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This is the excerpt from an interesting article that I found on www.forbes.com, written by David M. Ewalt.

“Thirty Amazing Facts About Private Jets:

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(Photo: Lester Lefkowitz/Getty Images)

 There were 672 new private jets sold in 2012, a sales dip of 3.4% from 2011. Overall, 11,261 private jets were registered for use in the United States, and 7,997 in the rest of the world.

Source: General Aviation Manufacturers Association

 

 The US makes up 49.7% of the world market for private jets; Europe 20.8%; Asia Pacific 11.8%; Latin and South America 11.6%; Africa and the Middle East: 6.1%.

Source: General Aviation Manufacturers Association

 

Average Jet Charter Rates (Per Hour):

 

Gulfstream 550 – $8,640

Global Express/XRS  –  $8,045

Falcon 7X – $7,865

Falcon 900 – $6,075

Gulfstream IV – $5,884

Challenger 604 – $5,053

Citation X – $4,533

Hawker 800 – $3,582

Citation Excel/XLS – $3,388

Learjet 60 – $3,347

Citation Mustang – $1,674

Source: Avinode Marketplace

 

 Cost to charter a Gulfstream V for a weekend trip from New York City to San Francisco: $106,711.17

(Friday evening to Sunday evening, all costs including helicopter transportation to and from airport, two full-time captains, a flight attendant, crew per diems, landing, ramp, parking, fuel surcharge, taxes, etc)

Source: Talon Air, Inc

 

 The biggest event for private jet travel is the Super Bowl; this year, over six hundred private aircraft flew into New Orleans Lakefront Airport for Super Bowl XLVII (typical weekend traffic at the airport is just 125 landings). Other top events include the Masters Golf Tournament and Art Basel Miami Beach.

Source: NetJets Inc.

 

 The average cost to charter a Gulfstream 550 for a single hour is $8,640. That’s enough money to buy 74 round-trip tickets for travel between New York and Washington, D.C on Jet Blue.

Source: Avinode Marketplace, JetBlue Airways

 

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Van Nuys Airport (Photo: Los Angeles World Airports)

 Over 259,000 private takeoffs and landings occurred at Van Nuys airport in 2012, making it the busiest general aviation airport in the world. Traffic was down 13.9% from a year earlier.

Source: Los Angeles World Airports

 

 One of the very first business aircraft was Smiling Thru, a Travel Air Model 6000-B monoplane built by H. L. Ogg, president of the Automatic Washer Company of Newton, Iowa. The interior contained seating for five, a room with demo washing machines, and a typing table. Ogg called it his “private air office.”

Source: National Air and Space Museum

 

 The most popular model of private jet in the U.S. is the Cessna Citation Excel, also known as the Citation XLS and XLS+. This medium-sized business jet took off on 144,302 flights in 2012, at an average charter rate of $3,388 per hour.

Source: Avinode Marketplace, FAA ASDI

 

 The world’s most expensive private jet, an Airbus A380 owned by Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Al Saud, has an estimated cost over $500 million. Some of the special features of the jet include a two-car garage, a stable for horses and camels, and a prayer room that rotates so it always faces Mecca.

Source: DealBook/New York Times

 

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The Bombardier Global 8000 (Image: Bombardier Inc.)

 Bombardier’s Global 8000, one of the longest range private jets on the market, can go 7,900 nautical miles on a single tank of gas, flying at Mach 0.85 with 8 passengers. With a fuel capacity of 48,950 lbs, it costs approximately $53,000 to fill the tank.

Source: Signature Flight Support, Bombardier

 

 Warren Buffett was a long-time critic of private air travel before Berkshire Hathaway bought its first corporate jet (for $850,000, used) in 1986. When the company sold it and bought a nicer model in 1989 (for $6.7 million), Buffett summarized his attitude toward the jet with a prayer attributed to St. Augustine: “Help me, Oh Lord, to become chaste – but not yet.” He named the plane “The Indefensible.” Within a few years, Buffet was so enamored of the plane that he told Berkshire shareholders he found the thought of retiring it ” more revolting than the thought of retiring the Chairman,” and joked that he wished to be buried with the plane. In 1998, Berkshire Hathaway acquired fractional jet-ownership company NetJets Inc. for $725 million.

Source: Berkshire Hathaway

 

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John Travolta (Image: Qantas Airlines)

 Celebrities who have their own jets include Oprah Winfrey (Bombardier Global Express XRS), Jackie Chan (Embraer Legacy 650), and Jay-Z (Bombardier Challenger 850). Some celebs even fly the plane themselves, like Tom Cruise (Gulfstream IV), Jimmy Buffett (Dassault Falcon 900), and John Travolta. Travolta owns eleven jets, including a Boeing 707, and is the official “Ambassador-at-Large” for Qantas Airlines.

Source:  Embraer SA, Qantas Airlines

 

 In 2012, NetJets logged more than 300,000 flight hours across its fleet –more than 35 years in the air. The total distance logged, 110,585,785 nautical miles, is equivalent to 266.2 round trips to the moon.

Source: NetJets Inc.

 

 10,397 people “like” the Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation on Facebook. Only 63 people “like” the Transportation Security Administration.”

Source: Facebook [1],[2]

 

“That is what makes me feel successful. Of all the wonderful things that have happened, including getting a doctorate, an honorary doctorate from Duke, what really makes me feel successful is being able to use my life in service to someone else’s… and it is really fantastic to have your own jet, and anybody who says it isn’t is lying to you. That jet thing is really good.”

-Oprah Winfrey, in a May 10, 2009 commencement address at Duke University.

Source: Duke University

 

5,950 nm / 11,020 km with 8 pax at M.80

 

The maximum headroom on a Dassault Falcon 7X is six feet, two inches. That means the tallest player in the NBA, Oklahoma City Thunder center Hasheem Thabeet, is about thirteen inches too tall — he’ll have to bend over as he walks down the aisle of the plane.

Source: Dassault Aviation, National Basketball Association

 

Thirty percent of current private jet owners say they’ll purchase a new jet in the next five years. Over 10,000 new business jets are expected to be delivered in the next ten years, at a cumulative value of $250 billion.

Source: Honeywell Global Forecast

 

Celebrities who died in private jet crashes include pro golfer Payne Stewart, British race car driver David Leslie, Mexican-American singer Jenni Rivera, and all eight members of the Brazilian rock group Mamonas Assassinas.

Source: The New York Times, BBC News, Reuters, Associated Press

 

There were 1,466 private jet crashes in 2011, resulting in 263 fatalities. If you’re going to fly private, your best bet is to fly in the company plane: The global accident rate for corporate jets is only 1/6th that for owner-operated private jets.

Source: National Transportation Safety Board, International Business Aviation Council Safety Brief

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A Learjet 23 on display at the Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy Center (Image: National Air and Space Museum)

Bill Lear flew the first Learjet (a twin-engine jet based on a Swiss military design) on October 7th, 1963. Known as a Learjet 23, it became the first universally known business jet. When his company was acquired by Gates Rubber Co. four years later, Lear’s stock was worth over $27 million.

Source: Bombardier Business Aircraft

 

Amount NetJets spent in 2012 to acquire 425 jets, the largest deal in private aviation history: $9.6 billion

Source: NetJets Inc.

 

Available baggage space in a Gulfstream G550: 226 cubic ft

Available baggage space in a 2013 Toyota Camry sedan: 15 cubic ft

Available baggage space on a Delta Airlines domestic economy ticket, without incurring fees: 3 cubic ft

Source: Gulfstream Aerospace, Toyota Motors Company, , Delta Air Lines

 

Between 2002 and 2012, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration seized 44 private jets.

Source: U.S. Department of Justice

 

In order to charter a Gulfstream 550 for a single hour, you’d need to work 1,192 hours at the Federal minimum wage of $7.25.

Source: Avinode Marketplace, U.S. Department of Labor

 

In 2012, fractional ownership and jet rental company NetJets logged more than 300,000 flight hours across its fleet — more than 35 years in the air. The total distance logged, 110,585,785 nautical miles, is equivalent to 266.2 round trips to the moon.

Source: NetJets Inc.

 

24-carat gold-plated features on Donald Trump’s private Boeing 757 include seat recline buttons, safety belt hardware, power outlet covers, faucet handles and sink basins.

Source: The Official Trump YouTube Channel

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The Cessna Citation Sovereign (Image: Cessna Aircraft Company)

 

If you removed the seats, you could fit approximately 270 soccer balls into the cabin of a Citation Sovereign jet.

Source: Cessna Aircraft Company

 

Several private jets are on view at the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center, including the first Learjet 23 and a Dassault Falcon 20, which is the jet most used extensively by FedEx in the early days of the company.

Source: National Air & Space Museum

 

Top airport for international departures in the United States: Teterboro Airport, New Jersey

Top airport for international departures in Europe: Vnukovo International Airport, Russia

Source: Avinode Marketplace

Samantha Sharf contributed reporting to this story.

 

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6 thoughts on “Thirty Amazing Facts About Private Jets


  • By Johnathan Tarter - Reply

    These 30 facts that you have listed are shocking and very interesting to say the least! I never knew any of these before reading this post of yours and I am so very happy that I ran into this piece of content! Keep up the great work! 🙂

    • By Maja - Reply

      Thank you Johnatan! I found this article on the Forbes website and also found it very interesting. I’m glad you liked it 🙂
      All the best.
      Maja

  • By Tina - Reply

    That’s unbelievable high rate on renting private jets. Can’t imagine how much it would cost to own one. But for the wealthy people who travel frequently, I’m sure it makes economical sense to buy their own private jets. That’s interesting to know some jets are at Smithsonian for public viewing. That’s a lot of hours a person has to work just to rent a jet.

    • By Maja - Reply

      Hi Tina,
      Yes, it is expensive indeed, but for someone who travels often and especially with a group of people, the price could be very interesting and not much higher then the price of the regular commercial flight.
      If you want to find out more, you can read my article about private jet charter rates here: http://privateflightfinder.com/private-jet-charter-rates
      Best wishes,
      Maja

  • By Horacio Warren - Reply

    Thanks for listed the amazing facts. I had never known this before. I am glad to bump on this article. Keep Sharing with more interesting facts.

    • By Maja - Reply

      Thank you for your interest Horacio. I’m glad you liked it.

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