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David Carr DASSAULT GOES LONG

The Dassault Falcon 7X will compete in a market already dominated by Gulfstream and Bombardier.

Written by David Carr   
The Dassault Falcon 7X will compete in a market already dominated by Gulfstream and Bombardier.
241-7xDassault Aviation is a late arrival in the ultra high-end, long-range market, having decided to take a pass on the category in the early 1990s. Even so, Europe’s only manufacturer of corporate jets does not believe that it is so late that it won’t make an impression. And that is precisely what the Saint Cloud, France-based aerospace company did in February with the unveiling of the Falcon 7X, Dassault’s first new design in 20 years, and the world’s only complete fly-by-wire business jet.

With a rollout as impressive as that of the 7X trijet’s distant and larger cousin the A380 earlier this year (Airbus parent EADS holds 46% of Dassault shares), familycontrolled Dassault has set the stage for an assault on a market already dominated by Gulfstream and Bombardier.

If the company is nervous, it refuses to show it. “We estimate the potential market for the 7X at 300 to 400 jets sold over the lifetime of the program, which is about 15 years,” Charles Edestenne, chairman and CEO of Dassault, told reporters at the unveiling. The breakeven point is pegged at 150 airplanes. It is off to a good start. Dassault has orders for 51 aircraft from 16 countries including Canada. “We have a very loyal customer base,” John Rosanvallon, president and CEO of US-based Dassault Falcon Jet, told WINGS. “It is normal that the majority of first orders would come from long-term Falcon customers.” Indeed, some analysts sense that the 7X will be strong enough to nudge Dassault ahead of Cessna as the world’s third largest manufacturer of business jets measured by value of deliveries.

The aero engineers in Saint Cloud have drawn heavily from Dassault’s experience in the higher-profile military side of the business, especially the Mirage and Rafale military jet programs. The 7X is the first airplane ever designed and built in an entirely virtual environment, meaning that most conflicts and issues that occur during the thick end of the development curve are resolved before production begins, resulting in an overall reduction in production time and costs. Dassault estimates that this process saved at least seven months in the assembly of the first production airplane.

The 7X will also be the first business jet to be flown with Fly by Wire (FBW) technology. Fly by Wire was introduced by Airbus on commercial aircraft in the 1980s with the A320, and had been standard technology on military programs before then. FBW replaces mechanical linkage between the controls in the cockpit and moving surfaces with electrical wires and circuits, reducing workload on the flight deck and safeguarding the pilot from operating outside of the flying envelope. Which leads to the question, why it took so long to introduce FBW to a corporate platform.

Rosanvallon points to Dassault’s 25-year military experience with FBW. “None of the other OEMs have ever developed a fly-by-wire airplane, so it would be a challenging first. They would also have been uncomfortable justifying the investment. The last brand new model we introduced was the Falcon 2000 in the 1990s. That was probably a little early to push the technology onto the business aviation side. The 7X was the first opportunity.”

Approximately 30% of the US$940- million cost of developing the Falcon 7X has been shared by 27 European and North American suppliers including Montreal-based CAE and Pratt & Whitney Canada (P&WC). “Our goal of producing an aircraft with 30% higher performance than the Falcon 900EX while costing only slightly more required us to hold an open competition for work packages that included our own subdivisions. The result was a highly competitive bid process which helped drive down costs without sacrificing quality,” said Guy Piras, Dassault vice-president for external procurement.

Like Dassault, P&WC is a newcomer to the ultra-high long-haul market. “Dassault is really our first major entry into large corporate aircraft. Until now we have focused on the small, medium to mid-super-size corporate jets. We are now into the heavy iron. It is a large and prestigious market,” said Mike Perodeau, vicepresident of corporate aviation and military programs.

Designed specifically for the 7X, the 6,100-pound thrust PW307A shares the same basic architecture with the rest of the PW300 family, although it has evolved largely from the PW306, versions of which are powering the Gulfstream 200 and Cessna Citation Sovereign. “There are some new features,” pointed out Catrina Mackenzie, vice-president of the PW307.

These include an advanced shockmanagement fan with increased flow capacity, ‘powdered metal’ in the turbines for much lower weight, and a TALON low emissions combustor, developed and trademarked by P&WC’s US parent for larger commercial airplane engines.

Dassault said that the 7X will be 40% more fuel-efficient than similar aircraft in its category and should exceed the latest FAA/EPA and ICAO noise emission standards.

P&WC delivered the first integrated powerplant system production shipset, including PW307A engines, to ux a few weeks ahead of rollout. Fly-by-wire does not have any impact whatsoever on the engine control system. What was new for P&WC was the engine configuration. “Obviously this is the first time we have done three engines on one airplane, so it was our first centre integration,” MacKenzie added.

The 7X is only the second time P&WC has powered a Dassault corporate jet. The more powerful PW308 is used on the Falcon 2000EX twin-jet. Interestingly, P&WC would have been with Dassault business aircraft right from the beginning if history had played out differently. Dassault’s first aircraft, the Mystère 20, launched in 1960, was powered by two Pratt & Whitney JT12 turbofans, a Canadian engine that was transferred to the US parent in the late 1950s in exchange for the PT6.

The Falcon 7X cabin width and height is equal to the Falcon 900EX, but is six feet longer, offering 20% more space. The 28 cabin windows are 10% larger than windows in earlier Falcon widebodied aircraft, giving the 12 to 16 passengers 40% more cabin light. The aircraft is capable of speeds of up to Mach 0.90 with a range of 5,700 nautical miles – approximately 1,000 nautical miles less than either the Gulfstream 550 or Bombardier Global Express. Still, that gives you all of Europe from Toronto and Tokyo from Vancouver. Dassault estimates that less than 10% of the market requires the maximum range of a 550 or Global.

First flight is expected in the second quarter of 2005. The engine program has already accumulated more than 3,500 total full engine test hours to date, including more than 450 hours on P&WC’s two Boeing 720 flying test beds. The airplane should receive certification in late 2006, with deliveries beginning shortly after.

Production of the US$39-million 7X is already sold out until the first quarter of 2009 so Dassault is considering accelerating the delivery schedule by increasing production from 2.5 aircraft per month to three. Good news for potential customers such as US fractional operator NetJets which already operates a fleet of 60 Falcon aircraft and is looking at the 7X. “We would like to get the backlog to a more traditional lead time as quickly as possible,” Rosanvallon said. “Right now this is the airplane delivery time we are offering. The majority of our customers would like to get the airplane sooner if they could.”