Jabiru 3300

Jabiru 3300
Type Piston aero engine
National origin Australia
Manufacturer Jabiru Aircraft
Unit cost US$18,500.00 (2010)
Developed into Jabiru 5100

The Jabiru 3300 is a lightweight four-stroke, horizontally opposed "flat-six" air-cooled aircraft engine produced by Jabiru Aircraft. The engines are direct drive and fitted with alternators, silencers, vacuum pump drives and dual ignition systems as standard. The engine is used to power homebuilt and ultralight aircraft.

bottom of a Jabiru 3300

History

In November 2014 the Australian Civil Aviation Safety Authority proposed restricting all Jabiru-powered aircraft to day-visual flight rules only, without passengers or solo students and within gliding distance of a safe place to land due to the engine line's safety record. This was in response to 46 reports of engine failure in flight. In flight failure modes included, but were not limited to: fuel starvation; valve/port collapse & breakage of critical bolts.[1][2][3] Both the manufacturer and Recreational Aviation Australia opposed the restrictions as unnecessary and unwarranted.[4] The final rule adopted somewhat softened the restrictions, allowing the carriage of passengers and students, but requiring them to sign an acknowledgement of risk before flying and restricting equipped aircraft to day VFR flight and within gliding distance of a safe place to land.[5]

Applications

Specifications

General characteristics

Components

Performance

See also

Comparable engines:

References

  1. RA-Aus Response, Sport Pilot Magazine (Australia), Feb 2015, page 27
  2. "Limitations on aircraft with Jabiru engines - Shine Lawyers". Shine Lawyers. Retrieved 29 May 2016.
  3. "CASA issues Jabiru Engine Update". australianflying.com.au. Retrieved 29 May 2016.
  4. Niles, Russ (15 November 2014). "Australia Eyes Jabiru Restrictions". AVweb. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
  5. Niles, Russ (21 December 2014). "CASA Issues Jabiru Final Rule". AVweb. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
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