Header22.jpg
HomeRequest BoardMT LegsMore InfoLoginAircraft indexFAQsAbout usAviation ProsWeatherFlight TrackerWorld TimeContact UsDestinationsBlog
Air Taxi saves time!



a Luxury Portal
The Future - Next Generation air travel


With the synergies of a number of technological advancements Americans will soon be touring the country more easily and with much less expense than is possible today.

 

Many aircraft manufacturers are competing in the race to produce their version of the next generation Very Light Jet (vlj).  New technologies in engine design, airframe manufacturing methods, computer aided design and avionics as well as ATC upgrades will come together to drastically reduce cost and increase efficiency, comfort and safety.  These aircraft will be more capable, more efficient, easier to fly and much cheaper to produce than current production jets.  5400 small airports across the country make point–to-point air travel on smaller jets quicker for travelers than the airline hub and spoke system.  Next generation avionics and systems will make these small airports accessible even in poor weather conditions.  Taxijet is creating a web site that will put the on demand air travel puzzle together in a different way, using some pieces that have never before been available.

--------------------------------------------------------------

Click here for a NASA tutorial that explains the next generation of air travel.

-----------------------------------------------

SATS report from April 2000 - The vision of the next generation of air travel.

View pages 181 to 195 of this document from Advanced Aviation Transport Experiments (AGATE) 

Federal Aviation Administration Forecasts

Highway In The Sky

Dial-a-Flight Problem  Per Seat On Demand Air Taxi service is a complex problem.  This report explains the issues involved.

--------------------------------------------------chart of future.jpg

Charts from:  The Next NAS 2025 Demand Projections by: Michael J. Harrison, Aviation Management Associates, Inc.

 

Aviation Week and Space Technology, April 25, 2005.            ..  “Taxi Please” - Newcomer DayJet’s huge ambitions include a large fleet and a whole new market  --  The business model for DayJet is to use VLJ’s to offer a product that is less expensive than traditional charters but quicker and more flexible than airline or surface transportation.  For VLJ taxis to work, they will have to be careful not to waste resources competing with airlines on city pairs where the fares and travel times are reasonable.

Aviation Week and Space Technology,  May 9, 2005..  “Small Birds, Big Goal”         - Adding light aircraft to its product line, Embraer aims to be a force in bizjets.-      Embraer expects to capture as much as 30% of the new vlj market that is projected to create demand for at least 3,000 airplanes in the next 10 years.  This figure does not include air taxis.  If air taxis succeed Embraer sees the little jet market through 2014 hitting 6,000.                                     

Aviation Week and Space Technology,   May 30, 2005.  “Lightweights” – Single-pilot commercial operations, insurance, training head list of concerns about VLJs.   Greg Thomas, chairman/CEO of Privatair, said he doesn’t see a business case for VLJ commercial ops, regardless of the number of pilots, at least among high-end charter operators.  However, with an expected influx of pilot owners with little or no business aviation experience, the potential of the new models for aircraft management business, he thinks, is huge.  Despite rosy projections, Dassault Aviation Chairman/CEO Charles Edelstenne cautions that the entire concept will be closely tied to affordable insurance.  “Two or three accidents in the early years could kill the market,” he says.

 

Aviation Week and Space Technology. .  June 13, 2005, “Good Start for SATS” (Small Aircraft Transportation System) – If supporters are right, less means more efficient use of airspace, airports and aircraft.   -- The SATS system is aimed at expanding the use of national airspace through new technologies to create affordable, point-to-point air travel.  Specifically, the SATS vision is to allow 4-10 seat passenger aircraft access to under-used rural and suburban airports, particularly in low-visibility conditions.  98% of our country population lives less than a 30-min. drive from any one of 5,400 small airports – which will be a major part of our integrated next-generation transportation system.  The NASA-led five-year project is partnered by the FAA, and the National Consortium for Aviation Mobility (NCAM).

Aviation Week and Space Technology.   June 2005.  According to a report by Boeing “Worldwide economic growth will average 2.9% a year, but market demand for commercial airplane services will more than double the world’s fleet by 2024.  That’s based on average annual growth rates of 4.8% for passenger traffic and 6.2% for freight.”  This growth will cause further congestion in our nation’s largest hub airports, increasing delays and causing passengers to seek out alternative means of transportation.  The map below shows the airports and metro areas most at risk.

trouble spots.jpg

AOPA magazine June 2005 – “Dawn of an era” – Here come the jets.  Eclipse Aviation has geared it’s production at a break even point of about 600 jets per year with an anticipated output closer to 1,000 units.  Eclipse designed its tooling to produce as many as 1,500 Model 500s yearly.  It is significant that a relatively few air-taxi operators are responsible for about half of the approximately 3,000 VLJ orders placed among all manufacturers. 

The FAA, Federal Aviation Administration, expects that 20% of business travel will be by small jets by 2015. 

Honeywell’s Aircraft Production Forecast sees $121 billion sales for new business jets through 2013.Recent studies undertaken by Honeywell in the general aviation segment found broad familiarity with emerging VLJs and indicated that a potential demand for up to 8,000 such aircraft over the next 10-15 years is feasible. Based on current aircraft specifications and pricing, purchase expectations were substantial, especially in the owner-flown segment of operators.

NetJets Europe reported that the company’s 600 or so customers booked more than 32,000 flights in 2004, with an average flight time of 1.4 hr.  – Aviation Week and Space Technology Feb 21, 2005.

Microjets (VLJ’s) are expected to cruise at Reduced Vertical Separation Minimum (RVSM) altitudes where all the airline aircraft are cruising, even though they will be flying at slower speeds.  This trend of more and more “incompatible” aircraft in the sky is going to complicate transformation of Air Traffic Management.  Aviation Week and Space Technology March 14, 2005. 

 This chart shows how the Pentagon plans to boost spending to meet the need for upgrades in the air traffic system. AW&ST Feb 28, 2005 pg 50

future spending.gif

SATS research performed by Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida found that, when available, air travel is more cost-effective than highway or rail transportation for middle distance trips of 200–600 miles. Most of the traveling public, however, seem to regard small aircraft ownership and travel as a luxury rather than a necessity.

 Bruce Holmes, wrote: “Viable business concepts are emerging to fill the void being created by the exodus from airline travel,”  Holmes also stressed that the air-taxi model would be attractive for reasons beyond mere convenience.  It could also improve, rather than compromise, security against terrorism.  … This is because: a)  the vehicles aren’t big enough to represent either a viable target or a viable threat to the ground, b)  the distributed system does not have the dependencies of the centralized system, making multiple paths from origin to destination possible and practical much like in the internet.  A “distributed” system, with no main headquarters (or target zone), can respond to stress more resiliently than a highly centralized system can.   Free Flight, by James Fallow, page xviii.

Vern Rayburn, of Eclipse Aviation said that if the SATS/air –taxi model fully succeeded, it would create a market for some 50,000 small jets.  Free Flight, by James Fallow, page xxi.

Time-and–motion studies conducted by NASA in the late nineties found that for airline trips of 500 miles or less…your average speed from when you left your home to when you arrived at your destination is only fifty or sixty miles per hour.  Bruce Holmes calculated an average speed for his personal trips of 500 miles or less at 75 knots. For trips of 1,000 miles he averaged 125 knots and for trips of 2,000 miles, he averaged 200 knots.  Free Flight, by James Fallow, page 7 and page 75-76.

Bruce Holmes says “..More than 98 percent of the U.S. population lives within a thirty-minute drive of over 5,000 public-use landing facilities.  This infrastructure is an untapped national resource for mobility.”  Free Flight, by James Fallow, page 80

In the late nineties fuel additive companies stopped producing some of the ingredients necessary to distill 100LL fuel.  When the existing stock of additive runs out, some time between 2005 and 2010, that will be it for the fuel on which most current piston engines run.  Free Flight, James Fallow, pg 175.

In it’s fund raising presentations Eclipse estimated that the air-taxi market might amount to 30 million trips a year, within a decade.  That would be less than 10 percent of the projected airline total for that time, but it would still mean a fleet of 35,000 small jets.  This in turn would mean businesses to schedule the trips… Free Flight, James Fallow, pg 198.  

There are two reasons why people have not used air taxis much in the past, according to Patrick Margetson-Rushmore, chief executive of the small charter firm, London Executive Aviation. "Firstly, there is lack of knowledge - people have not thought about air taxis as an option," he said.   "Secondly is perception - September 11 has acted as a catalyst and people are looking for viable alternatives."

Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) of the VLJ can’t agree on what the light jet should be named. Jack Pelton, CEO and president of Cessna Aircraft, favors “entry-level jets,” while Rick Adam, CEO of Adam Aircraft Industries, prefers “personal jets,” and Vern Raburn, CEO of Eclipse Aviation likes “very light lights.” However, since insurers have been referring to them simply as “VLJs,” for “very light jets,” OEMs have now used the same term. They all agree on one other thing. Microjet, minijets, babyjet, compact-jet or Barbie-jet are names to avoid. Adam said he’s not particularly fond of the term “microjet” because the “public doesn’t like getting in small planes, thinking they’re not safe.” 






Copyright  2006  All rights reserved. No copyright asserted to government works or the works of others. URL links are provided through public access only and do not imply any arrangement with the owners or operators of linked sites.
This web site contains forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve uncertainties and risks that could cause actual performance and results of operations to differ materially from those anticipated by these statements. These risks and uncertainties include issues related to the ability to: obtain sufficient funding to continue operations, maintain adequate cash flow, profitably exploit new opportunities, fulfill all backlogs and the unpredictable nature of business risks. The forward-looking statements contained herein represent the Company's judgment as of the date of this release and it cautions readers not to place undue reliance on such statements. The Company assumes no obligation to update the statements contained in this web site.