History Specifications Gallery Contact
Navion
Navion G-EYVZ banking steeply against blue sky
North American Aviation

Navion 47.911

Built 11 March 1947

The only ex-military Navion on the British register,
and still flying

Sunday 28th June 2026 G-EYVZ displays at the Shuttleworth Festival of Flight · Old Warden, Bedfordshire · 28 June 2026 · Flying from 14:00

The Aircraft

A Post-War Workhorse - Built to Last

The Navion was a solution to a post-war aviation need: a four-seat liaison aircraft that America's Army could procure straight from a production line serving civilians, oil companies and farmers. No bespoke military contract. No years of development. An honest aeroplane, bought off the shelf.

Originally designed by North American Aviation (the same Inglewood drawing offices responsible for the P-51 Mustang), the Navion first flew in 1946. The U.S. Army selected it as the L-17A after a rigorous competition against every four-seat aircraft in the country. In July 1947, Ryan Aeronautical (builders of Charles Lindbergh's Spirit of St. Louis) acquired the design and continued refining it.

47.911 was among the first off the NAA production line. Completed on 11 March 1947 in Los Angeles, it carries serial NAV-4-911 and Type Certificate 782. It was shipped to post-war France in 1948 to support U.S. Army Forces performing liaison and personnel carrying duties, flying initially under French registration. More recently, it was transferred into civilian ownership under a new registration F-AYZ based at Châteauroux, France.

Original North American Aviation Navion advertisement, late 1940s
Original North American Aviation advertisement, late 1940s • "Practical 4-Passenger Plane"


Service History

From Korea to Earls Colne

Navion L-17A on the flight deck of a U.S. Navy escort carrier

U.S. Army L-17A aboard a Navy escort carrier during Korean War operations. L-17s flew personnel and cargo from the decks of USS Sicily and USS Badoeng Strait.

Over 1,200 Navions served in military roles through the late 1940s and into the Korean War. L-17s spotted targets and guided F-51 Mustang and F-80 Shooting Star fighters into the attack, with individual aircraft logging up to 100 hours per month on front-line duties. General Douglas MacArthur and Major General Matthew Ridgway both flew personal L-17s.

After Korea, most L-17s passed to ROTC flight training and the Civil Air Patrol before entering civilian hands in the late 1960s. Today, fewer than 1,000 airworthy examples are believed to remain worldwide.

This aircraft is the first and only ex-military Navion on the British Register, now registered as G-EYVZ with a special exemption permitting it to display its original U.S. Army markings. The code 47.911 combines its build year with the last three digits of its serial number.

Technical Data

Specifications

Original North American Aviation data plate

Original data plate · North American Aviation · Serial NAV-4-911 · Completed 3-11-47

Type Plate: Ryan Navion L-17A

North American Aviation Inc.

Los Angeles, California
ModelNavion (L-17A)
Serial No.NAV-4-911
Type Cert.TC-782
Completed11 Mar 1947
EngineContinental E-185
Power205 HP (T/O)
Cruise Speed135 mph
Max Speed190 mph
Range750+ miles
Fuel60 gallons
Wing Span33 ft 4.5 in
Length27 ft 3 in
Gross Weight2,750 lb
Seats4 (dual controls)
RegistrationG-EYVZ
Displayed asU.S. Army 47.911

Supporting Veterans

RAF Benevolent Fund

47.911 is more than a historic aircraft. We are working with the RAF Benevolent Fund to raise awareness of veteran services across the UK through charitable air displays and flight experiences.

If you would like to support the Fund or enquire about a flight experience aboard this piece of living history, please get in touch.

Visit RAF Benevolent Fund

Get in Touch

Contact

Have a question about 47.911? Interested in a flight experience or a charitable partnership? We would love to hear from you.

Spam-protected · Your details will not be shared