outside, standing along the taxiway watching Van taxi the brand-new RV-10 to runway 35. At about 8:40, the big six-cylinder spooled up (quietly, with that big muffler) and the airplane was in the air in about 450 feet. Takeoff and climbout certainly looked like an RV!

And the rest, as they say, is history.

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