N8704V - 1975 BELLANCA 7GCBC
Note: This aircraft is not currently for sale on our platform.
Current Registration
Serial Number: 834-75
Aircraft: 1975 BELLANCA 7GCBC
City: PROSSER
Owner: ANDERSON KIRK M
State: WA
Issue Date: 07/06/2023
Country: US
Expiration Date: 06/30/2030
Zipcode: 99350-0508
Previous Registration
Date
Owner
Location
07/07/2021
RHODES MIKE A
PRINEVILLE OR
03/20/2020
OLIVER JAMES L
FOWLER CA
03/14/2017
OLIVER JAMES L
FOWLER CA
05/02/2014
OLIVER JAMES L
FOWLER CA
08/05/2011
OLIVER JAMES L
FOWLER CA
SHARE
Loading photos

August 25, Amherst, N.H. / Socata Trinidad

At about 07:37 eastern time, a Socata TB-20 crashed into the pilots residence, killing the pilot. An IFR flight plan was filed from Nashua to Atlantic City, N.J., but was not activated. Witnesses said the pilot appeared in a hurry before takeoff, taking off about 10 minutes after arriving at the airport. Radar data and witness accounts show the airplane made four circles over the pilots house before the pilot pulled the power and crashed into his house. A restraining order had been issued the day before and police escorted him off the property at that time. The medical examiner declared the accident a suicide....

As seen on:

Used Aircraft Guide: Socata TB-20 Trinidad

When the so-called Caribbean line from Aerospatiale first appeared at the Paris Air Show in 1977, the U.S. general aviation industry was booming, building mainly tried-and-true, if staid, designs like the Cessna 172 and the Piper Cherokee line. Against that backdrop, the new TB-20 was a splash of cold water. Its not that the airplane was terribly innovative-it wasnt, sporting the same Lycoming engines we had all been flying behind for years. But it had something no Skyhawk ever did: a sleek and stylish European panache. Ultimately, this didnt help much with sales, but the thing sure was-and is-good looking, what one aviation writer famously described as a Cherokee done over by Club Med. The Trinidad is the top of the line of a small family (five) of single-engine aircraft developed and built by Socata in Tarbes, France, from which the TB derives.

As seen on:

Aerospatiale TB-20

The Trinidad isn't the fastest retractable on the block but it excels in comfort and load carrying capability.

As seen on:

N8704V Flight Data
Last Seen Flying14 Days Ago
Last tracked coordinates:Lat 46.493179 / Long -120.309605

Search for Aircraft