Executive Jet Charter
Executive Jet (Business Jet)
Business jet, private jet or, in slang, bizjet
is a term describing a jet aircraft, usually of modest size,
designed for transporting small groups of business people for
commercial reasons at a time convenient to their business needs.
Some business jets may be adapted for other roles, such as the
evacuation of casualties or express parcel deliveries, and a few
may be used by public bodies, governments or the armed forces.
The more formal terms of corporate jet, executive jet, VIP transport
or business jet tend to be used by the firms that build, sell,
buy and charter these aircraft. The allied term "bizprop" is in
use amongst enthusiasts to refer to turboprop-powered aircraft
used in similar roles but seems unlikely to spread.
The older term "air taxi" tends to be used for piston-engined or
small turboprop aircraft, although the functions of an air taxi and
a business jet are essentially identical; in fact, some airfields
have runways unsuited to jet operations and may therefore be more
usable by slower aircraft. Depending on the passengers' destination,
the overall journey time could then be shorter with a slower aircraft.
Generally, jets tend to have a taller passenger cabin and more advanced
avionics, which may be advantageous in terms of safety, comfort and
resilience to extreme weather conditions. A company may also wish to
project its status through the type of aircraft in which its personnel
travel.
Almost all production business jets, such as Grumman Aerospace's famous
Gulfstream and the Gates Lear Jet (now built by Bombardier), have had
two or three engines, though the Jetstar, an early business jet, had four.
Advances in engine efficiency and power have rendered four-engine designs
obsolete, and only Dassault Aviation still builds three-engine models (in
the Falcon line). The emerging market for so-called "very light jets" and
"personal jets" has seen the introduction (at least on paper) of several
single-engine designs as well.
Excerpt from "Business jet." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
24 Oct 2006, 03:38 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 30 Oct 2006
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Business_jet&oldid=83353034 Aircraft Rentals
The term Air Charter is a catch all phrase
that refers to the renting of an entire aircraft vs. individual
aircraft seats. While the Airlines specialize in selling
transportation by the seat, air charter companies focus on
small groups for specialized itineraries, urgent / time sensitive
freight or cargo, air ambulance and any other form of ad hoc air
transportation.
Generally speaking, air charter is also known as air taxi, executive
charter, jet charter and more broadly as private aviation. In the
United States air charter / air taxi is governed by Part 135 of the
FARs (the Federal Aviation Regulations), unlike the larger scheduled
airlines, which are governed by more stringent standards of Part 121
of the FARs, which are regulations designed for scheduled air carriers.
It is believed that over 70% of the private air charter in the world
is within the United States, the largest market for private aviation
globally.
...
Beginning in the late 1990's the air charter / air taxi interest moved
into main stream media and discussion with the growth and advent of
several key factors:
- Very Light Jets or VLJs popularized the concept of small affordable
jets that would bring the capital carrying cost of aircraft down enough
so that many more could be sold and operated. Eclipse Aviation is perhaps
one of the most well known new aircraft brands, although other companies
including Adam Aircraft, Cessna, Honda, and Embraer have designed or built
VLJ's of their own. While the air taxi debate is concerned with whether
these aircraft will actually contribute to change, the mere discussion,
media coverage and excitement over new technology is bringing more and
more attention to the concept of ad hoc air transportation.
- Internet Communication: Because air charter was never part of the
major GDS or travel distribution systems, it could not reach wider audiences.
With the advent of the Internet, distribution of information regarding the
availability of aircraft, placement, pricing etc., became more available to
the increased broker and buyer community.
- Problems: Growing dissatisfaction with the scheduled airlines over
security and congestion related delays. While not all airline passengers
could afford alternatives, the upper echelons of airline passengers sought
was to stop flying commercially or exploring corporate aviation, fractional
or air charter.
- Alternatives: Air Charter and its cousin Fractional Ownership popularized
the notion of private aircraft use and ownership. Fractional aircraft ownerships
growth led to the advent of a distinct set of regulations in the United States
designed specifically to regulate fractionally owned aircraft companies. These
new regulations are spelled out clearly in Part 91 Subpart K and bring fractional
aircraft operations into line with existing air charter regulations, making
fractional ownership into simply another flavor of ad hoc air transportation.
Aircraft manufacturers, such as Eclipse Aviation and Adam
Aircraft Industries, and others maintain that the construction of cheaper,
smaller and faster jets will enable inexpensive point-to-point private aviation,
creating a new industry. Others maintain that these new aircraft will lower
the barriers to ownership enabling more wealthy individuals to own jet aircraft,
but will not result in their wide adoption for commercial applications. Critics
argue that basic economics, demographics, industry inertia and operational
constraints will automatically limit the birth of an air taxi industry.
Excerpt of "Air charter." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
16 Oct 2006, 01:35 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 25 Oct 2006
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Air_charter&oldid=81701852 More airports available with chartered aircraft
With chartered aircraft you have access to many more airports than with scheduled
flights, often much closer to your destination. For example in Europe, there are
over 2000 airports, but only 10% are reached by scheduled airlines. Private charter
reaches all of them.
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