The Gulfstream G650 recently completed the
fastest westbound, around-the-world flight for a non-supersonic
aircraft.
The ultra-long-range, ultra-large-cabin company flagship
circled the globe in 41 hours, 7 minutes, establishing a world record in the C-1.l aircraft class. The record was officially
certified by the National Aeronautic Association (NAA) and the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale in September.
The
G650, the fastest certified civilian aircraft, recorded an average
speed of 568.5 miles per hour (915 kilometers per hour) on the
journey, claiming 22 city-pair speed records in the process. The
G650 now has a total of 38 records since setting its first
(Burbank, Calif., to Savannah) in January 2011.
“This is a
momentous occasion for Gulfstream and business aviation,” said
Larry Flynn, president, Gulfstream. “This was an awesome display
of the G650’s speed and range, two performance capabilities that
help make this aircraft the industry standard since entering
service in 2012.”
The G650’s 20,310-nautical-mile
(37,614-kilometer) around-the-world journey started and ended in
San Diego, with stops in Guam, Dubai and Cape Verde. Each leg was
flown at Mach 0.90, the standard high-speed cruise setting for the
aircraft. Five pilots shared crew duties over the four legs of the
journey.
The record attempt kicked off at 21:08 local
time on 1 July, with the G650 leaving San Diego’s Brown Field
Municipal Airport. After crossing most of the Pacific Ocean, the
aircraft landed at Guam International Airport in 10 hours, 29
minutes.
The G650 covered the second leg — Guam to Dubai
World Central-Al Maktoum International Airport in 10 hours; the
third leg — Dubai to Cape Verde’s AmÍlcar Cabral International
Airport — in 8 hours, 52 minutes; and the final leg — Cape Verde to Brown Field in San Diego — in 10 hours, 10 minutes.
The
cumulative ground time for the three refueling stops was
approximately 1.5 hours.
“The aircraft performed
flawlessly, which is what we expected,” said pilot-in-command Tom
Horne. “It is a tremendous thrill to be a part of a
once-in-a-lifetime experience like this.”
The flight crew
consisted of Horne, Bud Ball, John McGrath, Ross Oetjen and Eric
Parker. Each was on the aircraft for the duration of the flight.
The G650 also carried Kris Maynard as the official observer for
the NAA.
Gulfstream personnel who assisted the flight crew
along the route were Bruce Egart and Les Lawrence in Guam; Ahmed
Ragheb and Alberto Bernaola in Dubai; and Michael Jarrett and
Keith Powell in Cape Verde.
In addition, more than 30
company employees were involved in the planning and execution of
the record flight. Fixed base operators San Diego Jet Center, Guam
Flight Services, Jet Aviation Dubai and Cape Verde’s Safeport
Executive made sure the G650’s ground times were minimal.
The C-1.l class is for aircraft with takeoff weights of 77,162 to
99,208 pounds/35,000 to 45,000 kilograms.
The G650 joins
the Gulfstream IV on the NAA’s around-the-world record rolls. In
1987, the GIV circled the globe in 45 hours, 25 minutes, a mark
that still stands in the C-1.k aircraft class (takeoff weights of
55,116 to 77,162 pounds/25,000 to 35,000 kilograms). The GIV also
holds the same classification’s eastbound record of 36 hours, 9
minutes set in 1988.
The G650 offers the longest range,
fastest speed, largest cabin and the most advanced cockpit in the
Gulfstream fleet. The G650 can travel 7,000 nm (12,964 km) at 0.85
Mach and has a maximum operating speed of Mach 0.925.
Record,
Gulfstream
|