Piaggio P.180 Orders Exceed 40 Worldwide
"No, the turboprop is not obsolete. When prospective customers
fly in the Avanti they understand it is a concept; then when you
show them the fuel used versus a jet, they are really surprised.
I tell you, the jet appeal is not real."
So says Jose Di Mase, CEO of Piaggio Aero Industries, manufacturer
of the ultra-smooth, fast and quiet turboprop P.180 Avanti-the only
production aircraft with three lifting surfaces and an aerodynamic,
laminar flow fuselage.
Proof of the pudding is in the sales of the radically different
business aircraft, here at Le Bourget in the static park. Orders
now exceed 40 worldwide.
"Do potential customers prefer a jet? That is not the issue,"
Di Mase told Show News. "Our problem now is: do we
have enough aircraft to sell? There is a long list of people interested."
Part of that enthusiasm comes from the Formula One racing car
crowd following the appointment in 1998 of Piero Ferrari, son
of the legendary Enzo, as chairman of Piaggio. Don't look for
any bright red Avantis emblazoned with the famous prancing horse,
but that connection-and stamp of credibility-is very much there.
Ralf Schumacher bought a P.180, the Ferrari racing team has two,
and French F1 driver Thierry Boutsen (164 races in Formula 1,
three victories and 15 times on the podium) has just become official
dealer for France, Monte Carlo and Belgium. Michael Schumacher
wears the Piaggio logo on his racing visor, but actually flies
a Challenger.
"We have three very famous names, all synonymous with style,
speed and quality, associated with this company," said Di
Mase. "They are Piaggio, which has been building airplanes
since 1915, Ferrari and Pininfarina, who will design our interiors."
Di Mase claims the P.180 Avanti has the same size cabin as a Falcon
20, the same performance as a Citation CJ2, and a price less than
that of a slowcoach King Air 350, at $4.7 million. "We do
not have difficulty selling the aircraft. Nobody questions the
price," said Di Mase. Plans call for 18 to be delivered this
year, 24 in 2002 and 30 in 2003.
By John Morris