CESSNA CITATION 8,000TH DELIVERY
8,000 deliveries and counting …
After 50 years and over 30 models, Textron Aviation’s Cessna Citation has just hit its 8,000th delivery milestone.
CESSNA CITATION 8,000TH DELIVERY
8,000 deliveries and counting …
After 50 years and over 30 models, Textron Aviation’s Cessna Citation has just hit its 8,000th delivery milestone.
ADVERTISED AS THE world’s most popular business jet line, with more than 41m flight hours, the Citation was first delivered in 1972. The first, a Cessna Citation 500, was delivered to American Airlines in January that year, where it helped to develop the company’s training programme.
“Citation jets have been the number one business jet by annual delivery volume for 40 years: from 1972-1974, 1979-1981, 1984-2012, and 2016-2021,” Lannie O’Bannion, senior vice president, Global Sales and Flight Operations, Textron tells Corporate Jet Investor. “It was a special moment celebrating the 8,000th delivery. It’s a significant milestone for our company.”
The Cessna in question, Textron’s flagship Citation, the Longitude, was delivered to Jim Hagedorn, CEO, of garden products company Scotts Miracle-Gro to become the fifth Citation in their fleet. Six Citation models are currently in production: Citation M2 Gen2, Citation CJ3+, Citation CJ4 Gen2, Citation XLS Gen2, Citation Latitude and Citation Longitude.
While it may be a little early to anticipate the 10,000th delivery, O’Bannion says it will be an anniversary to celebrate. “We can’t provide specific delivery figures, but I am confident we will be celebrating the 10,000th Citation delivery in the future.”
This year has been busy so far at Textron. In the first quarter, the Wichita-based OEM also saw the first production rollout and certification of its Cessna SkyCourier, the return of its turbocharged Cessna 182T and the certification and first delivery of its M2 Gen2.
“It is a good time in the market for private aviation. The new customers coming into private aviation are having good experiences, and we anticipate most of them will stay,” says O’Bannion. “Market studies show that of all the people who can afford to operate, charter or own one of our products, only about 10% do so, while the other 90% choose to fly commercially and purchase a first-class or business class ticket.”
After a good year in 2018, O’Bannion says there were a lot of expectations for growth going into 2019 across business aviation. “While 2019 didn't grow quite to the expectations, it was a solid year. And then 2020 happened and in March, people just stopped flying. Later in the year, we saw flight levels start to pick up particularly in leisure travel, as more people realised the time savings. Throughout 2021, that just accelerated every quarter.”
O’Bannion concludes: “While we still aren’t quite to the levels of 2019, we continue to see favourable market conditions, including improved aircraft utilisation, low pre-owned inventory levels and strong customer demand and order activity.”
Lannie O'Bannion, senior vice president, Global Sales and Flight Operations, Textron.
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Conor McDougall Garmin media.relations@garmin.com
Greg Principato National Aeronautic Association, President and CEO GPrincipato@naa.aero