Aircraft types
Challenger 604
The Challenger 604 intercontinental business jet accommodates up to nine passengers and has a range of 4,077nm. First flight was in 1994, certified in 1995, with 365 jets built before production ended in 2006.
Cirrus Vision Jet
The SF50 Vision Jet is a single-engine very light jet by Cirrus Aircraft. First flown in 2008, certified in 2016 as the first civilian single-engine jet. Features carbon fiber construction, V-tail, and ballistic parachute system.
Citation 560XL
The Cessna Citation Excel (560XL) is a midsize business jet first flown in 1996. It features an unswept supercritical wing, twin PW-545A turbofans, and seats up to 10 passengers. Production evolved through XLS, XLS+, XLS Gen2, and Citation Ascend variants.
Citation Latitude
The Citation Latitude is a midsize business jet announced in 2011, first flying in 2014 and certified in 2015. It features a new stand-up cabin design, 2,000+ nm range, seats up to nine passengers, and 200 aircraft were delivered by 2018.
Citation X
The Citation X (model 750) became the fastest civilian aircraft when introduced in 1996. First delivered to Arnold Palmer in July 1996, it featured highly swept wings, T-tail configuration, and Rolls-Royce engines.
Falcon 2000
Dassault announced the Falcon 2000 at Paris Air Show in 1989 as follow-on to Falcon 20/200. This wide-body, transcontinental twin engine aircraft first flew March 4, 1993, with first delivery February 16, 1995.
Hawker 750/800/900
The Hawker 800 derived from the DH-125 (first flew 1962), with the 125 800 iteration flying in May 1983. Variants include 750, 850, and 900 plus XPs. The 750 has a larger cabin and uses ventral fuel tank for baggage.
Learjet 55
The Learjet 55 first flew in 1979, featuring a 10-seat fuselage with Learjet 25-based wings and NASA-developed winglets. Powered by two Garrett TFE731 turbofans, 147 were built until production ended in 1990.