The Commander, A Real Twin

The Aero Commander -
The Aero Commander gives its owner an airliner feel at piston-twin prices. Photo by Greg Goebel (CC By-SA 2.0) Via Wikimedia
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The Aero Commander is an executive-twin aircraft, designed by Ted Smith, known for its "airliner feel" in the cockpit and ease of flight once accustomed to its unique taxiing.
  • It boasts a distinctive design, including a high wing and large tail for stable cruising, and a "light-bomber ramp presence" with fuel and baggage located centrally.
  • While wing spar ADs were a past concern, most have been resolved; later models from the 1960s and '70s (e.g., 500B, U, S) with direct-drive Lycoming engines are recommended and continue to receive support from Twin Commander Corporation.
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The Aero Commander -
The Aero Commander gives its owner an airliner feel at piston-twin prices. Photo by Greg Goebel (CC By-SA 2.0) Via Wikimedia

Ted Smith’s impressive Aero Commander, built in Bethany, Oklahoma, by Aero Design & Engineering and subsequently by Rockwell International, was a true executive-twin design, with a cockpit set up like an airliner’s—control columns sprouting from the floor, an aft entrance door, engines and props following behind the front office. Easy to board and a dream to fly (once you learn to taxi with the power steering), it’s a pilot’s airplane. 

The Commanders had no earlier company history of single-engine design, so they were a fresh departure, incorporating a light-bomber ramp presence. The fuel supply and baggage hold were located where a bomb bay would have been. The high wing and huge tail made for stable cruising, but the overhanging engines and wing darkened the five-seat aft cabin. Wing spar Ads were an issue, but most have been fixed long ago. Look for a later one with direct-drive Lycoming engines, like the 500B, U and S models built in the 1960s and ’70s. Twin Commander Corporation and its affiliates support the piston and turboprop Commanders.

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