WRAA ALAN N· ICAO24 a4902d· last seen Jun 2026
N393Z is a Christen Industries A-1 Husky, a single-engine piston aircraft operated by WRAA ALAN N. SkyMeter has tracked 78 flights totalling 52 hours of airtime via ADS-B. The most frequent segment is KCCR to KC83. Service window in our records spans 353 days. Of those flights, 42 (53.8%) carry at least one detected incident — go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The Christen Industries A-1 Husky has a maximum takeoff weight of 2,250 lb, light wake category.
About the Christen Industries A-1 Husky
The Christen A-1 Husky is a purpose-built backcountry taildragger that has earned a devoted following among bush pilots since its introduction in 1987. Designed by Frank Christensen (founder of Christen Industries, later Aviat Aircraft), the Husky was engineered from the ground up for short-field performance, rough-strip operations, and the kind of punishment that comes with landing on sandbars, tundra, and mountain ridges. With its robust steel-tube fuselage, oversized tires, and generous flap travel, the Husky can operate from strips as short as 200 feet and climb out at angles that leave most certificated aircraft behind.
Powered by a 180-horsepower Lycoming O-360 (some variants use the 200hp IO-360), the Husky combines a low stall speed of 43 knots with a never-exceed speed of 140 knots and a service ceiling around 20,000 feet. Its tandem seating configuration gives both occupants excellent visibility, critical for spotting landing zones in remote terrain. The aircraft's 2,250-pound gross weight allows for meaningful payload even with full fuel, and its high-lift wing generates enough drag to make steep descents controllable without building excessive speed.
The Husky found its niche among Alaska bush operators, backcountry guides, and recreational pilots who value go-anywhere capability over speed or comfort. It competes directly with the Piper Super Cub and later Carbon Cub variants, offering similar performance with a more modern design and better parts availability. While production numbers remain modest compared to mass-market trainers, the Husky's reputation for durability and short-field prowess has kept it in continuous production for over three decades.
SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators over routes, with the most frequently observed operator.
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Aircraft specifications
Christen Industries A-1 Husky
Recent flights
Newest 39 operations of N393Z
