G-ODIP
HUSKAVIAT Huskey· ICAO24 406f98· last seen 9d ago
G-ODIP is an AVIAT Huskey, a single-engine piston aircraft. SkyMeter has tracked 228 flights totalling 134 hours of airtime via ADS-B. The most frequent segment is EGNR to EGNR. Service window in our records spans 359 days. Of those flights, 22 (9.6%) carry at least one detected incident — go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The AVIAT Huskey has a 36 ft wingspan, a maximum takeoff weight of 2,000 lb.
About the AVIAT Huskey
The Aviat Husky is a high-wing taildragger built for backcountry flying, designed to get in and out of short, rough strips that would ground most other light aircraft. Introduced in 1987 by Christen Industries and now produced by Aviat Aircraft in Wyoming, the Husky evolved from the Piper Super Cub lineage but with a beefier airframe, more power, and modern construction. The A-1C variant typically mounts a 180-horsepower Lycoming O-360, giving it a useful load around 1,000 pounds and short-field performance that appeals to bush pilots, backcountry adventurers, and pipeline patrol operators.
With its robust landing gear, oversized tires, and docile handling, the Husky thrives on gravel bars, mountain strips, and tundra—environments where precision and ruggedness matter more than speed. Its stall speed in landing configuration sits around 44 knots, and it cruises comfortably at 120 knots, making it slower than most trainers but far more capable off-airport. The type has earned a loyal following among pilots who value go-anywhere utility over cross-country speed, and it remains in production today as one of the few factory-built taildraggers still available new.
SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the largest observed operator.
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Aircraft specifications
AVIAT Huskey
Recent flights
Newest 50 operations of G-ODIP
