PARSONS JOHN JOSEPH· ICAO24 a3451f· last seen 1d ago
N31GS is a Piper PA-34 Seneca, a twin-engine piston aircraft operated by PARSONS JOHN JOSEPH. SkyMeter has tracked 90 flights totalling 64 hours of airtime via ADS-B. The most frequent segment is FD84 to KORL. Service window in our records spans 362 days. Of those flights, 16 (17.8%) carry at least one detected incident — go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The Piper PA-34 Seneca has a 39 ft wingspan, a maximum takeoff weight of 4,750 lb.
About the Piper PA-34 Seneca
The Piper PA-34 Seneca is a light twin-engine piston aircraft that has served as the workhorse of multi-engine training and light charter operations since its introduction in 1971. Built as Piper's answer to the need for an affordable, docile twin for stepping up from single-engine aircraft, the Seneca combined the fuselage of the Cherokee Six with counter-rotating engines to eliminate critical-engine concerns—a feature that made it particularly forgiving for pilots earning their multi-engine ratings. Over five decades and six major variants (Seneca I through V), the type evolved from carbureted Continental engines to turbocharged Continentals and later Lycomings, with gross weights climbing from 4,000 pounds in early models to 4,750 pounds in the current Seneca V.
The Seneca's appeal lies in its predictable handling, relatively low operating costs for a twin, and generous cabin space that seats six adults. Its counter-rotating propellers eliminate the asymmetric thrust problems that define most light twins, making engine-out training less demanding and single-engine performance more benign. Cruise speeds hover around 190 knots at altitude with a range of roughly 800 nautical miles, positioning it between high-performance singles and cabin-class twins. The type found a loyal following among flight schools, air taxi operators, and owner-flown businesses that needed light twin capability without the fuel burn and maintenance complexity of larger aircraft.
Today the Seneca remains in production as the Seneca V, one of the few piston twins still manufactured, and continues to dominate the multi-engine training market alongside the Beechcraft Baron and Diamond DA42. Its rugged construction, parts availability, and straightforward systems have kept thousands of airframes flying well into their fourth and fifth decades. SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the largest observed operator.
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Piper PA-34 Seneca
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Newest 50 operations of N31GS
