The Arnet Pereyra Sabre II is an American ultralight trainer aircraft. It is a two-seats in side-by-side configuration, conventional landing gear-equipped, strut-braced, high-wing aircraft that was produced by Arnet Pereyra Inc of Rockledge, Florida in kit form for amateur construction.
First flown in July 1992, the Sabre II is a land version of the highly successful 1984-vintage Arnet Pereyra Buccaneer, which the company produced at the same time. The Sabre II was developed from the two seat Buccaneer II by removing the wing-tip floats, replacing the retractable landing gear with leaf-spring fixed landing gear, shortening the wing by and replacing the boat-hull with a new fiberglass lower fuselage. The lower fuselage was more streamlined than the boat-hull and was lighter as well. Overall the Sabre II is more than lighter than the Buccaneer II, with an empty weight of .
The Sabre is constructed from bolted aluminium tubing, covered in pre-sewn Dacron sailcloth envelopes. Standard aircraft dope and fabric is optional. The standard engine is the liquid-cooled two-stroke Rotax 582 and the acceptable power range is . When in production a Ballistic Recovery Systems parachute was standard.
The Sabre II was not a commercial success, with only three reported delivered by 2001 and the aircraft was dropped from the company line when the company was renamed Aero Adventure Aviation circa 2003.