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. .
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.

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.
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

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.”