High-performance single.
Six seats. Retractable gear. The Centurion teaches a student what a commercial pilot actually signs for — a complex endorsement that sits on every ICAO CPL logbook and opens hours on the airframes charter operators fly.
The 210 is the aircraft where speed, load, and systems start to feel like real commercial operations. Gear up, gear down, cowl flaps, manifold pressure. At cruise, it burns through cross-country miles that the Skyhawk would take half again as long to cover — typically five hours on 90 gallons.
This is where students build hours that airlines respect: cross-country, complex, multi-condition. Not the most-flown aircraft in the fleet — it doesn't need to be — but the one that widens the logbook when the interview is next.



