Diamond Aircraft Da 20
Single Piston
The Diamond DA-20 serves the United States Air Force as the T-52A, a primary flight screening trainer that introduces officer candidates to powered flight before they progress to the T-6 Texan II. Selected in 2020 to replace aging Cessna 172s in the Initial Flight Training program, the Austrian-designed composite aircraft brings modern glass-cockpit avionics and exceptional fuel efficiency to the Air Education and Training Command. Its docile handling characteristics and forgiving stall behavior make it ideal for ab-initio military students, while the side-by-side seating configuration facilitates instructor-student communication during the critical early hours of flight training. Diamond's composite construction gives the DA-20 an unusually smooth exterior and low drag coefficient, contributing to cruise speeds around 110 knots on just 125 horsepower from its Continental IO-240 engine. The type's 39-knot stall speed in landing configuration and benign spin characteristics provide wide safety margins for student pilots learning basic airwork, traffic patterns, and emergency procedures. The military variant retains the civilian model's excellent visibility through its bubble canopy, essential for visual scanning and situational awareness training. Beyond the Air Force's Initial Flight Training program, the DA-20 serves with Civil Air Patrol squadrons and various flight schools worldwide, where its low operating costs and modern avionics make it a popular choice for primary instruction. The type's reputation for structural integrity and crashworthiness, combined with a service ceiling of 13,200 feet and range exceeding 500 nautical miles, allows training operations across diverse geographic and meteorological conditions. SkyMeter has tracked 25 flights across 9 airframes and 2 operators, with SILVA FERNANDO the largest observed operator.
Safety in context
The incident rate counts flights with ANY safety event detected by SkyMeter — go-arounds (a routine response, not a failure), unstable-approach gate flags (advisory thresholds), rejected takeoffs (the system working as designed), and runway events. It is NOT an accident rate or fatality rate. For accident statistics, refer to the NTSB Aviation Accident Database (USA) or the Aviation Safety Network. See methodology for what each event type measures.
Performance
Speed envelope & approach
Dimensions
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By fleet size · last 7 days
Safety profile
Flagged flights · last 7 days
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