Future of the 50-seater? Cargo?
#32
I'm told Embrear is building a new factory in China to produce ERJs. I was told this and haven't looked it up so take it with a grain of salt.
As far as what will happen goes I don't see RJs being that good of a deal for people to actually want them. Pretty much all the side markets have been filled. There are aircraft that go higher, faster, further, and do so more efficiently than the RJs. True they don't fit as many people but if that's your market then they'd have BBJs. Has any fractional, which caters to the markets some of you are talking about, ever tried to place orders for CRJs? If the CRJ had that much of a future they would have been marketed already. Netjets would have a few at least. I could see a few places like USA JET or someone like them grabbing a couple but not in the personal market.
As far as what will happen goes I don't see RJs being that good of a deal for people to actually want them. Pretty much all the side markets have been filled. There are aircraft that go higher, faster, further, and do so more efficiently than the RJs. True they don't fit as many people but if that's your market then they'd have BBJs. Has any fractional, which caters to the markets some of you are talking about, ever tried to place orders for CRJs? If the CRJ had that much of a future they would have been marketed already. Netjets would have a few at least. I could see a few places like USA JET or someone like them grabbing a couple but not in the personal market.
#33
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Last edited by BoilerUP; 11-16-2007 at 10:08 AM. Reason: fixed link
#34
First Hainan ERJ is Embraer's 1000th
Aviation International News offers FREE subscriptions to industry insiders...that includes regional airline pilots.
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#35
Originally Posted by ToiletDuck
As far as what will happen goes I don't see RJs being that good of a deal for people to actually want them. Pretty much all the side markets have been filled. There are aircraft that go higher, faster, further, and do so more efficiently than the RJs.
True they don't fit as many people but if that's your market then they'd have BBJs.
If the CRJ had that much of a future they would have been marketed already.
There is a market for a corporate CRJ, and it is just now starting to blossom.
#36
Keep in mind Ghilis flies 747s that land in a fat crab. As I was saying there might be a couple out there but overall I don't see a market for them unless they are basically giving them away. Time will tell.
#37
I"m with boiler on this one, I think there is a HUGE market for the CRJ/ERJ converstions in the furture. It just makes sense. You can have a plane with about, what, double the size, with aux tanks, almost the same range for half the price of a new G550 or Global Express. Umm, sounds pretty decent to me. I will bet you will see a large number of these birds converted in the near future. As far as cargo, who knows what those guys will want. And if some one could explain how fedex used gas hogs Faclons for that long, maybe the CRJ makes sense. I'm being serious on that last one.
#38
Even with the large aux tank a Challenger 850/CRJ2 won't be anywhere close to touching the range of a Global Express or G450/550. Those planes have 12+ hours of endurance in the mid to upper-40s.
Doing BED-VNY or LGW-TEB in the winter, however, should be within the 850s range and ability...especially if you climb it above 370 (which should be no problem on a 4+ hour segment).
Doing BED-VNY or LGW-TEB in the winter, however, should be within the 850s range and ability...especially if you climb it above 370 (which should be no problem on a 4+ hour segment).
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