![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... OK, I see what you were saying. I suspect it is mainly based on the personal desires of some Cessna executives as well as a marketing/strategic purpose to build brand loyalty in pilots early. I don't think it was purely the airplanes themselves that catapulted Cessna to the top of the bizjet market relatively quickly. I suspect it was also at least partly due to all of the pilots trained in Cessna's who now fly for, or own, many of the companies that fly Cessna jets. From "70 YEARS OF EXCELLENCE - AN OVERVIEW OF THE CESSNA AIRCRAFT COMPANY" Citation Business Jets In 1967, Cessna launched a new era in business aviation when it announced plans to introduce the Citation. The new business jet was quieter, simpler, more capable of operating safely in and out of short fields, substantially more fuel efficient and much less expensive to own and operate than any other business jet on the market or the drawing board. Five years later, in 1972, Cessna delivered the first Citation. In 1976 the company dramatically increased its leadership role by announcing three new business jets: the improved Citation I; the larger, better-performing Citation II; and the Citation III. The Citation II quickly became the best-selling business jet in the world. It was replaced in 1984 by the improved Citation S/II. The Citation III was the first all-new business jet designed and produced in the United States since the original Citation in 1972. More than 200 Citation IIIs entered service after deliveries of the aircraft began in 1983. In response to popular demand, the Citation II returned to the Cessna product line in 1987. More than 800 Citation IIs and S/IIs were delivered by the end of 1994 when the Citation Bravo replaced them in the Cessna line. In September 1987, Cessna introduced the Citation V, a larger, faster aircraft that has set sales records since deliveries began early in 1989. In October 1989, Cessna introduced the CitationJet, a new aircraft tailored to first time jet owners. The CitationJet was certified in October of 1992 and the first delivery followed in March of 1993. The CitationJet quickly became the most popular entry-level business jet in the world, and in July 1997, the 200th CitationJet was delivered. In May 1990, Cessna added two more aircraft to its business jet line: the Citation VI and Citation VII, which were derived from and replaced the Citation III. The first Citation VI was delivered in May 1991, with deliveries of the higher-powered Citation VII starting in March 1992. In October 1990, Cessna took another industry standard-setting step when the Citation X was introduced. Flying at .92 Mach, the Citation X is the world's fastest business jet. Among non-military aircraft, only the Concorde is faster. The new Cessna flagship travels from Los Angeles to New York in under four hours. The Citation X's first flight was in December of 1993 and certification was received May 31, 1996. The first Citation X was delivered to golf legend and Citation pilot, Arnold Palmer. By summer, 1997, the Citation X fleet grew to over 30 and had accumulated over 10,000 flight hours. The National Aeronautics Administration recognized the Citation X's accomplishments, bestowing upon the aircraft and its design team the 1996 Robert J. Collier Trophy. The Collier is awarded annually for outstanding achievement in the fields of aeronautics or astronautics. Cessna has earned the award twice, first in 1985 for the safety record of the Citation fleet, and is the only general aviation manufacturer to have ever been honored with the most prestigious award in United States aviation. In 1994 Cessna introduced the Citation Ultra, an updated version of the Citation V, and announced the Citation Bravo, a replacement for the Citation II. Completing certification in 1996, the Bravo incorporates customer-recommended improvements including upgraded avionics, trailing link landing gear, more speed, range and payload. Deliveries began in February 1997. In October of 1994, Cessna also announced the Citation Excel. The only light jet to offer a stand-up cabin, the Excel approached the 200-order marker by mid-1997. The Excel was certified in April 1998 and deliveries began in early July 1998. The Citation fleet of business jet aircraft, based in over 75 countries, is the largest in the world as evidenced on September 10, 1997, with the delivery of the 2,500th Citation - a Citation X. At the National Business Aviation Association Convention in Las Vegas, October 19 - 21, 1998, Cessna made the biggest new product announcement in its history. Four new Citations were revealed: Citation CJ1, Citation CJ2, Citation Encore and Citation Sovereign. The Citation CJ1 is the successor to the best-selling CitationJet; the Citation CJ2 is a longer, faster version of the CJ that seats 6 passengers; the Citation Encore inherits the worldwide recognition and acceptance of the Ultra with new engines, a trailing link landing gear and more; and the Citation Sovereign is an all-new midsize business jet that will begin deliveries in third quarter of 2002. ---------------------------------------------- Yes, it many respects it WAS the aircraft, as a differentiated product, that did catapault Cessna to the top of the BizJet market. Learning in a 152 and flying a 182 or 210 is a world apart from the bizjet. Cessna could not have "cornered" the market with a mediocre product. -- Matt --------------------- Matthew W. Barrow Site-Fill Homes, LLC. Montrose, CO |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
1/72 Cessna 300, 400 series scale models | Ale | Owning | 3 | October 22nd 13 03:40 PM |
Nearly had my life terminated today | Michelle P | Piloting | 11 | September 3rd 05 02:37 AM |
Wow - heard on the air... (long) | Nathan Young | Piloting | 68 | July 25th 05 06:51 PM |
Parachute fails to save SR-22 | Capt.Doug | Piloting | 72 | February 10th 05 05:14 AM |
USAF = US Amphetamine Fools | RT | Military Aviation | 104 | September 25th 03 03:17 PM |