Six months after launching its midsize Citation Latitude, Cessna Aircraft today at EBACE announced a $25.9 million stretched version–the Longitude–that will fly 4,000 nm at Mach 0.82. First flight is scheduled for 2016, with entry into service in 2017. “The aircraft is long on range, high on value and low on price,” Cessna president and CEO Scott Ernest said at the unveiling. The super-midsize Longitude uses the same fuselage cross-section, windows, passenger seats and aluminum construction as the smaller Latitude, but will be nine feet longer. This gives it a 31-foot flat-floor cabin with passenger seating for eight. Mtow is projected to be approximately 55,000 pounds. The Longitude will be powered by a pair of Fadec-controlled, 11,000-pound-thrust Snecma Silvercrest turbofans with autothrottles, making it the launch platform for the engine. Cessna has selected the Garmin G5000 flight deck, using the same three-screen touch control avionics architecture that the company is using on both the Latitude and Citation Ten. The jet’s cabin management system will be built on the new wireless Clairity system that Cessna is developing for the Latitude, Ten and M2. Cessna plans to build the Longitude in Wichita. Notably, “This is not the large-cabin jet that we’ve talked about building in China with our partner AVIC,” Ernest told AIN. “That aircraft will be something different,” though he would not elaborate further.
Cessna Launches 4,000-nm, Super-midsize Longitude
Monday, May 14th, 2012While the hatches remain battened down on corporate travel budgets, why is the private jet sector seeing “green shoots of recovery”?
Saturday, May 12th, 2012“Exclusive” – there’s an overly and often inaccurately used word, along with the much-abused “unique”. However, for once both may apply here at Farnborough airport in Hampshire. Owned and run by TAG Aviation, it’s the only airport in the UK exclusively for private jets: no hobby aircraft, no commercial flights, nothing with more than 30 passengers.
And it does indeed feel exclusive; the stylish black-and-white terminal lounge looks more like a chic boutique hotel than an airport (of course, if you want a chic boutique hotel, as private jetsters sometimes do, the TAG-owned Aviator is just across the runway). Gleaming Gulfstreams, Learjets and Falcons roll up to the plate-glass windows, disgorging their VIP passengers. More expensive hardware shelters in 240,000sq ft of spotless hangars.
The airport boasts heritage and glamour: Samuel Cody piloted the first powered flight in Britain here in 1908, and more recently it starred as a location for James Bond in Quantum of Solace. TAG has invested more than £100 million in the airport in the last 10 years, opening the award-winning Reid-designed terminal in 2006, and buying the freehold from the MoD in 2008.
PAYING THE PRICE
But let’s cut to the chase: while most corporates are haggling over maximum hours in economy, switching to no-frills and generally tightening travel purse-strings, who on earth is using private jets – and why?
I put the question to TAG Aviation area director Ashley Namihas. He says: “An IPO [initial public offering] is a good example of where a senior leadership team needs to do a roadshow, flying into sometimes three cities in one day. It’s a cost-to-value ratio that really works. The price is a miniscule part of the overall costs of an IPO – the fees for auditors, underwriters and so on have gone up 17 per cent since 2005. Then try and measure the importance of the team using the jet as a conference room, ready to be at their best when they hit the ground. It’s a huge step in a company’s life. Also, the schedule can change by the hour, and you simply couldn’t achieve that timetable using commercial flights.”
A travel buyer for an international investment bank cites similar advantages for a hectic itinerary of meetings when the stakes are high. He says: “One of the biggest advantages is avoidance of all the unnecessary delays at commercial airports, leaving schedules undisrupted. These jet services are available 24/7, 365 days a year. You don’t have to follow a time schedule – the jet will take off as per your requirements.”
So if the finance sector is a mainstay of private aviation, is everyone in the business struggling to survive after the 2008 financial crash? Another travel manager in the banking sector tells me they now only keep a relationship with a jet provider for any emergency contingencies that might arise.
Read the full story by Paul Revel here.
JetOptions Private Jets flies their chartered private jets in and out of Farnborough Airport or any other aiport in the UK.
JPMorgan: Business Jet Deliveries To Rise 8 Percent in 2012
Wednesday, February 22nd, 2012“We sense an eagerness for a pickup in the long-depressed business jet market, particularly at the lower end, but we continue to observe mixed signals,” JPMorgan Investment Research notes in its latest market report. Despite the conflicting signals, the investment research firm still predicts an 8-percent rise in business jet deliveries this year. Keeping with recent trends, large-cabin jets will be driving much of this increase, with only “modest pickup for smaller jets.” JPMorgan saw a “few pockets of strength” in the fourth quarter, but did “not see a decisive turn.” As positives it cited Gulfstream’s 1.0x book-to-bill ratio and Bombardier’s 0.9x ratio. But other indicators were “mixed,” it said. “We view the U.S. as an important driver of the next major leg of a recovery, and FAA [data on] flight ops fell another 2.9 percent year-over-year in December.” Additionally, pre-owned inventories of in-production business jets remained stagnant in January on a month-over-month basis and remain high in historical terms at 10.8 percent of the in-service fleet. Meanwhile, pre-owned jet average asking prices slid 2.1 percent last month to $12.2 million, “the lowest level since 1998,” said JPMorgan analysts.
Aircraft Charter Market Awaits Summer Liftoff
Wednesday, July 6th, 2011The northern hemisphere’s busy summer period for private charter flights has yet to take off, but demand levels are already ahead of 2010 figures, according to the latest data from online charter portal Avinode. As of yesterday, the company’s forward-looking demand index stood at 146.47, more than four points down from a month earlier, but almost four points up on where it had stood exactly 12 months ago. Avinode’s price index showed a similar trend, with global demand for a 30-day period starting on July 4 at 98.29, almost three points up from last year, but down slightly from last month. The company’s latest actual average flight-hour rates paid also show continued moderate instability in market conditions. In North America, rates for three sample aircraft types as of July 4 were down by between 4.5 and 6.1 percent from where they had been on June 4 and were also about the same degree lower than the rates recorded three months earlier. The average July 4 rates were as follows: Cessna Citation Excel, $3,283; Hawker 800, $3,492; and Challenger 604, $5,045. In international charter markets, rates for both the Hawker 800 and the Challenger 604 were down marginally–€3,002 ($4,322) and €4,729 ($6,809), respectively–but Citation Excel rates, at €2,804 ($4,037) per hour, were 3 percent higher than a month ago and up 6.8 percent from a year ago.
JetOptions will be attending Florida Aviation Trade Association annual meeting
Monday, May 30th, 2011The Florida Aviation Trade Association is holding a breakfast program to promote general aviation to non-aviation businesses and residents during its annual meeting next month in Sarasota, Fla. The free presentation, to be held at 8 a.m. on June 15 at the Ritz-Carlton Sarasota, will inform attendees about the “positive and significant ways” general aviation affects their lives on a daily basis. JetOptions will be in attendance.
Secret Stealth Helped U.S. Accomplish bin Laden Raid
Monday, May 9th, 2011
Photographs of the tail wreckage of one helicopter, which was destroyed by the Seals following its crash into the compound, show significant differences from U.S. Army Sikorsky MH-60K Black Hawk helicopters that are used to insert special forces. These include a disc covering a five- or six-blade tail rotor; modified tailboom and tailplane and a silver paint finish.
Pakistan was not alerted to the raid, and may not have detected the airborne approach of the night-raiding team. On-the-record accounts of the raid have contained contradictions, including whether mechanical failure caused the crash.
From off-the-record briefings quoted by The Washington Post and Time magazine, it seems that the raiding party flew to and from Abbottabad via Bagram airbase in Afghanistan in two helicopters, described as Black Hawks in these accounts. The helicopters might have originated from the USS Carl Vinson operating in the North Arabian Sea, to where Bin Laden’s body was removed for analysis and subsequent burial at sea.
One or more Boeing Chinook helicopters, presumably MH-47Gs, also flew into Pakistan with back-up forces, and one of these recovered from the compound those special forces members whose helicopter was destroyed. The RQ-170 might have provided communications and imagery relay during the raid.
It might also have previously flown into Pakistan airspace undetected, to provide video imagery of the compound, which could supplement surveillance from reconnaissance satellites and covert ground observations. The RQ-170 has been seen periodically at Kandahar airbase since 2008.
U.S. State Department Upgrades Travel Warning for Japan
Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011The U.S. State Department updated its Travel Warning for Japan dated March 18 in response to new information about the malfunction at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, and are now warning Americans within 50 miles (80 kilometers) of the plant to evacuate the area or to take shelter indoors if safe evacuation is not practical. The United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), the Department of Energy, and other technical experts in the U.S. government have reviewed the scientific and technical information they have collected from assets in country, as well as what the government of Japan has disseminated.
On March 21, 2011, consistent with NRC guidelines that apply to such a situation in the U.S., the U.S. government is making available potassium iodide (KI) as a precautionary measure for United States government personnel and dependents residing within Nagoya (Aichi Prefecture), Tokyo (Tokyo Capital Region), Yokohama (Kanagawa Prefecture), and the prefectures of Akita, Aomori, Chiba, Fukushima, Gunma, Ibaraki, Iwate, Miyagi, Nagano, Niigata, Saitama, Shizouka, Tochigi, Yamagata and Yamanashi. The KI should only be consumed after specific instruction from the U.S. government. While there is no indication that it will become advisable to take KI, out of an abundance of caution the U.S. government is making it available to its personnel and family members to be used only upon direction if a change in circumstances were to warrant. No one should take KI at this time. In the event of a radiological release, sheltering in place or departing the affected area remain the primary means of protection.
There are numerous factors, including weather, wind direction and speed, as well as the exact status of the reactor problem, that affect the risk of the possibility of lower-level radioactive materials reaching greater distances. Previous notification to U.S. citizens to leave areas within 50 miles of the reactors stands. In the event they cannot evacuate that area, they are advised to seek shelter and remain sheltered. For private U.S. citizens seeking information about KI, the State Department suggests contacting your doctor or employer. For the most updated information, visit www.travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/pa/pa_5378.html.
FAA New York Area Program Integration Office
Thursday, March 17th, 2011Want to learn more about the progress the FAA made with NextGen in 2010? Curious about the capabilities that will fundamentally change the way the National Airspace System operates by the end of the decade? Then check out the 2011 update to the NextGen under ‘Special Interest Websites’ on the New York Area Program Integration Office (NYAPIO) website.
Included in this year’s update to the Plan is an overview of NextGen accomplishments in improved surveillance, more precise navigation, enhanced safety and reduced environmental impact including a discussion of the benefits seen at JFK due to shared surface surveillance coupled with aircraft metering. The document also offers a look at upcoming innovations, presents operators and airports with a guide to NextGen investments, and provides a timeline and summary of key FAA work activities planned for the coming years.




