bizav Archives - FLYING Magazine https://cms.flyingmag.com/tag/bizav/ The world's most widely read aviation magazine Mon, 05 Sep 2022 16:45:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 Daher Ramps Up TBM 960 Production With 20th Delivery https://www.flyingmag.com/daher-ramps-up-tbm-960-production-with-20th-delivery/ Wed, 31 Aug 2022 15:51:45 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=153804 The turboprop has flown to 17 U.S. customers following FAA validation in June.

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Taking delivery of his third TBM, new owner Johnie Weems—an entrepreneur from South Florida—looked forward to getting acquainted with the updates to the model driven by the turboprop’s new Pratt & Whitney PT6E-66XT powerplant, automated engine start, improved weather radar, and digital connectivity.

“The TBM 960’s advanced technology reduces the single pilot’s workload, which ultimately leads to safer flights,” Weems said. “I want to thank the Daher team for having an innovative mindset and pursuing the quest to make an already very capable aircraft even better.”

Weems took delivery of the 960 at the Daher plant in Tarbes, France, and returned to the U.S. joined by veteran ferry pilot Margrit Waltz. “This was truly an amazing experience and an eye-opener as to the capabilities of the TBM,” Weems said. “I was amazed at how simple the TBM 960 made the crossing.”

The turboprop features a new Pratt & Whitney PT6E-66XT powerplant, automated engine start, improved weather radar, and digital connectivity. [Courtesy: Daher]

2022 So Far

Daher delivered a total of 12 turboprop aircraft in the first half of 2022, with seven Kodiak 100s, and five TBM 960s making up the blend. The slow ramp-up illuminates the delay between the 960’s initial type certification under the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) in March. Of the first 20 TBM 960s, 17 have flown to U.S. customers since the FAA validated the aircraft in June. Three 960s have gone to customers in Europe.

“The TBM 960’s benefits of digital power for enhanced sustainability, a superior piloting experience, and increased cabin comfort has created a strong demand for our latest TBM version,” said Nicolas Chabbert, senior vice president of Daher’s Aircraft Division. “We’re nearly fully booked for 2023, with a significant percentage of these orders coming from customers in North America and Europe.”

Daher delivered a total of 60 Kodiaks and TBMs in 2021, and they’re on track to beat that number this year. The company projects that the new Kodiak 900 announced at Oshkosh will begin deliveries early next year.

TBM 960 by the Numbers

The latest model in the TBM series builds upon the 940’s Garmin G3000 integrated flight deck with the addition of Garmin’s GWX 8000 weather radar, which fits as a direct replacement for the GWX 75 in the 940.

Daher has delivered more than 1,080 airplanes in the TBM series.

Powerplant:Pratt & Whitney PT6E-66XT
Thermodynamic power rating:1,844 hp
Nominal power:850 hp
Propeller:Hartzell Raptor five-blade, composite
Recommended cruise speed/fuel burn:308 ktas, 57 gph
Max takeoff weight:7,615 lbs.
Max payload:1,468 lbs.
Max rate of climb:4,000 fpm
Max operating altitude:31,000 ft.

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Take a Look at Bombardier’s New Global 8000 https://www.flyingmag.com/take-a-look-at-bombardiers-new-global-8000/ Mon, 23 May 2022 14:37:23 +0000 https://www.flyingmag.com/?p=139544 The company projects it will be 'the world’s fastest and longest-range purpose-built business jet.'

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On Monday at the National Business Aviation Association’s European Business Aviation Conference and Exhibition (EBACE) in Geneva, Switzerland, Bombardier unveiled its new Global 8000 aircraft, what it’s calling “the world’s fastest and longest-range purpose-built business jet.”

Here are some images of the new aircraft:

Bombardier expects the Global 8000 to enter service in 2025. [Courtesy: Bombardier]
The Global 8000 offers what the company calls “revolutionary cabin entertainment,” including a directional audio sound system and available 4K monitor. [Courtesy: Bombardier]
One of the four personalized suites on the aircraft is the conference suite. [Courtesy: Bombardier]
A look at the Club Suite. [Courtesy: Bombardier]
The available Principal Suite features a stand-up shower in the En-suite. [Courtesy: Bombardier]

The available Principal Suite also features a full-size bed. [Courtesy: Bombardier]

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Business Aviation Leaders: We’re On Track to Net-Zero Emissions https://www.flyingmag.com/business-aviation-industry-emissions-report/ Wed, 17 Nov 2021 22:34:50 +0000 https://flying.media/?p=102781 Progress reported toward 2050 goals across business aviation, but challenges remain.

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Industry leaders trying to cut carbon emissions across the global fleet of business jets and turboprops said Wednesday they had achieved an important milestone and were on track to meet their goals through 2050.

The Business Aviation Commitment on Climate Change, a collaboration of organizations representing manufacturers, operators, fuelers, and service providers, credited its success to improvements in alternative fuel, technology, infrastructure and operations, and carbon offsets.

“This hinges heavily on technology improvements being introduced by our industry and a significant adoption of sustainable aviation fuel [SAF].”


—Thomas Fissellier, Bombardier Business Aircraft head of strategy and analytics

Between 2010 and 2020, the business aviation sector improved its fuel efficiency by 2 percent per year, achieving one of its main objectives across its fleet of about 38,000 aircraft. The group is now renewing that same goal through 2030.

A large part of the success took place between 2015 and 2020, when the sector emitted 2.4 million tons less CO2 than expected, the group reported. Those numbers included a drastic 26 percent drop in aviation activity across the fleet in 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

An existing goal for 2050—to cut CO2 emissions to 50 percent of 2005 levels—remains on track, but members have set a new aspirational goal for business aviation, across turbine, electric, and hybrid platforms, to reach net-zero CO2 emissions by 2050.

“This hinges heavily on technology improvements being introduced by our industry and a significant adoption of sustainable aviation fuel [SAF],” said Thomas Fissellier, Bombardier Business Aircraft head of strategy and analytics, who presented the data at Wednesday’s press briefing.

Burning SAF emits significantly less greenhouse gas emissions than conventional fossil-based aviation fuel. It’s made by mixing conventional fuel with various renewable materials including cooking oil, plant oils, agricultural residues, and municipal waste.

Relying on SAF and improvements in technology and infrastructure alone will not get the business sector to net-zero by 2050, Fissellier said. To reach the goal, Fissellier said purchasing carbon offsets will be necessary.

Carbon offsets are investments in activities that reduce carbon emissions.

“It’s really up to our operator community to offset this,” he said. “The good news is that there’s actually really strong interest across operators and across all the associations to go in that direction…to help us get there.”

Potential Challenges to Reaching Net-Zero

However, there are hurdles to achieving the 2050 goals, including limited access to SAF. “It’s just not out there and available,” said International Business Aviation Council Director General Kurt Edwards. “We need a whole lot of it as soon as possible.”

The argument to that view, he said, is that the demand for SAF is not evident. As Edwards pointed out during the presentation, airlines are showing demand signals by making long-term commitments to use SAF. “But they can’t get the fuel right now, or…they get it in dribs and drabs.” Also, the general aviation community has been pushing lawmakers to make SAF more available.

Getting SAF “produced, scaled up, and available to the fleet is important,” Edwards said. “SAF is going to be probably among the most critical of the tools to get us to the goal of net-zero carbon by 2050.”

General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA) President and CEO Pete Bunce expressed concern during the presentation that a proposed tax regime in Europe would threaten the group’s 2050 goals.

“For the business aviation sector to be able to avoid taxes, we have to be able to use sustainable aviation fuel,” Bunce said. “But if you can only get it in their deployment structure at large hub airports and you don’t recognize a ‘book and claim’ system…this tax is very debilitative on the industry and I am extremely concerned about it.”

A book and claim system allows SAF carbon reductions to be documented and fully traceable throughout the fuel’s supply chain.

How Aviation Contributes to Overall Emissions

According to GAMA, business aviation’s global CO2 emissions amount to about 2 percent of all aviation and 0.04 percent of total man-made carbon emissions worldwide. Civil aviation as a whole contributes about 2 percent of global CO2 and 3 percent of greenhouse gas emissions.

The business aviation sector has improved fuel efficiency of its products 40 percent during the past 40 years, according to GAMA. Business aircraft built in 2050, GAMA predicts, will be 45 percent more fuel efficient than those built in 2005.

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