Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Hawker 900XP, using new Honeywell TFE731-50BR engines for increased range. In 2012, its unit cost was US$ 16.07 million. [3] After the 2013 bankruptcy of Hawker Beechcraft, the surviving company, Beechcraft, discontinued its business jet range, including the 800 series, although the designs are still supported for parts.
The aircraft operating the flight was a Hawker 800 registered as N818MV and manufactured in 1991. East Coast Jets began operating it in June 2003. [1]: 8 The captain was 40-year-old Clark Jon Keefer, a former flight instructor who had been with East Coast Jets since 2005. [2] He had 3,600 flight hours including 1,188 hours on the Hawker 800.
Hawker 800SP and 800XP2 – The designation for Hawker 800 and Hawker 800XP aircraft fitted with Aviation Partners Inc. (API) winglets. Hawker 850XP – 800XP with factory installed winglets and interior updates Hawker 900XP – 850XP with Honeywell TFE731-50R turbofan engines for increased hot/high performance and longer range and modified ...
Hawker 800 Hawker 4000 Beechcraft Premier I Beechcraft T-6 Texan II. In early 2010, the company, in partnership with FlightSafety International, opened the 44,000 sq ft (4,100 m 2) Maintenance Learning Center, for technician training. [37] By September 2011, the company had US$2.14 billion of debt outstanding. [38]
The first Hawker design was the unbuilt Hawker Humpback of December 1920. [2] This was soon followed by the Hawker Duiker , the first prototype, which flew in July 1923. [ 3 ] In the interwar years , Hawker produced a successful line of bombers and fighters for the Royal Air Force , the product of Sydney Camm (later Sir Sydney) and his team.
British Aerospace 125 series / Hawker/Raytheon 700/800/800XP/850/900: H25C: H25: British Aerospace 125-1000 series / Hawker/Raytheon 1000: HDJT: HHJ: Honda HA-420 ...
Hawker 800XP, American business jet aircraft Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination.
Broughton, which employs over 5,000 people, is the main wing manufacturing centre for all Airbus aircraft and also builds the fuselage and wings of the Hawker 800. [ 88 ] [ 90 ] Since 2006 Airbus has also had a small development centre in the Midlands.