N122WB
C337Cessna 337 Skymaster2SEA2IT LLC· ICAO24 a05d16· last seen 14d ago
N122WB is a Cessna 337 Skymaster, a twin-engine piston aircraft operated by 2SEA2IT LLC. SkyMeter has tracked 100 flights totalling 67 hours of airtime via ADS-B. The most frequent segment is K47N to KBLM. Service window in our records spans 334 days. Of those flights, 18 (18.0%) carry at least one detected incident: a go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The Cessna 337 Skymaster has a maximum takeoff weight of 4,630 lb, light wake category.
About the Cessna 337 Skymaster
The Cessna 337 Skymaster is one of aviation's most distinctive light twins, instantly recognizable by its push-pull centerline engine configuration: one tractor propeller on the nose, one pusher at the tail. Introduced in 1965, this unconventional layout solved the most dangerous problem facing conventional twin pilots: asymmetric thrust after an engine failure. With both engines mounted on the fuselage centerline, the Skymaster eliminates the yawing moment that causes loss-of-control accidents in traditional twins, making single-engine handling straightforward enough that it earned a reputation as the safest twin-engine aircraft for low-time pilots.
Cessna built more than 2,000 Skymasters in various configurations between 1965 and 1982, including the pressurized P337 and the military O-2 variant used extensively as a forward air control platform in Vietnam. The O-2 carried smoke rockets under the wings and flew low and slow over the jungle, marking targets for strike aircraft, a mission that demanded reliability and the ability to limp home on one engine. The civilian 337 found favor with aerial survey operators, pipeline patrol pilots, and owner-fliers who valued the safety margin of twin-engine redundancy without the demanding handling characteristics of conventional twins.
Performance is modest by twin standards: cruise around 170 knots on both engines, service ceiling near 19,000 feet, and a range of roughly 1,000 nautical miles with reserves. The rear engine runs hotter than the front and requires careful monitoring, and parts availability has become challenging as the fleet ages, but the type remains popular among pilots who appreciate its unique engineering solution to the twin-engine safety problem. SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the largest observed operator.
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Cessna 337 Skymaster
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