I got to wondering what the most successful aircraft has been, and setting aside the Airbus 320 and Boeing 737 ~ each of which I flew at the time they achieved a rank of best-selling airliner ~ the answer if apparently the Cessna 172 above. Since its appearance in 1955 it has sold 44,000.
Now however it will have been supplanted by Iran's Shahed drone, of which they've 80,000 in stock and licensed versions of which are produced at rates of upto 500 per day by Russia, which launches as many as 5,000 monthly.
Costing $50,000 to make but selling for $200,000, then compared to the $400,000 required for a Cessna you do get more bangs for your buck*. Nonetheless if it's purely a numbers game the drone does have the advantage it is not intended to survive a single flight, whereas you'd like to think that your Cessna would do a little better.
Confusing the issue tho' as it will for you as it did for me, there is not just one type of Shahed drone but any number, the company itself bearing the name. This one tho' is the one I suspect the stats relate to, and does if nothing else demonstrate that if it is sheer volume you're set upon then foam and plywood go a long way to meet that goal.
But we knew that already, didn't we?
* Ed. with apologies to anyone on the wrong end of a guided missile. The phrase originated with the US military around the time the 172 was being developed, since entering common parlance as meaning 'value for money'.







