The Airbus ACJ TwoTwenty is the newest arrival on the private aviation scene, and it aims to offer the holy grail of transcontinental range and next-level comfort without costing the GDP of a small country. Is it too good to be true?
The Learjet was the 1960s status symbol ne plus ultra. The planes, created by American entrepreneur Bill Lear, could seat up to eight passengers in relative comfort and seclusion and became popular with stars such as James Brown, Frank Sinatra and Arnold Palmer. But that was then. Earlier this year it was announced that the Learjet would cease production. Today it seems that, with private jets, bigger is better.
Convenience and exclusivity alone can no longer guarantee a sale. Range, comfort and value for money have all become more important considerations. The adage used to be that you could only enjoy two of these three criteria: to have range on a budget meant compromising on cabin space; to have space on a budget meant your range would be limited. Then manufacturers responded by creating corporate aircraft with acres of room – and with the endurance for intercontinental reach. These were enlarged versions of existing private jet types.. With business still representing the lion’s share of the overall industry, mid-sized machines such as the Embraer Legacy 600, released in 2002, set the bar with a balance of comfort and economy – to stop the finance director entering a tailspin.
Wealthy individuals tend to favour machines with the range to make transcontinental journeys, such as the Gulfstream IV which Tom Cruise flies. More recently, several airliner manufacturers enjoyed a surge in interest for VIP versions of their aircraft, with highly customisable cabins akin to flying apartments. Boeing and Airbus have sold luxury versions of their best-selling passenger jets – but the cost of these means they’re the preserve of the global elite or Middle Eastern royalty, and therefore account for few sales.
The more interesting opportunity for the industry, then, perhaps lies in more affordable, market-leading private jets such as the Gulfstream G650ER or its rival Global 6000 from Bombardier. The company’s upcoming Global 7500 will boast the longest range of any business jet and can fly non-stop from New York to Hong Kong. These are just tens of millions of dollars to purchase, rather than the hundreds of millions needed to acquire an airliner.





