Flight International - 10 April 2018

(Grace) #1

BUSINESS AVIATION


fiightglobal.com 10-16 April 2018 | Flight International | 23

Demand springs
back for carriers
Data View P24

U


S engineering company and
aftermarket specialist Black-
hawk Modifications has received
a Canadian supplemental type
certificate (STC) for its XP67A en-
gine upgrade on the Beechcraft
King Air 350, and is preparing to
begin work on the first retrofit for
a local customer.
The upgrade replaces the
type’s 1,050shp (783kW) Pratt &
Whitney Canada PT6A-60A en-
gines with 1,200shp PT6A-67As,
which boost the 350’s maximum
cruise speed by up to 40kt
(74km/h). The XP67A-powered
twin can also climb from sea
level to 35,000ft in 18min in hot
conditions, says Blackhawk –
more than twice the rate of the
baseline model.
The upgrade package includes
five-blade composite propellers
from German manufacturer MT,
which Blackhawk says “delivers
significant reductions in noise
and vibration levels, while im-
proving overall performance”.
Jim Allmon, president and
chief executive of the Waco, Tex-
as-based company, calls the up-
graded model “the fastest King
Air on the planet”. ■

MODIFICATION
KATE SARSFIELD LONDON

Upgraded King


Air 350 secures


Canadian STC


Strengthening US economy is expected to support rise in demand

Gulfstream

B


usiness jets are set to outper-
form all other certificated gen-
eral aviation types in the USA
over the next 20 years, according
to a forecast published by the
Federal Aviation Administration.
It predicts that although the av-
erage annual growth rate for the
whole general aviation sector –
which includes traditional busi-
ness jets, turboprops, fixed-wing
piston aircraft and helicopters –
will remain flat in the period to
2038, the business jet fleet will
grow at an average rate of 2.2%. It
expects the overall fleet and busi-
ness jet totals to reach 214,100
and 22,200, respectively.
Turbine aircraft as a whole will
also perform better than piston-
powered types, the report says,
with the US inventory expected
to climb from 23,600 units in
2018 to more than 35,000 in 20
years – an average annual in-
crease of 2%.
Turboprops will grow by a
more modest 1.7% per year, with
the fleet forecast to total 12,600 in
2038, the report says.
The FAA’s upbeat prediction is

based on forecast growth in the
US economy and corporate prof-
its – key ingredients for a thriving
business aircraft market.
By contrast, the country’s fleet
of fixed-wing, certificated piston-
singles is expected to shrink over
the forecast period by 23,750 air-
craft – an average annual decline
of 0.9% – with the FAA predict-
ing an inventory of about 119,650
in 2038. The agency attributes

this gloomy outlook to “pilot de-
mographics, overall increasing
cost of aircraft ownership, cou-
pled with new aircraft deliveries
not keeping pace with retire-
ments of the ageing fleet”.
Hours flown by turbine busi-
ness aircraft are expected to rise
from 7.2 million in 2018 to 11.6
million in 2038 – or 2.4% a year


  • thanks largely to the higher
    business jet utilisation. ■


OUTLOOK KATE SARSFIELD LONDON

Rising corporate profits will


drive fleet growth, FAA says


Twenty-year forecast expects jets to outperform turboprops, with piston singles in decline

MILESTONE KATE SARSFIELD LONDON

Second PC-24 arrives as first gets down to work


Pilatus Aircraft

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ilatus Aircraft has delivered
its second PC-24 to its US
dealer and maintenance provider
Western Aircraft. The handover
of aircraft serial number 102 –
registration N224WA – comes as
the first production example en-
ters service with fractional own-
ership company PlaneSense.
Pilatus plans to deliver 23 of
the superlight business jets in
2018, from an order backlog of 84.
Western Aircraft says it has
seen strong demand for the
PC-24, “with more than a dozen
offers to buy the first aircraft”.

Despite this demand Western
plans to add aircraft 102 to its
own inventory, where it will be
used for ad hoc charter and, for
the coming year, as a company
demonstrator. “This gives us the
ability to show the PC-24 to exist-
ing order holders, and also to
prospective customers who want
to get in on the next block of air-
craft when Pilatus re-opens the
orderbook,” says Western’s vice-
president of sales and charter,
Phil Winters.
The manufacturer, headquar-
tered in Stans, has not disclosed a

timeframe for the next order
round – but it could be as early as
the fourth quarter of this year.
PlaneSense, one of Pilatus’s

largest customers, has an order
for six PC-24s, but is keen to ac-
quire additional aircraft to bolster
its fleet of 36 PC-12s. ■

Western will employ aircraft 102
to support demonstrations
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