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]]>But as a sign of evolving times, the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA) aircraft shipment reports now collect electric aircraft under the single-engine piston heading. And in 2022, GAMA recorded a total of 1,366 singles delivered—piston and electric, with 17 of those the Pipistrel Velis Electro, under European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) approval as it awaits FAA validation. That’s better than last year’s 1,261 and 2020’s 1,164. Just 158 twins left the hangar in 2022—but that’s up from 148 in 2021 and even with the 157 delivered in 2020.
Diamond’s certification of the DA50 RG under FAA approval announced at EAA AirVenture on July 25 takes the lead on news for the sector. The DA50 RG, reviewed in the June 2023/Issue 938 edition of FLYING, steps into the spot once held by the Beechcraft Bonanza. It’s a speedy, high-performing retract with an advanced Continental engine design—this time the diesel CD-300 rather than the IO-550. And it can haul a lot of people and gear with relative comfort felt in the backseats—though the total seats number five instead of the Bo’s six. The modern powerplant can run on sustainable aviation fuel, and it retains the inherent slow-speed handling characteristics for which the Diamonds stay famous.
That Bonanza remains in production—more than 75years later—though Textron Aviation saw just three of the G36 models delivered in 2022. Strength for the Wichita, Kansas-based OEM remains with its Cessna singles, the 172S Skyhawk, the 182T Skylane, and the Turbo 206 HD Stationair. Textron Aviation leveraged its position with flight school and aviation universities with 151 deliveries of the 172 to complement the 48 182s and 42 Stationairs.
Expect an enthusiastic response through the end of 2023 from Cirrus Aircraft to step up its bid to retain the top spot in overall piston delivery numbers. The Duluth, Minnesota-based OEM sent 100 SR20s, 159 SR22s, and 280 SR22Ts home with lucky pilots in 2022 for a total of 539 singles—in addition to the 90 SF50 Vision Jets it delivered. Cirrus has made incremental changes to the SR series for this year, including a bespoke model run celebrating its 9,000th SR delivery midyear. The real news will come as it continues to test a 100LL replacement in its big-bore Continentals. The OEM is working with General Aviation Modifications Inc. (GAMI) on its G100UL fuel in pursuit of a solution for the fleet as it faces the sunsetting of leaded fuel in the next several years. Every OEM running 200 hp or higher engines in its piston aircraft is in a similar position.
Tecnam introduced its P2010 Gran Lusso single in 2022, aimed at the luxury four-seat market. It has resonated, as the company delivered 46 of the P2010 series last year. Other interesting piston singles run the gamut of missions—from aerobatics with the Extra NG and Gamebird GB1 (rumors of the GB2 remain unanswered) to backcountry utility with the CubCrafters XCub and NXCub and just plain nostalgic fun with the WACO YMF-5, profiled in our August 2023/Issue 940 of FLYING.
Piper also continues strong sales, particularly of its PA-28 series and PA-44 Seminole into training fleets worldwide. With 146 of the Pilot 100i and Archer III sold in 2022, Piper has also recently signed deals for its diesel version of the Archer, the DX, to flight schools in India, where 100LL is scarce and expensive. Ron Gunnarson, vice president of sales and marketing for Piper Aircraft, said, “In 2022 we delivered 232 aircraft, 14 percent higher than what we did in 2021. That increase was realized in both primary segments—the trainer class and the M class.” Piper is “comfortable” delivering 180 to 200 training aircraft, Gunnarson said.
Also moving strongly into the training sector is Tecnam, which debuted its P-Mentor two-seat, single-engine trainer at EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh this summer—and which we reviewed in FLYING’s July 2023/Issue 939 edition. While it awaits certification under the FAA, Tecnam continues to see success with its two piston twins—the Rotax-powered P2006T for flight schools and the Lycoming-powered P2012 Traveller for regional operators.
Piper’s Seminole meets the P2006T in the flight training world, with 21 of the light T-tail twins sent to training programs last year. But big questions remain for the future of Piper’s Seneca V and the Beech-craft G58 Baron—neither of which saw any deliveries in 2022.
What’s certain, though, is that you will see more of Diamond’s futuristic-looking twins, the DA42-IV and the DA62, whether you’re flying in North America or Europe. The DA42, which some organizations use for training, sold 45 units, while the more powerful cross-country DA62 delivered 53 units worldwide.
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]]>In 2022, a total of 505 single-engine turboprops (SETs) were delivered, according to the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA), besting the 2021 and 2020 totals of 455 and 381, respectively. That’s a healthy market that should continue, even as pressure from the war in Ukraine continues in Europe with aftershocks globally. On the multiengine side, a total of 77 units went out the door in 2022, up from 72 in 2021, and 62 in 2020.
FLYING Editors’ Choice Award winner for Aircraft in 2023, Daher’s Kodiak 900, leads the group in combining utility with efficiency. Though FAA certification was announced in summer 2022—and European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) approval in April—deliveries were just beginning in earnest as we went to press. “The difficulty that our aviation industry [is] having these days is to manage the supply chain,” said Nicolas Chabbert, senior vice president of Daher’s aircraft division, at EAA AirVenture this summer. “We are working with great partners…but all the suppliers are needed to complete an aircraft, and this is still a problem. So the Kodiak 900 deliveries have just started, and we intend to have eight deliveries of the Kodiak 900 this year, and next year, it’s going to be 50 percent of the output, so 15 aircraft.”
Daher fielded not one but two new turboprops in 2022—and while the Kodiak 900 looks very different on the outside from its predecessor (the 100 Series III), the other, the TBM 960, shows its significant evolution on the inside. The business end of it, the Pratt & Whitney PT6E-66XT turboprop, is on full display, but the brains, the Garmin GDL 60, only gained full signoff in July, though it had been in place on the 960 since its debut in March last year. Daher also continues to expand roles for its Kodiak 100 Series III—on tricycle gear or floats—in multimission and public service roles.
The Piper M Class continues to perform well in the market, according to Ron Gunnarson, vice president of sales and marketing for Piper Aircraft. Gunnarson noted strong continued sales of the M500 and M600/SLS Halo introduced in late 2019 with Garmin’s Autoland on board—though he too called out the ongoing supply chain issues. “We remain in a ‘pull’ market—probably the strongest market that any of us have ever seen, including those who have been here for 30 or more years,” said Gunnarson at AirVenture. “It’s not pulling as hard as it was a year ago, but it was unsustainable. It was collapsing our traditional supply chain. It was pulling on the resources of every OEM and every major supplier.”
Still, the push to get aircraft into customers’ hands continues. Epic Aircraft fielded the update to its certified SET, the E1000 GX, in fall 2021, and in 2022 it delivered 16 of the fast turboprop to customers. So far in the first quarter of 2023, it only shipped two units, hampered by those same supply chain constraints. Pilatus Aircraft also remains sold out into 2025 on its longevous PC-12 NGX.
Sustainable aviation fuel plays a critical part in the strength of the single-engine turboprop (SET) market, as it identifies a near-term path toward net-zero emissions for these airframes, though it is hardly as easy to implement as it seems on paper. Nicholas Kanellias, vice president of general aviation for Pratt& Whitney Canada, said in a press conference at AirVenture: “We’re focusing on the future. We realize that we need to be able to optimize the engine, but [SAF] has to also be accessible for the customer base that we’ve got.”
Greater operational efficiency is also made possible by advancements in the turboprop engine that powers most SETs, the Pratt & Whitney PT6 series. Now in its “E” versions—as in the PT6E-67XP on the PC-12NGX—the powerplant is integrated with the airframe through the engine and propeller electronic control system, which streams data usable by both the pilot, Pratt & Whitney, and the airframe OEM. “[Pilots] can monitor whatever parameters they need to in order to fly the aircraft, while we monitor over 100 parameters for the engine,” said Kanellias. That greater data transparency is likely to advance turboprops toward reducing emissions as much as the net gain currently seen in using 30 percent SAF from varying sources—and in distribution worldwide that is uneven at best until better standards have been set.
Textron Aviation advanced the multiengine turboprop (MET) game on its own in 2021 and 2022 with the debuts of the next generation Beechcraft King Air 260 and 360/360ER to replace the 200 and 350, respectively, as well as the short-haul mount, the Cessna SkyCourier.
The King Air 260 marked a total of 35 deliveries in 2022 to best slightly the 360/ER’s total of 34 units. The SkyCourier saw six deliveries to launch customer FedEx, beginning in May 2022—but it also notched its first airline customer, Aerus, a new regional airline in Mexico, which will operate the company’s Cessna Grand Caravan EX as well.
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]]>Yet as demonstrated by broad participation in art, music, or sport, individuals seek more than practical solutions. Sometimes the activities that inspire us most are those which free our minds and lift our spirits.
The aircraft in this portion of FLYING’s Buyers Guide this year might be called “joy machines,” for their mission is to elevate you—physically and emotionally.
Welcome to recreational—and, yes, affordable—aviation. To offer a taste of the 158 aircraft the FAA has accepted as special (fully built) light sport aircraft (LSA)—plus more than 100 kit-built models—I’ve divided the subject aircraft into several categories, with three outlined here. These aircraft are good representatives but between them account for just a small percentage of the models available.
Buyers enjoy many diverse choices, one of which might be perfect for them. I encourage you to explore the segment more fully at ByDanJohnson.com (to become AffordableAviation.com), now a member of the FLYING family.
Light sport aircraft have been part of the aviation firmament for almost 20 years, and over that time, some models established themselves even as newcomers regularly arrive. The way the FAA accepts (not “certifies”) these airplanes allows rapid improvement, which has stimulated surprisingly fast progress. What will happen as the Modernization of Special Airworthiness Certification’s (MOSAIC) recent rulemaking comes to conclusion looks like it will only serve to expand upon the grand variety and capability we witness on the market—such as expanding the envelope of the Bristell SLSA featured in our opening spread, and in the April 2023/Issue 936 edition of FLYING.
The Evektor Harmony is a next-generation model following its SportStar, which will forever hold the title of the first special LSA accepted by the FAA in April 2005 only weeks after the new sport pilot/light sport aircraft regulation was released. Flight Design’s CT was accepted the same day.
Being first often conveys some advantage, but in an industry where new ideas often emerge, a successful producer cannot long rest on past achievements. Based in an aviation-rich area of the Czech Republic, Evektor steadily upgraded its SportStar through a series of alterations. Later, the company introduced the Harmony with added sophistication.
The Harmony uses a more advanced compound wing—the leading edge does not form a straight line—to bring performance up to the top of the category (restricted by present regulation, which may change with MOSAIC). Pilots who fly the Harmony say it feels like a legacy GA airplane.
The Jabiru J-230D, hailing from Australia, is the result of years of development, beginning long before light sport aircraft came along. When FAA’s rule hit in 2004, the Down Under designer and manufacturer was quick to adapt its kit products to the new market.
The J-230D resembles the company’s J-400, a four-seater. That many seats aren’t permitted on LSA, so out they came, leaving an aft interior bigger than a Cessna 150. A third door sized for people brings the easiest luggage area loading among LSA—you can easily take your pet along. Jabiru is a rare airframe manufacturer that also makes its own engine. When you hear the word “Jabiru” (a large bird), you need to think airplane and powerplant, though the engines are also used on other airframes. A J-230D with the 6-cylinder Jabiru 3300 can readily hit the top speed among LSA.
The 2020 FLYING Editors’ Choice Award-winning Texas Aircraft Colt relies on the great success of a predecessor Brazilian design, but the Colt is all American. One of the newer aircraft to the LSA fleet in the U.S., developers had the advantage of seeing what pilots were buying…and what they were requesting.
With its conventional yoke control, the Colt breaks a familiar mold in LSA, an overwhelming majority of which use joysticks in various forms. A refined aircraft, the Colt is beautifully appointed inside and out, attracting pilots seeking a legacy GA airplane look in a ground-up-new design that can be operated by a sport or higher-certificated pilot exercising the no-medical privileges of LSA.
Built in Hondo, Texas, with local support, the Colt joins the best of an experienced Brazilian aircraft designer with American airplane-building capability in the U.S.
Seaplanes quickly earn a special place in some aviators’ hearts because of their unique ability to land on water and for the versatility that amphibious gear affords. The FAA recognized this interest and allowed 110 pounds more gross weight for qualifying seaplanes and also permitted amphibious gear. With a water-going craft, you have vastly more places to make a landing, whether for a pleasant visit or an emergency.
From its first announcement, pilots could see ICON’s A5 LSA seaplane was something distinctive. Its hull and fuselage blended form and function to retract gear invisibly while providing stability on the water. When its wings were electrically folded, jaws dropped; many envisioned how to launch A5 at their local marina.
The California developer went on to a long development period where every detail was sussed out to an intricate degree. The resultant aircraft that emerged addressed FAA’s current counsel to industry: “Make these aircraft easy to fly, operate, and maintain.” Three checks for ICON engineers and company leadership. They forged ahead while maintaining the smooth lines of early prototypes.
By 2022, ICON rose to be one of the leading suppliers in the LSA industry, and those of us lucky enough to have operated its well-located controls quickly acquired large smiles. A5 is simple and responsive, stall resistant, and stable. The modern sports car cabin is comfortable and spacious. Amphibious gear makes the A5 versatile and puts America’s many waterways on the list of available landing areas.
Vickers Aircraft closely observed ICON after it made a big splash with the A5. Vickers, based in New Zealand, saw an opportunity to achieve even more with its Wave. And engineers took a different approach to creating it. Using modern CAD methods and software similar to Boeing or Lockheed Martin, Vickers worked for years before unveiling a product but, when it did, it flew “right out of the box.” The company remains in testing as it works toward FAA acceptance but believes it can swiftly move to manufacturing because of the detailed preparation work. Indeed, elements are already being produced. The Wave first tempted buyers with prices substantially below ICON’s eye-watering $394,000, although continued improvements and the latest engine from Rotax have pushed up its costs. All told, the Wave is an intriguing amphibian loaded with features and boasting a large interior complete with sliding doors.
Scoda Aeronautica’s Super Petrel started its life in France. It was much different before the team at Edra, now Scoda Aeronautica, took over in Brazil. Here’s another seaplane entry from the South American nation that is very big in aviation. The Super Petrel sets itself apart from all others with its biwing construction. You may not think that’s logical in the modern world, but the Super Petrel is a highly efficient aircraft. Plenty of wing area helps it leave the water faster. The shorter the water run, the less strain on an airframe. LSA seaplanes are masterful at this task, jumping off the water in a few seconds. The higher power-to-weight ratio helps, but Scoda wanted to go even further.
Scoda’s XP designation for the Super Petrel means extra performance, but you also get more airplane. The airframe was extended by 10 inches, bringing with it a bounty of benefits, including more luggage area. With Rotax’s 141 hp 915iS engine atop the center of gravity, Super Petrel leaps out of the water with great energy.
The Airplane Factory’s Sling HW, or High Wing, is an all-new design clearly aimed at FAA’s coming MOSAIC regulation. A quick glance at the specifications below illustrates that Sling HW is well outside the current regulation for light sport aircraft. That’s OK for now. It can start with a kit or import a few aircraft in the experimental/exhibition category.
Numbers are bigger than for a present-day LSA, and that’s great if you seek extra capability. Be prepared to pay for it. Most MOSAIC-targeted LSA unveiled to date are often well into the $200,000s. Several exceed $300,000. Still, that’s much less than a comparable legacy GA aircraft, and Sling HW is big, comfortable, and well equipped. A sleek composite exterior helps it outperform comparable models.
These MOSAIC light sport aircraft (MLSA) are going to greatly expand the LSA range, and Sling producer TAF has long been an innovator.
It is also supremely confident in its designs and loves to demonstrate that by literally flying a new design all the way around the world. In fact, it has done so several times.
Building your own aircraft involves much more than just saving money—just ask the experts at Van’s Aircraft, who offer both SLSA and kit versions of the RV-12. For most, it is a learning experience, a use of craftsmanship, or simply an absorbing hobby. When you’re done, you will know it in a way few pilots know their aircraft. You can also put in it precisely what you want.
Lockwood Aircraft’s AirCam is no light sport aircraft, but it might qualify as a MLSA. The AirCam has been such a hit that 200 have been built as kits. It looks somewhat unorthodox with its twin aft-mounted Rotax engines on a half-open-cockpit design, but you need to know why it looks this way.
The AirCam was custom designed and built for one job—taking National Geographic-grade cover story photos of Namibian jungles and African wildlife. The country’s terrain is utterly unforgiving. Clearings are few and small. The photographer, seated up front for photo missions, needs huge visibility and no obstructions. Plus, they wish to fly at the speed of nature, that is, slowly. The AirCam accomplishes all this like it was designed for it—because it was.
This story first appeared in the September 2023/Issue 941 of FLYING’s print edition.
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]]>“Nothing surprises me,” says Vincent. “We were on a sugar high in 2021 and 2022, fed by essentially free money. Now with middle single-digit loan rates, we’re getting back to a more normal market.”
Adds Ron Epstein, senior equity analyst at Bank of America: “The COVID recovery was kind of a weird thing. We’re getting back to a normal [growth] trajectory pre-COVID.”
Rising interest rates haven’t yet been much of a damper on new aircraft sales, as up to 60 percent to 70 percent of purchases now are all cash or 50 percent cash down/50 percent financing. Less than one-third involve a large loan. Some buyers look at 6 percent aircraft loan rates in relation to the 8 percent returns they’re making on investments, so they’re choosing to finance aircraft purchases rather than tying up cash.
The current market cooldown is more related to supply chain snags, particularly as noted by the heads of Bombardier, Dassault, and Gulfstream. Éric Martel, Bombardier’s CEO, says fewer of the firm’s suppliers have problems, but the remaining ones have systemic issues that need remedial work. Bombardier has its own specialists embedded with key suppliers to provide support should issues arise.
Dassault chief Éric Trappier points out that supply chain issues in 2023 are worse than last year, partly from the fallout of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Some materials, such as titanium, are in short supply, and European aerospace manufacturer’s energy costs have soared. In mid-July, Trappier disclosed that sales had slowed in the first half of 2023 as compared to the same period in 2022 in large part because of the war in Ukraine.
Gulfstream president Mark Burns says that while supply chains are constricted, the Savannah, Georgia, firm began reordering parts and materials two years ago, resulting in fewer challenges. Phebe Novakovic, CEO and chairman of General Dynamics, Gulfstream’s parent company, has modestly scaled back projected deliveries for 2023.
There’s an upside to supply chain snags, says Epstein, because “it prevents anybody from spoiling the party because it forces production discipline.” Simply put, manufacturers cannot flood the market with an oversupply of airplanes.
Market growth also is being constricted by aircraft certification delays. Similar to many other organizations, the FAA encouraged many employees to work remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic. Several staff members have been reluctant to move back to FAA offices after experiencing the freedom and flexibility of their remote workplaces. Industry observers claim sparsely staffed FAA certification offices are creating long delays in paperwork processing.
In addition, the FAA has doubled down on its aircraft certification checks in the wake of the Boeing 737 Max debacle, delaying by several months the type certification of the Dassault Falcon 6X and Gulfstream G700 and G800, plus potentially the Beechcraft Denali in 2025.
Prospects for smaller turbofan aircraft already in production remain bright. Cirrus, for instance, delivered 90 single-engine SF50 Vision Jets in 2022, according to the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA) aircraft shipment report. Demand for the entry-level Vision Jet remains strong because it’s an easy step up from Cirrus’ piston singles, owing to its combination of docile handling, human-centered flight deck design, passenger amenities, and top-notch customer support. It’s very similar to the success that Cessna enjoyed 50 years ago when it introduced the mild-performing, twin-turbofan Citation 500 as a modest step-up product from its 300- and 400-series piston twins.
The Vision Jet is the only turbofan aircraft as of yet to offer both a standard airframe parachute system and Garmin Autoland—branded Safe Return—providing unsurpassed peace of mind to occupants. Similar to the long-term growth plan that Cessna had with its Citation500 family, Cirrus is expected to develop faster, higher, and farther-flying turbofan aircraft as follow-on products to the Vision Jet. As FLYING previously reported, Cirrus Aircraft filed for a $300 million initial public offering on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange to provide funds for new aircraft development and increased pro-duction capacity, among other growth goals.
Deliveries in the light jet twin-turbofan market continue slowly to decline, in large part because of the steep drop in demand for Embraer Phenom 100-series aircraft, once the most popular light jet by a wide margin.
Phenom 100 deliveries soared during its first two full production years (2009-2010) for the 100, with Embraer producing nearly 200 units. The Phenom 100 completely eclipsed its archrival, the Cessna Citation CJ1+, a light jet that was $1 million more expensive and somewhat slower. The Phenom 100’s introductory price was on par with the Cessna CE-510 Mustang, but its cabin cross section was nearly as big as the Learjet 45. The Phenom 100’s tall stance and airstair door made it look even larger than its actual size, adding to its perceived value. Owner pilots also favored the Phenom 100’s Garmin G1000 avionics package over the CJ1+’s Collins Pro Line 21 system.
Three years later, Textron Aviation responded by delivering Citation M2, a CJ1 variant with more thrust, Garmin G3000 avionics, a plusher interior than the Embraer, a 40-plus-knot cruise speed advantage, 160 nm more range, and a more attractive price tag than CJ1+. Within a few years, M2 took the sales lead from Embraer in this class and it clearly has maintained it. M2 steadily is catching the Phenom 100 in total sales, with Textron now having delivered more than 340 Citation M2 jets compared to Embraer’s 400-plus Phenom 100 aircraft.
M2 deliveries also surpass those of HA-420 HondaJet, despite the latter’s having a roomier cabin, higher cruise speeds and, arguably, the quietest interior in the light jet class. The Citation, however, offers superior runway performance and a roughly $800,000 lower price.
Veteran buyers also are keen on product support, giving Textron Aviation a major competitive edge over Embraer and Honda Aircraft, according to some industry observers. Textron Aviation delivered nearly double the number of M2 jets in 2022 compared to the HondaJet, and it’s on track to preserve a similar margin in 2023. Phenom 100 comes in a distant third.
Competition in the upper end of the light jet market is far different. Three competitors, Embraer’s Phenom 300E and Textron Aviation’s Citation CJ3+ and CJ4 Gen2 face off. The Brazilian offering has compelling advantages—biggest cabin volume, lowest cabin altitude, longest range, highest cruise speed, and smallest price. Phenom 300/300E deliveries, as a result, now exceed those of CJ3+ and CJ4 Gen2 combined. The Phenom 300 also siphoned off so many Learjet 75 orders that Bombardier was compelled to shut down production. Notably, the Phenom 300 has been the best-selling light jet for more than a decade. And it’s the only light jet to be purchased by all three major fractional aircraft operators—NetJets, Flexjet, and Airshare.
The upmarket Pilatus PC-24 resides in a class of its own, straddling the boundary between light jets and midsize aircraft. Its 18,300-pound max takeoff weight, fuel efficiency, single-pilot certification, and runway performance make it competitive. Its 500-cubic-foot cabin volume, flat floor, standard autothrottles, and 400-knot block speed nudge it into the midsize niche. The right engine has a special low idle rpm ground mode that enables it to double as an APU, thereby providing heating, air conditioning, and electrical power when the aircraft is parked. The PC-24 is the only jet in either class to have a 4.2-foot high by 4.1-foot wide aft cargo door. It can use unpaved runways, just like the PC-12 NGX turboprop. That increases the number of landing facilities it can use from 10,650 to 21,000.
Textron Aviation’s Citation Ascend, the fifth-generation Citation CE-560XL, is the last remaining truly midsize class jet. Gone are Citation III/VI/VII, Hawker800, Gulfstream G150, and Learjet 60. None had the 560XL’s blend of short-field performance, cabin comfort, operating economics, and low purchase price—though it won’t reach the market until 2025.
Ascend could be the last member of the venerable CE-560XL family, a placeholder to buy time for Textron Aviation to develop a clean-sheet replacement aircraft with more speed, more range, and more cabin volume. At nearly $17 million, Ascend’s price point puts it close to the $18 million Embraer Praetor 500, a super-mid-size aircraft with 70 percent more range, 40 to 70 knots more speed, and half again more cabin volume.
The Praetor 500 can fly nonstop between almost any two U.S. continental coastal cities at Mach 0.80 against winter winds. It has the lowest cabin altitude in its class, 5,800 inside while cruising at 45,000 feet. It boasts full-tanks, full-seats loading flexibility. It has a wet galley, vacuum lavatory, and optional Viasat KA-band SatCom connectivity. It’s the least expensive jet in FLYING’s Buyers Guide to boast fly-by-wire flight controls, a technology that used to be available only on the most expensive jets from Bombardier, Dassault, and Gulfstream. Topping all that, it beats Citation Ascend’s short-field performance on equal length missions. However, being much heavier than Citation Ascend, Praetor 500 burns 20 to 25 percent more fuel.
The super-midsize class remains one of the most hotly contested sectors with offerings from Bombardier, Gulfstream, and Textron, as well as Embraer. All contenders feature two cabin sections, typically configured with double-club seating or a single-club section up front and a divan plus two facing chairs at the rear. Bombardier Challenger 3500, the latest variant of the Challenger 300 that entered service in 2003, sports a cabin with nearly the same cross section as a Gulfstream V, lower cabin altitudes to reduce fatigue, more comfortable and stylish Nüage chairs and numerous connectivity and convenience upgrades.
The Challenger 300 series has been the bestseller in class for two decades because of its combination of cabin comfort, performance, operating economics, and dispatch reliability. With fat margins and fuel problems, it’s a cash cow for Bombardier. However, some industry analysts maintain Challenger 3500 is due for a major refresh to keep it competitive in the long term.
The Gulfstream G280 is the performance leader, capable of flying four passengers 3,700 nm at Mach 0.80, and eight passengers 3,500 nm at the same speed. Its cabin is slightly narrower than Challenger 3500, but it’s longer, so the volume is virtually the same. The G280 features a wing derived from the GV airfoil, albeit one with different twist and improved winglets. Fuel efficiency rivals the best class, a result of the low drag wing, fuel-efficient HTF7250G turbofans and comparatively high cruising altitudes. For example, it can climb directly to 43,000 feet on an ISA+10 degree Celsius day. Demand for G280 is getting stronger, with Gulfstream delivering 24 aircraft in 2022, according to GAMA.
Textron Aviation’s Citation Latitude is the firm’s bestselling jet, with 42 deliveries in 2022. Passengers love this airplane, especially its roomy aft lavatory. This low-risk derivative of the Model 680 Sovereign+ offers the largest cabin cross section of any Citation yet to enter production but one with impressive structural efficiency. Its increase in empty weight is less than 360 pounds compared to Sovereign+, while its cabin is 4 inches higher and 11 inches wider. It features the first flat floor in a Citation, a 9.66 psi pressurization system that maintains cabin altitude below 6,000 feet and a Garmin G5000 flight deck. Cabin width is about 5 inches narrower, and floor width is 7 inches less than in the Praetor 500, thus its cross section is the leanest in class. The Latitude’s typical block speed is 400 knots, so it’s optimized for two- to three-hour trips even though it has a 6.5-hour endurance.
The Latitude’s fraternal twin, the Citation Longitude, shares its cabin cross section, low cabin altitudes, and G5000 avionics package, but little else. The wing has a super-critical airfoil with 28.6 degrees of sweep at one-quarter chord. It’s powered by Honeywell HTF7000 series turbofans, considered best in class by Bombardier, Embraer, and Gulfstream. Normal cruises peed is Mach 0.80, so mission block times are nearly identical to those of Gulfstream G280.
The jet will fly four passengers 3,500 nm and eight passengers 3,400 nm at that speed, enabling it to cruise from New York to Paris, but not necessarily Paris to New York against winter headwinds. On typical two-to three-hour missions, the Longitude burns less fuel than the Latitude and its takeoff and landing distances are only slightly longer. Textron Aviation’s asking price is nearly $30 million, the highest in the super-midsize class, but that’s not dampening sales, again boosted by the company’s renowned product support and the air-plane’s unsurpassed low cabin noise levels. Textron Aviation delivered 26 units in 2022.
Embraer’s Praetor 600 is the value leader in this market niche. With a $21.5 million base price, it’s less than $2 million more than the Citation Latitude, yet it offers an extensive list of standard features. Along with the Praetor 500, it’s the only super-mid to have fly-by-wire flight controls. Its cabin cross is slightly smaller than either the Bombardier Challenger 3500 or Gulfstream G280 but larger than the Latitude or Longitude. Similar to the Citation Latitude and Praetor 500, there is no access to the unpressurized aft baggage compartment in flight. With a highest-in-class, 16,000-plus-pound fuel capacity, it can fly eight passengers 3,900 nm at long-range cruise. At Mach 0.80, range is close to 3,700 nm.
While orders are strong at all the jet manufacturers in FLYING’s Buyers Guide, storm clouds rapidly are forming in Europe. Climate change activists cut the airport security fence at Geneva International Airport (LSGG) in May and chained themselves to aircraft on display at the European Business Aviation Convention& Exhibition, calling for a total ban on private jets, decrying them as “toxic objects” and carrying signs that read, “Warning: Private Jets Drown Our Hope.”
Another environmental group sprayed orange paint on a Citation CJ1 at Sylt, Germany, in June, and a third splattered yellow paint over an Embraer Phenom 300E at Ibiza, Spain, in July, unfurling a banner that read, “Your Luxury = Our Climate Crisis.”
Dassault fully understands the threats posed by environmental protesters in Europe, warning that aviation bashing often translates into government regulatory policies. Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport (EHAM), for instance, plans to ban private jets after 2025. Dassault officials counter that all 2,100 Falcon Jets in service produce the same emissions as a single day of internet video streaming.
To put business jet aviation emissions into perspective, it’s constructive to first look at global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions. In 2022, the total was 36.8 billion metric tons, according to the International Energy Agency. IAE says aviation represents 2 percent of total CO2 emissions, or 736 million metric tons. ICAO also quotes a 2 percent aviation share, based upon research conducted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. GAMA claims that business aviation represents 2 percent of all aircraft emissions, or 14.7 million metric tons.
The World Health Organization, in contrast, reports the tobacco industry emits 84 million metric tons of CO2 every year, more than 5.7 times as much as business aviation. FLYING knows of no climate change activists who are protesting cigarette smoking.
“There’s [an] angle of class warfare here,” says Epstein, the Bank of America analyst.
Says another business aviation veteran: “Business jet owners are targeted as fat cats that don’t have to go through TSA. It’s not yet an existential threat in the U.S. But what happens in Europe eventually comes here.”
In light of growing public sentiment regarding the carbon impact of private jets, the business aviation industry has committed to slashing total CO2 emissions by 50 percent by 2050 compared to 2005. Transitioning from fossil fuel to sustainable aviation fuel (SAF or bio jet-A) can reduce overall aircraft CO2 emissions by 80 percent, according to the International Air Transport Association. Some SAF advocates claim up to 90 percent reduction, depending upon the bio feedstocks and production processes.
The challenges to making the jump from fossil jet-A to SAF are immense. Currently, the aviation industry uses close to 100 billion gallons of jet-A annually but only 14 million gallons is SAF, the majority of which was purchased by business jet operators, according to Timothy Obitts, CEO of Alder Fuels, a leading sustainable fuels company in Virginia. One big hurdle to scaling up SAF production is price. The wholesale cost of biojet is up to three times as much as fossil fuel, so FBOs are bound to charge a substantial premium for it, squeezing the already tight budgets of many light jet operators.
“Scaling up production of SAF is beyond the scope of business aviation,” says Epstein. “It’s not happening anytime soon. It’s going to take a massive investment by government. And then business aviation can ride on the coattails.”
However, the underpinnings of the business jet sector remain strong.
“People want to travel by air,” Epstein says. “The industry needs to be aware of climate change pressures and manage them. Climate change activists aren’t the ones buying business jets.”
Aircraft Make/Model | Manufacturer Base Price | Engine | Seats | Maximum Takeoff Weight | Full Fuel Payload |
Bombardier Challenger 3500 | $27.2 million | 2 x Honeywell HTF7350 | up to 10 | 40,600 lb. | 1,800 lb. |
Bombardier Challenger 650 | $33 million | 2 x General Electric CF34-3B MTO | up to 12 | 48,200 lb. | 1,150 lb. |
Bombardier Global 5500 | $47.4 million | 2 x Rolls-Royce Pearl 15 | up to 16 | 92,500 lb. | 2,639 lb. |
Bombardier Global 6500 | $58 million | 2 x Rolls-Royce Pearl 15 | up to 17 | 99,500 lb. | 2,470 lb. |
Bombardier Global 7500 | $81 million | 2 x General Electric Passport | up to 19 | 114,850 lb. | 1,890 lb. |
Cessna Citation M2 Gen2 | $6.15 million* | 2 x Williams FJ44-1AP-21 | 7 | 10,700 lb. | 3,810 lb. useful load |
Cessna Citation CJ4 Gen2 | $11.86 million* | 2 x Williams FJ44-4A | 10 | 17,110 lb. | 6,950 lb. useful load |
Cessna Citation Latitude | $19.78 million* | 2 x Pratt & Whitney PW306D | 19 | 30,800 lb. | 12,394 lb. useful load |
Cessna Citation Longitude | $29.99 million* | 2 x Honeywell HTF7700L | 12 | 39,500 lb. | 16,100 lb. useful load |
Cirrus Vision Jet G2+ | $3.29 million* | 1 x Williams FJ33-5A | 7 | 6,000 lb. | 1,400 lb. max payload |
Dassault Falcon 7X | $54.2 million | 3 x Pratt & Whitney PW307A | 12-14 | 70,000 lb. | 3,988 lb. |
Dassault Falcon 8X | $63.8 million | 3 x Pratt & Whitney PW307D | 12-14 | 73,000 lb. | 1,959 lb. max payload |
Dassault Falcon 2000LXS | $44.7 million* | 2 x P&W PW308C | 8-10 | 42,800 lb. | 2,755 lb. |
Dassault Falcon 900LX | $36 million | 3 x Honeywell TFE731-60 | 12-14 | 49,000 lb. | 2,480 lb. |
Embraer Phenom 100EV | $4.495 million | 2 x Pratt & Whitney PW617F1-E | 6 or 8 | 10,703 lb. | 647 lb. max payload |
Embraer Phenom 300E | $10.295 million | 2 x Pratt & Whitney PW535E1 | 8 or 11 | 18,552 lb. | 1,586 lb. max payload |
Embraer Praetor 500 | $17.995 million | 2 x Honeywell HTF7500E | 2+9 | 37,567 lb. | 1,610 lb. max payload |
Embraer Praetor 600 | $21.495 million | 2 x Honeywell HTF7500E | 2+12 | 42,858 lb. | 2,194 lb. max payload |
Gulfstream G280 | $24.5 million* | 2 x Honeywell HTF7250G | 8-10+2 | 39,600 lb. | 4,050 lb. max payload |
Gulfstream G500 | $49.5 million* | 2 x Pratt & Whitney PW814GA | up to 19 | 79,600 lb. | 5,250 lb. max payload |
Gulfstream G600 | $59.5 million* | 2 x Pratt & Whitney PW815GA | up to 19 | 94,600 lb. | 6,540 lb. max payload |
Gulfstream G650ER | $70.5 million* | 2 x Rolls-Royce BR725 | up to 19 | 103,600 lb. | 6,500 lb. max payload |
HondaJet Elite II | $6.95 million* | 2 x GE Honda HF120 | 1+7 | 11,100 lb. | 3,974 lb. useful load |
Pilatus PC-24 | $12.2 million** | 2 x Williams FJ44-4A | 1+11 | 18,300 lb. | 715 lb. |
Aircraft Make/Model | Fuel Burn | Max Speed | NBAA IFR Range | Stall/VREF Speed | Takeoff Field Length | Landing Distance |
Bombardier Challenger 3500 | NA | 0.83 Mach | 3,400 nm | NA | 4,835 ft. | 2,308 ft. |
Bombardier Challenger 650 | NA | 0.85 Mach | 4,000 nm | NA | 5,640 ft. | 2,402 ft. |
Bombardier Global 5500 | NA | 0.90 Mach | 5,900 nm | NA | 5,340 ft. | 2,207 ft. |
Bombardier Global 6500 | NA | 0.90 Mach | 6,600 nm | NA | 6,145 ft. | 2,236 ft. |
Bombardier Global 7500 | NA | 0.925 Mach | 7,700 nm | NA | 5,760 ft. | 2,237 ft. |
Cessna Citation M2 Gen2 | 830 pph | 404 ktas | 1,550 nm | 83 kias | 3,210 ft. | 2,590 ft. |
Cessna Citation CJ4 Gen2 | 1,299 pph | 451 ktas | 2,165 nm | 86 kias | 3,410 ft. | 2,940 ft. |
Cessna Citation Latitude | 1,770 pph | 446 ktas | 2,700 nm | NA | 3,580 ft. | 2,480 ft. |
Cessna Citation Longitude | 1,810 pph | 483 ktas | 3,500 nm | NA | 4,810 ft. | 3,170 ft. |
Cirrus Vision Jet G2+ | 442 pph | 311 ktas | 1,275 nm | 60 kcas | 2,036 ft. | 1,628 ft. ground roll |
Dassault Falcon 7X | 2,210 pph | 0.90 Mach | 5,950 nm | 104 kias (VREF) | 5,710 ft. balanced field | 2,070 ft. |
Dassault Falcon 8X | 2,240 pph | 0.90 Mach | 6,450 nm | 107 kias (VREF) | 5,880 ft. balanced field | 2,220 ft. over 50-ft. obs |
Dassault Falcon 2000LXS | 1,480 pph | 0.86 Mach | 4,000 nm | 105 kias (VREF) | 4,675 ft. | 2,260 ft. |
Dassault Falcon 900LX | 1,620 pph | 0.87 Mach | 4,750 nm | 110 kias (VREF) | 5,360 ft. | 2,415 ft. |
Embraer Phenom 100EV | 88 gph | 406 ktas | 1,178 nm | 95 ktas | 3,190 ft. | 2,473 ft. |
Embraer Phenom 300E | 124 gph | 464 ktas | 2,010 nm | 103 ktas | 3,209 ft. | 2,212 ft. |
Embraer Praetor 500 | 214 gph | 466 ktas | 3,340 nm | 101 ktas | 4,222 ft. | 2,086 ft. |
Embraer Praetor 600 | 236 gph | 466 ktas | 4,018 nm | 104 ktas | 4,717 ft. | 2,165 ft. |
Gulfstream G280 | NA | 0.85 Mach | 3,600 nm | 115 kias (VREF) | 4,750 ft. | 2,365 ft. std config |
Gulfstream G500 | NA | 0.925 Mach | 5,300 nm | 117 kias (VREF) | 5,300 ft. | 2,645 ft. std config |
Gulfstream G600 | NA | 0.925 Mach | 6,600 nm | 109 kias (VREF) | 5,700 ft. | 2,365 ft. std config |
Gulfstream G650ER | NA | 0.925 Mach | 7,500 nm | 115 kias (VREF) | 6,299 ft. | 2,445 ft. std config |
HondaJet Elite II | 638 pph/392 ktas/FL430 | 422 ktas | 1,547 nm | 108 ktas | 3,699 ft. MTOW | 2,717 ft. 4 pax/NBAA |
Pilatus PC-24 | 159 gph | 438 ktas | 2,129 nm | 82 kias | 2,930 ft. over 50-ft. obs | 2,120 ft. over 50-ft. obs |
The post Jets: Reaching the Service Ceiling appeared first on FLYING Magazine.
]]>The post What’s Next in New Aircraft appeared first on FLYING Magazine.
]]>Since Citation Excel deliveries began in 1998, Textron Aviation (née Cessna Aircraft) has delivered more than 1,100 units, making it the firm’s most successful jet in its 96-year history. Based on the XLS series, the newest iteration of the model, the Ascend, offers a number of features designed to extend the winning streak, including the more fuel efficient Pratt & Whitney Canada PW545D turbofans, an upgrade from the Collins Pro Line 21 to Garmin G5000 avionics with standard auto-throttles, increased payload, and more range. Scheduled maintenance interval shave been stretched to 800 flight hours or 18 months, whichever comes first.
The Ascend has new and larger flight deck and cabin windows, upgraded passenger seats, and improved acoustical insulation to soak up sound. The 8-inch dropped aisle has been filled in to create a flat floor. However, the dropped aisle remains an option for customers needing more center cabin headroom.
The Honeywell RE100 now is approved for unattended operation, freeing both flight crewmembers to focus on essential preflight chores. A host of other upgrades endows the Ascend with levels of comfort, quiet, convenience, and connectivity on par with Textron Aviation’s larger super-midsize aircraft. First deliveries are set to begin in 2025.
—With reporting by Fred George
Price | $16.725 million |
Engines | Pratt & Whitney PW545D (2) |
Projected Max Speed | 441 ktas |
Range | 2,100 nm |
First Delivery | 2025 |
The growth of the Dassault Aviation infrastructure at the Bordeaux-Mérignac Airport (LFBD) in western France can be attributed to the success of the Rafale fighter series, and the Falcon 7X and 8X, as well as the recent introduction of the 6X—and its upcoming big brother, the 10X. Dassault began parts assembly in 2022 to pre-pare for the final assembly of the first test articles underway this year. The all-composite wing is being built at a dedicated facility in Biarritz.
The 10X, announced in 2021, has had a long slow buildup, fitting for a jet that will be the largest built by Dassault and introduce the largest cabin of any jet purpose-built for the business aviation sector. That cabin features a new design path for the company, breaking out of the traditional mold with bold colorways and seating that looks more like that of a penthouse living room than an aluminum tube. It has already received several nods in international design competitions, including the Red Dot award from the Design Society of the U.K.
With a range of 7,500 nm at Mach 0.85—and a top speed of Mach 0.925—the 10X is powered by a pair of bespoke Rolls-Royce Pearl 10X powerplants rated at 18,000 pounds of thrust apiece and able to run on 100 percent sustainable aviation fuel (SAF). On the flight deck, the 10X gives pilots the FalconEye combined vision system, as well as carrying over the digital flight control system (DFCS) made popular on the 7X. As the Dassault pilots finish up flight tests on the 6X and move to the first 10X test platform later this year, perhaps, we’re certainly eyeing them with envy.
Price | $75 million |
Engines | Rolls-Royce Pearl 10X (2) |
Projected Max MMO | 0.925 |
Range | 7,500 nm |
First Delivery | Late 2025 |
Long before pilots will get their hands on the DFCS sticks of the 10X, however, Dassault’s Falcon 6X will entice them to the flight deck. Now type certified under the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the FAA, the 6X leads the next generation of Falcons with its dual Pratt& Whitney PW812D engines. Rated at up to 14,000 pounds thrust, the powerplants propel the wide-body, long-range 6X to a range of up to 5,500 nm at Mach 0.80 and a max cruise speed of Mach 0.925.
The 6X preserves the relative short-field performance of its predecessors, with the capability to operate out of 3,000-foot runways with a partial fuel load.
The balanced field length for takeoff is 5,480 feet under ISA conditions at sea level and at the maximum takeoff weight of 77,460 pounds.
The 6X showed off its graceful, powerful ability to maneuver at the Paris Air Show in late June at the hands of pilots Philippe Duchateau and Fabrice Valette. Visitors to the display could sit on the flight deck and witness the four large-format displays, two tablets mounted on either pilot side, and roundly shaped pedestals from which to stabilize while entering data into the flight management system. It’s a well-thought-out cockpit design, with pilot-friendly touches in and around the instrument panel, such as EFB mounts. We watched passersby stroll in front of the nose through the head-up display with the FalconEye cutting through the gray and bringing everything ahead of the airplane into sharp focus.
Price | $47 million |
Engines | Pratt & Whitney PW812D (2) |
Projected Max MMO | 0.925 |
Range | 5,500 nm |
First Delivery | 2023 |
The race to certify the next long-range mount looked neck-in-neck between the Falcon 6X and the Gulfstream G700. With its paperwork filed and everything over but the shouting, the bird from Savannah, Georgia, first announced in 2019 is expected to begin deliveries in the first quarter of 2024.
The G700, which takes its strength from the Rolls-Royce Pearl 700 powerplants, can carry up to 19 passengers—and sleep up to 13—in as many as five flexible living spaces. The 7,500 nm range (at Mach 0.85) puts it squarely in the ultralong category, routinely cruising at 45,000 to 49,000 feet. In the conclusion of the flight test program, the G700 continued to set city-pair speed records. It flew into the European Business Aviation Conference and Expo (EBACE) and Paris on up to 30 percent SAF and marked a memorable flight from Savannah to Tokyo on SAF at an average speed of Mach 0.89.
And what’s in it for the pilot? A familiar Symmetry Flight Deck up front, paired with Gulfstream’s Enhanced Flight System, that you’d find on theG500 and G600, making the G700 a straightforward transition for aviators stepping up.
Price | $78 million |
Engines | Rolls-Royce Pearl 700 (2) |
Projected Max MMO | 0.925 |
Range | 7,500 nm |
First Delivery | 2024 |
The higher model number ascribed to the Gulfstream G800—sister ship to the G700—refers to the increase in range customers can expect when the platform debuts in a couple of years. Yes, topping the charts at 8,000 nm, the G800 achieves this on the same wing as the G700 by shortening the length of the fuselage and reducing the number of living areas to four.
The G800, currently in the heart of its flight test program, achieves the target distance powered by the same Rolls-Royce Pearl 700 powerplants, at 18,250 pounds of thrust each, at Mach 0.85. If you want to go faster—and sacrifice 1,000 nm of range—push it up to Mach 0.90. Or just get there fast by taking a shorter segment at Mach 0.925.
Gulfstream’s flight test crew flew the first test article with a finished interior—used for proving those components in worldwide environments and operating conditions—to the Paris Air Show.
A second test aircraft first flew on July 15 on a blend of 30 percent SAF and reached a top speed of Mach 0.935 during the mission.
Sitting up front, the familiar Symmetry Flight Deck offers pilots a total of 10 display screens up front—four large-format ones across the front left to right, and six smaller touchscreen displays that can be configured in nearly endless ways depending on the phase of flight, pilot preference, or during abnormal and emergency operations.
The predictive landing performance system works in the background to help prevent runway overruns—though the G800 is projected to mark a6,000 takeoff distance at its max gross weight of 105,600 pounds.
Price | $72.5 million |
Engines | Rolls-Royce Pearl 700 (2) |
Projected Max MMO | 0.925 |
Range | 8,000 nm |
First Delivery | 2024 |
Close kin to the G500 and G600, Gulfstream’s next answer to the large-cabin midsize question, the G400, takes its lineage from its bigger siblings. The OEM stretched the fuselage to 36 feet, 4 inches and leveraged Symmetry Flight Deck technology from the larger models to create an advanced jet boasting a best-in-class cabin cross section with up to 2.5 living areas, with 100 percent fresh air that is refreshed every two minutes.
Those fortunate passengers (up to 12, sleeping as many as five) will enjoy the G400’s projected 4,200 nm range at Mach 0.85 settings—that’s Geneva to Minneapolis—and a top speed of Mach 0.90 and a maximum cruise altitude of 51,000 feet. And that’s done more efficiently than on previous Gulfstream models. The combination of the advanced Pratt &Whitney PW812GA powerplants, wing with improved aerodynamics, and avionics management should realize up to 30 percent in greater fuel efficiency as compared to a G450 on a hypothetical 3,000 nm journey with eight passengers at Mach 0.85.
The G400 is in development alongside the G800, with its first test aircraft delivered internally and poised for a first flight later this year. Gulfstream predicts the airplane’s entry into service will be in 2025.
Price | $34.5 million |
Engines | Pratt & Whitney PW812GA (2) |
Projected Max MMO | 0.90 |
Range | 4,200 nm |
First Delivery | Late 2025 |
The gauntlet thrown down in the ultralong-range market appears to be a spitting match between the Gulfstream G800 and Bombardier’s latest entrant in the Global series, the 8000. Yes, that 8000 translates directly into the expected range of the new luxury plat-form—but the Montreal-based OEM wants to not just equal but win on speed. Try Mach 0.94, according to the manufacturer’s latest claims.
And it wants to achieve that speed without sacrificing passenger comfort. Bombardier has developed what it calls the Smooth Flex Wing to blend control and agility with the ability to ride the bumps well. Like its competitors from Savannah, the 8000’s max altitude is 51,000 feet, and it will maintain a cabin altitude of 2,900 feet at FL410. Up front, the Bombardier Vision flight deck on the Global 7500 will assist pilots in managing both short and long segments. Four large-format displays sit between two EFB mounts, supplemented by the head-up display available for both the left and right seat. A fully loaded Global 8000—at 114,850 pounds—is anticipated to need just 5,760 feet for takeoff, with a landing distance of 2,237 feet.
Price | $78 million |
Engines | General Electric Passport (2) |
Projected Max MMO | 0.94 |
Range | 8,000 nm |
First Delivery | 2025 |
In a follow-up to the introduction of the HondaJet 2600 concept—recently rebranded as the HondaJet Echelon— at the National Business Aviation Association’s (NBAA) convention & exhibition in October 2021, Honda Aircraft has made its next move in bringing the new model into its lineup. In June, the OEM revealed that development continues on the project, with its official “commercialization” or plan to pursue type certification on the clean-sheet light jet.
Intended to be a midsize jet in alight jet’s body, the HondaJet Echelon is aimed at a 2,625 nm range (four passengers and one pilot, NBA AIFR) and 450 ktas maximum cruise speed—but at 20 percent better fuel efficiency than other light jets and a 40 percent improvement over midsize models.
FAA type certification should come in 2028, with entry into service as a single-pilot-operated platform. Up to 11 people can be seated on board, with the option for nine or 10 passengers depending on crew requirements. Supply partners include Garmin for the G3000 flightdeck, Williams International and itsFJ44-4C engines, Spirit AeroSystems providing the fuselage, and Aernnova for aerostructures. Fabrication of the first airframe is underway as HondaAircraft completes initial engineering on the program.
Price | TBD |
Engines | Williams International FJ44-4C (2) |
Max Speed | 450 ktas |
Range | 2,625 nm |
Expected Type Certification | 2028 |
Textron Aviation marked an important rite of passage in any airplane’s development program—its first appearance at EAA AirVenture in late July. The Wichita, Kansas-based OEM flew its third test article to the show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin—called “P2” in company parlance to designate the conforming airplane with a full interior for that phase of the flight test campaign.
There’s a lot you can understand much more immediately than you can with a mock-up. First, the air-plane feels like it stands roughly the same height as its Beechcraft brethren, the King Air 200 series. Once onboard, the ergonomics of the Garmin G3000 integrated flight deck harken to the Cessna CJ series but with the familiarity of the Brand G avionics. The powerplant installation includes FADEC and an auto-throttle—necessary for Garmin Autoland certification.
On the business end, the clean-sheet GE Catalyst engine is proving worthy of the investment in it, according to test pilots. As of May, the program included 26 engines built, with more than 5,400 hours of testing—figures that increase every day. The McCauley prop on the front is helping the combination to achieve even greater fuel efficiency than originally projected. The Denali will be certified with flight into known icing (FIKI) capability, completing what Textron Aviation calls “a jet-like experience.” Still, certification isn’t expected until 2025, recognizing the significant work remaining to bring anew turboprop engine to market.
Price | $6.95 million |
Engine | General Electric Catalyst |
Projected Max Speed | 285 ktas |
Range | 1,600 nm |
First Delivery | 2025 |
The first production Extra 330SX may not be taking to the skies until next year, but the new single-canopy, aerobatic airplane is already spoken for. At a presentation at EAA AirVenture, company president Marcus Extra introduced Bob Freeman as the first customer.
The Extra 330SX improves upon the 330SC with better cooling up front on the 315 hp Lycoming and a Garmin G3X Touch flight display. The sporty airplane features high-performance ailerons, with 60 percent larger horns and modified wing tips, along with a reduced fuselage length. The combination leads to its stunning roll rate, which the company measures by mounting a Go-Pro in the airplane, taking it out for a series of rolls, then returning that video to the engineering team to calculate the rate.
Other improvements in the cockpit are proposed to deliver greater pilot comfort, including a taller stick with reduced side-to-side travel to better accommodate larger pilots—like Extra, who flew the airplane earlier this summer in a com-petition in Germany for the first time. The first deliveries will take place in2024, with the company ramping up its production space in DeLand, Florida, to meet the challenge.
Price | TBD |
Engine | Lycoming AEIO-580 (1) |
Top Speed (VNE) | 220 kias |
Max Gs | +/-10 Gs |
First Delivery | Mid-2024 |
Van’s Aircraft debuted its first high-wing model at AirVenture 2022. Once more it flew the prototype to Oshkosh for the air show this summer with a few updates made to the still mostly mysterious kit in progress. Most take a bit of sleuthing to determine, but they include changes to the stabilator and anti-servo tab to improve stability and stick forces.
The ailerons have also been reshaped slightly, with hinge points moved, and changes made to the internal control system gearing influence stick throw. Van’s test pilots already report improved stick forces and control harmony.
The prototype stills runs from a fuel tank located in the cabin. Van’s plans to build new wings that will mount the fuel tanks, reported at 60 gallons total, internally, following legacy high-wing designs with this increase in pilot/passenger protection in the event of an accident.
With the wing moving back about 4 inches, Van’s will see benefits to load carrying and CG—and allow for the use of lighter powerplants than the current Lycoming IO-390, though it’s expected to be the core engine.
The airframe features unique, damped landing gear intended to smooth out vagaries in both pilot and runway surface. Van’s is sticking to its previously announced plan* to begin taking deposits 12 to 18 months after the airplane’s debut. It is likely to need at least six more months to get the design pinned down and prepare to build kits.
—With reporting by Marc Cook
*Since this article went to press, Van’s Aircraft has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and the timeline for the RV-15 is unknown.
Kit Price | TBD |
Engine | Lycoming IO-390 (on prototype) |
Max Cruise Speed | TBD |
First Kit Delivery | TBD |
Tecnam Aircraft debuted its P-Mentor at EAA AirVenture 2023, though the airplane is already approved under EASA CS 23, the equivalent to FAA Part 23 certification. The P-Mentor, featured and test flown in FLYING’s Issue 939, should see the agency’s nod in early2024, according to the company.
The P-Mentor is a two-seat aircraft designed to be a primary training platform, equipped with Garmin G3XTouch and GTN 650Xi avionics and boasting almost un-heard-of fuel economy at 3.7 gallons per hour.
This low consumption translates to low operating costs for owners and renters—and means lower carbon dioxide emissions. The P-Mentor’s fuel consumption results in up to nine operating hours between refuelings.
Powered by a FADEC-equipped Rotax 912iSC3 powerplant, the heavier-than-an-LSA P-Mentor shows graceful handling characteristics and docile slow flight and stall behavior. Takeoff ground roll at less than max gross was around 1,000 feet, with a landing roll less than that on a grass strip at the company’s headquarters in Capua, Italy. The comfortable cockpit can also accept a Garmin GFC 500 autopilot for serious cross-country and IFR operations. Several flight schools in the U.S. signed orders for the trainer at AirVenture.
—With reporting by Amy Wilder
Price | $350,750 |
Engine | Rotax 912iSC3 (1) |
Max Cruise Speed | 117 ktas |
Range | 950 nm |
First U.S. Delivery | 2024 |
Elixir Aircraft, based in La Rochelle, France, has also posted a sales streak for the training version of its aircraft, with a deal closed in June on more than 100 units—50 on option—with Sierra Charlie Aviation in Scottsdale, Arizona. The agreement caps a growing order book for the OEM as it brings three versions of its single-engine airplane to market.
Most of the models—intended for flight training—feature the 100 hp Rotax 912iS powerplant with a full glass cockpit. Sierra Charlie Aviation plans to integrate the airplanes into its Aviation Career Program, an ab initio course focused on identifying varying learning styles and steering those pilot applicants toward success. The composite airframe is built through the One-Shot manufacturing process to reduce parts count.
Elixir delivered five of its 912iS versions in 2022 for a total of more than 10 made so far by press time. The company was founded in 2015 by a trio of engineers who sought to reduce costs in flight training by lowering parts count and increasing efficiency in training aircraft. The first model achieved initial EASA CS 23 type certification in 2020, with FAA validation pending.
Price | Around $300,000 |
Engine | Rotax 912iS (1) |
Max Cruise Speed | 130 kts (EASA) |
Range | 1,000 nm |
First U.S. Delivery | 2024 |
This article first appeared in the September 2023/Issue 941 of FLYING’s print edition.
The post What’s Next in New Aircraft appeared first on FLYING Magazine.
]]>But what goes into the numbers we publish?
Beginning in the summer, we solicit information from each of the selected manufacturers we feature, and obtain the most current available data from each in a few key categories.
Sounds simple, right?
In fact, the figures we publish are a bit of a moving target, and require some insight into interpreting correctly.
Case in point: load.
We have to make a decision regarding the data we print because of the limited space we have in the pages of the physical magazine. We take the most commonly reported figure (in 2021, “useful load”) and build the table around that.
We added a series of footnotes to illuminate the variations from that figure—and normally this takes care of things. However, after an error in the production process, we had those footnotes slip off of the visible portion of the table in the Turboprops and Jets sections. So, to correct that, we’re reprinting the tables in their full format here.
AIRCRAFT MAKE/MODEL | MFG BASE PRICE* | ENGINE | SEATS | MAX TAKEOFF WEIGHT | LOAD | FUEL BURN | MAX SPEED | MAX RANGE | STALL SPEED | TAKEOFF DISTANCE | LANDING DISTANCE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pilatus PC-12 NGX | $4,480,000 | P+W PT6E-67XP | 10 + 1 | 10,450 lb. | 2,235 lb. (6) | 69 GPH | 290 KTAS | 1,803 NM | 67 KIAS | 2,485 ft. (2) | 2,170 ft. (2) |
Daher Kodiak 100 | $2,278,750 | P+W PT6A-34 | Up to 2 + 8 | 7,255 lb. | 3,530 lb. (5) | 48 GPH | 183 KTAS | 1,132 NM | 60 KCAS | 1,507 ft. (2) | 1,468 ft. (2) |
Epic E1000 GX | $3,850,000 | P+W PT6A-67A | 6 | 8,000 lb. | 1,100 lb. (7) | N/A | 333 KTAS | 1,560 NM | 68 KIAS | 2,254 ft. (2) | 2,399 ft. (2) |
TBM 940 | $4,575,004 | P+W PT6A-66D | 6 | 7,394 lb. | 1,400 lb. (6) | 60 GPH @ max cruise | 330 KTAS | 1,730 NM | 65 KCAS | 2,380 ft. (2) | 2,430 ft. (2) |
Piper M600/SLS | $3,112,116 | P+W PT6A-42A | 6 | 6,000 lb. | 2,400 lb. (5) | 40 GPH | 274 KTAS | 1,658 NM | 71 KIAS | 2,635 ft. (2) | 2,659 ft. (2) |
Beechcraft King Air 260 | $7,050,000 | 2 x PT6A-52 | 9 | 12,500 lb. | 3,760 lb. (5) | 125 GPH | 310 KTAS | 1,720 NM | 80 KCAS | 1,715 ft. (3) | 1,750 ft. (3) |
Beechcraft King Air 360 | $8,390,000 | 2 x PT6A-60A | 11 | 15,000 lb. | 5,145 lb. (5) | 128.8 GPH | 312 KTAS | 1,806 NM | 81 KCAS | 3,300 ft. (4) | 2,692 ft. |
You’ll note that we reported on three different kinds of “load”: useful load, payload, and payload with full fuel. We’d chosen the figure either reported or advertised by the OEM for that column.
For example, we reported the full fuel payload for the Epic E1000 GX, which is 1,100 pounds, with a useful load of 2,238 pounds. Be sure to take a look at both—as well as other performance stats, such as cruise speed, fuel burn, and takeoff and landing distances—when you consider your purchase decision.
And, because of the lead time involved in producing a print version, it’s inevitable that some of those figures will have been updated by the time the pages get to you.
AIRCRAFT MAKE/MODEL | MFG BASE PRICE* | ENGINE | SEATS | MAX TAKEOFF WEIGHT | LOAD | FUEL BURN | MAX SPEED | MAX RANGE | STALL SPEED | TAKEOFF DISTANCE | LANDING DISTANCE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HondaJet Elite S | $5,400,000 | 2 x GE Honda HF120 | 1 + 6 | 10,700 lb. | 3,827 lbs. (5) | N/A | 422 KTAS | 1,437 NM | N/A | 3,500 ft. | 3,000 ft. |
Cirrus Vision Jet G2+ | $2.980,000 | Williams FJ33-5A | 7 | 6,000 lb. | 1,400 lb. (6) | 442 PPH | 311 KTAS | 1,275 NM | 60 KCAS | 2,036 ft. | 1,628 ft. (3) |
Embraer Phenom 100EV | $4,250,000 | 2 x P+W PW617F1-E | 6/8 | 10,703 lb. | 1,775 lb. (6) | 88 GPH | 406 KTAS | 1,178 NM | 72 KTAS | 3,190 ft. | 2,430 ft. |
Embraer Phenom 300E | $9,650,000 | 2 x PW535E1 | 8/11 | 18,552 lb. | 2,637 lb. (6) | 124 GPH | 464 KTAS | 2,010 NM | 78 KTAS | 3,209 ft. | 2,212 ft. |
Embraer Praetor 500 | $16,995,000 | Honeywell HTF7500E | 2 + 9 | 37,567 lb. | 2,921 lb. (6) | 214 GPH | 466 KTAS | 3,340 NM | 82 KTAS | 4,222 ft. | 2,086 ft. |
Embraer Praetor 600 | $20,995,000 | Honeywell HTF7500E | 2 + 12 | 42,858 lb. | 4,001 lb. (6) | 236 GPH | 466 KTAS | 4,018 NM | 85 KTAS | 4,717 ft. | 2,165 ft. |
Pilatus PC-24 | $10,700,000 | 2 x Williams FJ44-4A | 1 + 11 | 18,300 lb. | 2,500 lb. (6) | 159 GPH | 440 KTAS | 2,000 NM | 82 KCAS | 2,930 ft. | 2,375 ft. (2) |
Cessna Citation CJ4 Gen2 | $10,750,000 | 2 x Williams FJ44-4A | 10 | 17,110 lb. | 6,950 lb. (5) | 1,470 PPH | 451 KTAS | 2,165 NM | 86 KIAS | 3,410 ft. (4) | 2,940 ft. |
Bombardier Challenger 350 | $26,700,000 | 2 x Honeywell HTF7350 | 10 | 40,600 lb. | 15,950 lb. (5) | N/A | .83 MACH | 3,200 NM | N/A | 4,835 ft. | 2,364 ft. |
Cessna Citation Latitude | $19,105,000 | 2 x PW306D1 | 9 | 30,800 lb. | 12,394 lb. (5) | 1,765 PPH | 446 KTAS | 2,700 NM | 88 KIAS | 3,580 ft. | 2,480 ft. |
Cessna Citation Longitude | $29,265,000 | 2 x Honeywell HTF7700L | 12 | 39,500 lb. | 1,600 lb. (7) | 1,937 PPH | 483 KTAS | 3,500 NM | 90 KIAS | 4,810 ft. | 3,170 ft. |
Gulfstream G280 | $24,500,000 | 2 x Honeywell HTF7250G | 8-10 + 2 | 39,600 lb. | 4,050 (6) | N/A | 0.85 MACH | 3,600 NM | N/A | 4,750 ft. | 3,050 ft. |
Gulfstream G500 | $48,500,000 | 2 x P+W PW814GA | up to 19 | 79,600 lb. | 5,250 lb. (6) | N/A | .925 MACH | 5,300 NM | N/A | 5,300 ft. | 2,620 ft. |
Gulfstream G600 | $58,500,000 | 2 x P+W PW815GA | up to 19 | 94,600 lb. | 6,540 lb. (6) | N/A | .925 MACH | 6,600 NM | N/A | 5,700 ft. | 2,550 ft. |
Dassault Falcon 7X | $53,800,000 | 3 x P+W PW307A | 12 – 16 | 70,000 lb. | 6,000 lbs. (6) | 2,210 PPH | .90 MACH | 5,950 NM | 104 (VREF) | 5,710 ft. (4) | 2,070 ft. |
Dassault Falcon 8X | $60,000,000 | 3 x P+W PW307D | 12 – 16 | 73,000 lb. | 4,900 lbs. (6) | 2,240 PPH | .90 MACH | 6,450 NM | 107 (VREF) | 5,880 ft. (4) | 3,705 ft. (2) |
Bombardier Global 5500 | $46,000,000 | 2 x Rolls-Royce Pearl | up to 16 | 92,500 lb. | 41,889 lb. (5) | N/A | .90 MACH | 5,900 NM | N/A | 5,340 ft. | 2,207 ft. |
Bombardier Global 6500 | $56,000,000 | 2 x Rolls-Royce Pearl | up to 17 | 99,500 lb. | 47,520 lb. (5) | N/A | .90 MACH | 6,600 NM | N/A | 6,145 ft. | 2,236 ft. |
Bombardier Global 7500 | $75,000,000 | 2 x GE Passport | up to 19 | 114,850 lb. | 53,400 lb. (5) | N/A | .925 MACH | 7,700 NM | N/A | 5,760 ft. | 2,237 ft. |
In the future, with our expanded team and the strength of Flying Media Group’s data skillset in the house, we will go to an all-digital format for next year’s Buyers Guide. So, you can look forward to more data from more manufacturers—and better tools to assist you with your buying decision.
This will allow us to keep performance data and specs more current, as information changes.
Sounds exciting? We think so. Stay tuned for more from the team at FLYING!
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]]>With a broad selection of new models approaching certification this fall and lots of used deals bringing new owners into the market, 2020 has shaped up to be a better-than-expected year to become an aircraft owner. Keeping in mind those challenges, Flying has made a new approach to our online Buyers Guide, showing you a selection of aircraft based on how they match what you want out of aircraft ownership.
To do this, we’ve organized the 2020 Buyers Guide online a little bit differently, more by mission than by spec sheet. If you’ve entertained thoughts of aircraft ownership, you probably know the broad category that interests you: single-engine or multiengine piston, turboprops, or jets from light to super-midsize. While not a comprehensive outline of every airplane on the market, we’ve chosen a selection that offers the best blends of utility, speed, style and customer support in each category, and then we help you define your mission. We’ll also post updates for you on insurance, the latest in aircraft mods and gear for owners, and a lot of good reasons to join a type club when you’re starting into the purchase process–so keep checking back here for new content as the year progresses.
Check it out: Flying’s 2020 Buyers Guide
The post Flying Launches 2020 Buyers Guide appeared first on FLYING Magazine.
]]>When researching various aircraft types for Flying, I encounter a wide variety of owners with an even wider variety of stories.
Most recently, I met with the owner of a taildragger who agreed to take me up for a demonstration flight to help me evaluate the type for an article I was writing. As he was conducting his preflight inspection, he explained how he purchased his airplane without ever seeing it in person, and without ever having flown an example of the type. The entirety of his research took place online and through telephone conversations with owners.
This struck me as a bit out of the ordinary. His airplane cost nearly as much as a house, yet he simply assumed he would enjoy the airplane’s flight characteristics.
I’ve dedicated more effort to evaluating hiking boots.
But then it occurred to me that for many prospective owners, thoroughly researching various aircraft types can be a difficult part of the purchasing process. Test flying certain taildraggers, complex/high-performance types, and other less common types can be challenging if not outright impossible.
The more common types like the Cessna 172 or the Piper Cherokee are easily located and are available for rent at FBOs across the country. But it’s another story if you’re looking at things like Globe Swifts or Navions. These are less common types to begin with, and they take considerably more effort to find. In addition, they’re unlikely to be offered for rent, as downsides like parts availability and higher insurance premiums can easily outweigh any upside they may offer to the business owner.
Those of us who dream of owning such types, therefore, have to get creative if we want to get behind the controls and evaluate one before we buy it.
In my case, I spent quite a bit of time scouring the web and making phone calls in an attempt to locate a Cessna taildragger near me to fly. I was fortunate to locate a well-used 1946 Cessna 140 available for rent in a neighboring state. A few weeks later, I found myself flying it with an instructor, and went on to fly it a few more times before ultimately deciding to purchase its bigger brother, a 170.
Had I become enamored with a less common type, the process to find one would have been significantly more challenging.
I’ve since discovered some investigative techniques that might prove useful for prospective owners researching these less common types before they buy an aircraft.
Not every aircraft type has a corresponding owner’s group, but most do. They tend to be fantastic resources. A vibrant, active owner’s group or type club can be the single greatest source of expertise and assistance for a given aircraft model.
When I was researching the Beechcraft Musketeer for an article, I reached out to the Beech Aero Club to see if I could connect with any local owners. They proved to be the most enthusiastic owner’s group I’d ever encountered.
When the club president notified the group that help was needed, it was as though he sounded a giant horn that could be heard across the Midwest. Within minutes, multiple members had messaged me, offering to let me photograph and fly their beloved airplanes. The energy and enthusiasm of the group was as impressive as their knowledge, and the very existence of such a group proved to be a significant selling point for that aircraft type.
It amounts to a team of subject matter experts, able and willing to lead each other through whatever ownership challenges might arise.
While this was an example of a group that has both online and actual, physical, real-world presence in the form of organized educational and social events, other groups exist only online. Some have their own dedicated websites and message boards, and others exist only as a Facebook group.
Regardless of their level of organization, owner’s groups are often keen to welcome curious newcomers, and can be a great resource to pilots interested in potentially becoming owners.
Any pilot considering ownership would benefit from attending local fly-ins. Large or small, these events offer great opportunities to network with local pilots and mechanics, and the connections you make can be valuable on many levels.
Local fly-ins typically lure pilots and their airplanes out of their hangars through the promise of coffee, pancakes, and bacon. The resulting collection of aircraft on display is always interesting to see, particularly when rarely-flown examples can be seen in person.
A pilot interested in ownership can strike up a conversation with the owner to receive a thorough overview of the type, including recommendations that might ease the buying process, such as the name of a local mechanic who can perform thorough pre-purchase inspections. Owners will often invite interested pilots to sit in the airplane to ensure he or she fits. With any luck, the owner might even know of other examples for sale.
Flight schools and FBOs can be fantastic resources when seeking out various aircraft types to evaluate, provided they’ve got your airplane of interest available for rent. A quick flight with an instructor is often all that’s needed to determine whether you mesh with a particular aircraft type, and it’s certainly a lot cheaper to learn you dislike an airplane in this manner than after you’ve bought one.
Back when I was in my own research phase, I learned of a Piper PA-16 Clipper for rent at an airport about an hour’s drive away. I went ahead and booked a lesson with an instructor primarily out of curiosity. On paper, the Clipper seemed to check a lot of boxes. It was reasonably affordable, it had an impressive useful load for its size and power, and it also had fairly impressive short-field performance. All in all, the stats seemed to indicate it would be an ideal airplane for exploring shorter, out-of-the-way strips and camping along the way.
It was a good thing I booked that lesson, because within 15 minutes, it was clear the Clipper and I were not suited to each other.
No matter how I tried, I never fully got a feel for how much rudder it wanted in turns. The landing speed was surprisingly fast, and the gear provided a bone-rattling ride. It was a nice airplane with legitimate strengths—it just wasn’t for me. The short flight enabled me to check the Clipper off my list of potential purchases. The following week, getting back into a Cessna 140 felt like shrugging into a favorite old pair of jeans.
The staff at FBOs are also a valuable resource to prospective buyers. Flight instructors tend to know a wide variety of owners, and are usually happy to make introductions. Maintenance staff see various aircraft types come and go on a daily basis, and can provide insight into the ease or more importantly, the difficulty of maintaining them. It’s hugely beneficial to network with both of these groups, as it’s important to locate qualified, experienced individuals to help with training and maintenance regardless of the type you end up purchasing.
For prospective owners who know exactly what model they want, the research phase of an aircraft purchase might amount to nothing more than shopping for the nicest example out there. But for more curious types, seeking out and learning about the various types available for purchase can prove to be both educational and a huge amount of fun.
Jason McDowell is a private pilot and Cessna 170 owner based in Madison, Wisconsin. He enjoys researching obscure aviation history and serves as a judge for the National Intercollegiate Flying Association. He can be found on Instagram as @cessnateur. You can e-mail him with any questions or comments you have at editorial@flying.media.
The post Try it Before You Buy it? It’s Not Always That Easy. appeared first on FLYING Magazine.
]]>When you and your bank account finally decide it is time to buy a new airplane, the choices vary widely in price, features and mission. Every make and model has specific mission capabilities that offer the owner-pilot the most efficient return on investment, and where you settle on the “mission” question ultimately determines the price you pay and the feature set you require.
The choices of single-engine or multiengine piston- powered aircraft range from small two-seat models for pure affordable recreational flying to high-end luxury models, with a price tag to match. Let’s take a look at a few makes and models currently available.
A great first airplane for many budgets is the new Texas Aircraft Colt. With a manufacturer’s base price of $167,000, it’s an affordable light-sport choice that sips fuel as you go have some fun in the sky. However, with the choice of a Dynon SkyView HDX or Garmin G3X and GTN 650 avionics, all-aluminum construction, and stout landing gear, the Colt is suitable for flight training use as well.
Pilots who have been around aviation for a while will be drawn to the new Cessna Skyhawk, Skylane and Turbo Stationair HD from Textron Aviation. All three models deliver a lineage born from decades of dependable aviation manufacturing, and while the Skyhawk, Skylane and Stationair might look like your granddad’s Cessna 172, 182 or 206 from afar, these new models are supremely refined. The Skyhawk of today is flown behind a capable Garmin G1000 NXi glass panel, with an interior look and feel that is far superior to the well-loved 172 you might have trained in back in the day. The Turbo Stationair is equally refined with a similar G1000 NXi avionics suite, and it will carry the exceptional load that has always drawn owner-pilots to the legacy 206. Room for six people on upgraded seating plus the model’s signature double aft doors make loading all those people and cargo easy. The Skylane 182T hits the sweet spot in the middle, in terms of mission, with four seats and substantial flexibility in both payload and performance. You will pay a premium for today’s Cessna models compared to decades ago but will enjoy the same legendary performance, serviceability and dependability.
Check out more: 2020 Flying Buyer’s Guide
If flying the backcountry is your desired mission, the CubCrafters XCub or Aviat Husky A-1C-200 will suit that mission well. The XCub is designed for exceptional STOL performance, and while it is designed to be rugged, plenty of passenger comforts have been added. With the panel centered around Garmin’s 10.6-inch G3X flight display, pilots will be able to wind their way safely through canyons with ease.
The Aviat Husky A-1C-200 is also designed to get in and out of the smallest, most-demanding backcountry strips by offering the pilot plenty of horsepower from the Lycoming IO-360-A1D6 engine while sipping just 7.6 gph at 55 percent power. If you want to conduct extreme STOL operations, this backcountry hot rod makes it happen.
For owner-pilots focused on long-range cruising, Beechcraft’s Bonanza G36 should be a strong contender for your dollars. Like the decades of Bonanzas that came before, the G36 is fast, comfortable and well-built. The Garmin G1000 NXi panel allows serious IFR flying, which makes the G36 a great choice as a first business airplane. Another solid cruiser is Piper’s Archer LX, which draws heavily on the familiar Cherokee family. With its fine leather seats and G1000 NXi panel, pilots who have previously flown an older Cherokee will quickly realize this is a seriously upgraded airplane.
One model that percolates to the top of many a pilot’s wish list is Diamond Aircraft’s DA40. The company is known for engineering a high level of safety into each model, and the DA40 is a super stylish, well-built airplane for the first-time owner or seasoned IFR aviator. The sexy ramp appeal of the DA40 comes as standard equipment.
When your budget is on the higher end, the Cirrus SR22 series is the logical choice for a perfect blend of speed, safety, comfort and capability. Available in many package levels starting at $654,900, you pay for the privilege of flying one of the most capable single-engine airplanes available today. The Cirrus Perspective Plus avionics suite by Garmin, 310 hp Continental IO-550-N engine, Cirrus Airframe Parachute System and gorgeous premium interiors make the SR22 family about as good as it gets in personal or business flying.
This story appeared in the November 2020, Buyers Guide issue of Flying Magazine
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