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Bombardier Debuts the Continental, Pledges
Quicker Global Completions

Bombardier staged a gala fly-in of its new Continental here
Tuesday, and is targeting 30% of a super-midsize market it pegs
at nearly 1,300 jets over the next ten years.
For its flagship Global Express, Bombardier is pledging to speed
deliveries to customers.
The $14.675 million Continental made its maiden flight on August
14.
Green deliveries of the 3,000-nautical mile, .80-Mach aircraft
are to commence late next year following third-quarter 2002 certification.
Continental service entry is planned for June 2003. "The
first two years are booked," Bombardier product development
VP Charbel Bachaalani told Show News.
The Continental will outperform the Citation X, Falcon 50EX and
Gulfstream 200 (the former Galaxy) in terms of performance and
interior space, yet will be considerably cheaper, Bombardier says.
Bombardier is predicting a direct operating cost of about $940
per hour for the Continental, which it says is more in line with
midsize aircraft than super-mids. "We looked at the Lear
45 and the Challenger and we got the best out of both," Bachaalani
says.
Continental's interior is being developed by DeCrane, which will
supply componentry for Bombardier completions to be done in Tucson.
Bombardier intends to certify the Continental interior concurrently
with the flight test regime. To further save time, five aircraft
will be committed to the certification program instead of the
usual four, Bachaalani says. The aircraft is to be JAA-certified
too, and Bombardier has demanded that its key suppliers follow
the same time-saving certification regime.
Principal among them is Honeywell, which is furnishing the Continental's
6,500-pounds-thrust, AS907 engines, which share a common core
with the engines for the now defunct BAE Systems Avro and RJX
80 and 100 aircraft. Honeywell is responsible for the new jet's
GKN Westland nacelles and Hurel-Dubois thrust-reversers, as well
as the engine itself. Honeywell is also supplying the Continental's
APU.
The new aircraft will be fitted with the Rockwell Collins Pro
Line 21 avionics suite, and all avionics options, including redundant
distance measuring equipment, satcom, weather radar with turbulence
detector, and 3-D moving maps, will be certified in line with
the basic aircraft's timetable. "We give the customer what
he wants up front," Bachaalani says.
Bombardier is meanwhile speeding Global Express deliveries at
the same time that a series of aircraft performance enhancements
are certified, most of them available as free modifications to
the more than three dozen Globals already in service.
Bombardier has vowed to make it easier for customers who buy its
largest aircraft by giving them a single point of contact from
contract-signing to delivery. "Customer relationship managers"
now handle communications between customers and Bombardier sales,
engineering, completion and other staff.
Bombardier's flagship Global Express is a 6,000-nautical-mile,
$41.7 million airplane that's in fierce, head-butting competition
with the U.S.-built Gulfstream V.
Bombardier has lined up four outside completion partners for the
Global and has targeted 35 weeks-down from today's 42-from the
time of "green" aircraft delivery from its
Toronto-Downsview assembly line to in-service availability.
"We had underestimated the task when we set out to do the
completions," says Global Express product manager Marc Bouliane.
"We had underestimated by far the technical complexity of
certifying an aircraft in this category."
Enhancements to the Global include Performance Enhancement Program
aerodynamic mods that improve overall range by about 100 nautical
miles, to better than 6,000-without the further gain that may
be gleaned from a pending engine nozzle redesign by Rolls, Bouliane
told Show News. PEP will be part of all new Globals, and available
as a free retrofit package to all existing aircraft.
One new Global Express customer is Bombardier itself, which will
bring the Global Express into its Flexjet fractional ownership
program by year-end.
By Rich Piellisch
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