FMA IA 50 Guaraní II


The I.A. 50 Guaraní II is an Argentine utility aircraft designed at the DINFIA in the early 1960s.

Design and development

In the early 1960s, the Argentine state aviation conglomerate, DINFIA, realised that its IA 35 Huanquero twin-piston engined light transport was becoming outdated, and it was decided to develop a turboprop-engined derivative. While of similar layout to the Huanquero, with both aircraft being twin-engined low-wing monoplane of all metal construction with a twin tail, the new aircraft, the Guaraní, shared only 20% of the structure of the Huanquero. It was powered by two Turbomeca Bastan III engines each rated at. It first flew on 6 February 1962.
The aircraft was further developed as the Guaruani II; the main difference being a single swept fin and a shortened rear fuselage. It also used more powerful Bastan VIA engines. The fuselage was semi-monocoque with a squared cross-section, having unswept wings and swept tailplanes. The prototype Guaraní was rebuilt to this standard and flew in this form on 26 April 1963.

Operational history

In June 1965 the Guarani II prototype. TX-01 was later flown to the CEV at Istres, France, for technical evaluation, where it was tested for a total of 200 flying hours. It was flown back to the FMA, Argentina in February 1966, being the first Latin American-built aircraft to fly across the Atlantic Ocean.
The last flying example, retired in 2006 at the II Brigada Aérea, at Paraná, Entre Rios, Argentina, is currently preserved at the National Aeronautics Museum of the Argentine Air Force, at Morón, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Operators