Renderings of Bye Aerospace eFlyer 2Colorado-based
Bye Aerospace, a pioneer in electric aviation, has achieved FAA Approval of its G-2 ‘Means of Compliance for Certification’ issue paper, a major milestone in the certification process of its two-seat, all-electric eFlyer 2 aircraft, which is brand new and purposely designed with electric propulsion.
The Means of Compliance for Certification was divided into 16 specific certification plans covering all systems, subsystems and procedures and they have all been accepted by the FAA. This represents the first such approval in the general aviation industry, worldwide, by the FAA under Amendment 64 of FAR 23 for a Level 1 all-electric aircraft.
Bye Aerospace CEO George E. Bye said: “With this major milestone approved, Bye Aerospace is now poised to enter the testing and compliance demonstration phase of the certification, including the fabrication of eFlyer 2 serial #001, and several production conforming aircraft. We remain on course to have the world’s first Part 23 Amendment 64 FAA certified fixed-wing aircraft. Bye Aerospace received FAA approval of its G-1 (Certification Basis) issue paper 31 August, 2020.
Bye Aerospace previously applied for the eFlyer 2 Type Certificate in April 2018 for FAA certification under FAR Part 23 as the first in the world ‘Level 1’, normal category, all-new design, all-electric aircraft to be certified under the new Amendment 64 rules.
John Knudsen, general counsel, said, “This major milestone is only possible because of the close collaboration and pioneering effort with the FAA. Our thanks to the FAA leadership and certification team as well as the many designated engineering representatives that made this possible.”
The G-2 Issue Paper documents the accepted means of compliance to the FAA certification basis established for the Bye Aerospace eFlyer 2 aircraft (Project No. TC09549CH-A). The eFlyer 2 has been found to be eligible for a type certificate, as the applicant has proposed, and the FAA has found the type design complies with the USA type certification basis. In addition, the FAA has determined that no feature or characteristic of the eFlyer 2 aircraft makes it unsafe for the category in which certification is requested.