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Regional airliner

A regional airliner or a feederliner is a small airliner that is designed to fly up to 100 passengers on short-haul flights, usually feeding larger carriers' airline hubs from small markets. This class of airliners is typically flown by the regional airlines that are either contracted by or subsidiaries of the larger airlines. Regional airliners are used for short trips between smaller towns or from a larger city to a smaller city. Feederliner, commuter, and local service are all alternative terms for the same class of flight operations.[1]

A Dash 8 in front of a BAe 146

History edit

 
The Douglas DC-3 first flew in 1935 and had a range of around 1,000 miles (1,625 kilometers.)

To keep short routes economical, airlines preferred using second hand aircraft than costlier new aircraft.[1] Older aircraft were put into short haul service as they were replaced by new longer-range designs.

Post-war era edit

Propeller aircraft of larger airlines were transferred to smaller airlines: even the De Havilland Dragon Rapide biplane, or the Douglas DC-3s, in large surplus after the war, which the Aircraft manufacturers wanted to replace. The first piston powered airliners with 40 seats were the Martin 2-0-2s (introduced in 1947) and Convair CV-240s (1948).

Turboprop designs edit

 
The Fokker F27 Friendship was introduced in November 1958

The first turboprop powered aircraft emerged like the Vickers Viscount (75 seats, introduced in 1953) and Fokker F27 (44–52 seats, 1958). Some smaller turboprop airliners were developed in the 1960s like the British Shorts Skyvan (19 seats, 1963), and French Nord 262 (29 seats, 1964) or Brazilian Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante (1973). This "hand-me-down" process of supplying aircraft continued with designs like the Convair 440 and Douglas DC-6 also serving in this role while the first jets were introduced.

By the mid-1950s, demand for even more economical designs led to the production of the first custom feederliners. These were almost always turboprops, which had fuel economy on par with piston engine designs, but had far lower maintenance costs. Often the time between engine overhaul periods was five times that of the best piston engines. Early examples of these designs include the Fokker F27 Friendship, Avro 748, and Handley Page Dart Herald.

These designs were so successful that it was to be many years before newer designs bettered them enough to make it worthwhile in terms of capital investment to develop. Among the first purpose built airliners developed for the CAB sanctioned local-service airlines in the US, the predecessors of the modern regional airliner industry; was the interim and custom built Fairchild F-27/FH-227's for the needs of these smaller but expanding airlines of the late 1960s.

There were a few other exceptions, generally tailored to more specific roles. For instance, the Handley Page Jetstream (first flight in 1968) was intended for fewer passengers at much higher speeds, displacing smaller designs like the Beechcraft Queen Air. The Fairchild/Swearingen Metro (developed from the original Queen Air through a number of stages) filled a similar niche.

By the 1970s the first generation regional airliners were starting to wear out, but there had been little effort in producing new designs for this market. A varied list of light transport aircraft supplanted by newer and more modern 30 seat designs by Shorts with their Shorts 330 and 360 as well as other aircraft manufacturers, replaced and sometimes provided growth to established commuter markets. Additional development came to the regional airline industry with the arrival of some of the earlier De Havilland Canada types such as the Dash 7 delivered in 1978, but this was tailored more to the short-range and STOL (Short Take-Off and Landing) role than as a regional airliner. Feedback from the airlines was fairly consistent, and De Havilland responded with the Dash 8 in 1984, which had economic benefits over the earlier generation machines, and was faster and quieter as well.

 
The ATR 72 was introduced in October 1989

In the early 1980s, the Dash 8's success sparked off development of a number of similar designs, including the ATR 42/72, Saab 340, Embraer Brasilia and Fokker 50. Consequently, there were a relatively large number of aircraft offered by manufacturers in this sector of the market, pushing older 1950s designs from Fokker, Vickers and others into retirement. Due to the high level of competition, production of a number of these types ceased. Saab AB exited the civil aviation market and wrote its debts off, Daimler-Benz Aerospace "pulled the plug" on Dornier, and British Aerospace ended production of their BAe Jetstream 41 after 100 delivered. By 2006 only the ATR 42/72 models and the Dash 8 remained in production.

Turboprop airliner deliveries are correlated with oil prices with a lag of a few years.[2]

In 2018, 245.4 million two-way seats were offered on turboprop flights, up from 201.4 million in 2009, with 97% of flights below 500 nmi (930 km) and 87% below 300 nmi (560 km), and an average capacity increasing to 51 seats from 44 seats in 2009. The largest user was Air Canada with 12.7 million seats, followed by Flybe with 10.3 million and Wings Air with 9.24 million. Canada was the largest market with 30.5 million seats, then Indonesia with 14.3 and the US with 13.4. The busiest turboprop airport was Vancouver (2.75 Million seats) followed by Toronto Pearson (2.64) then Seattle-Tacoma (2.39).[3]

Noise edit

Although turboprops are quiet to outside observers, propwash makes them noisy inside.[4]Active noise reduction should reduce the cabin noise of the Bombardier Q400 or the ATR 72-600.

Market forecast edit

Flight Global fleet forecasts 3,081 turboprop deliveries for a $63 billion value and 4,042 regional jet deliveries for a $130 billion value for the 2016–2035 period.[5] In turboprops, ATR with 12% of the market should dominate the Dash 8 Q400 (3%); while Embraer with 40% should lead the Regional Jets market above the Mitsubishi MRJ (17%) and Superjet 100 (4%), while Bombardier Aerospace moves to the small narrowbody aircraft with the CSeries and doesn't develop the CRJ700 series (2%).[6]

Embraer claims crossover regional jets are more cost-efficient than current turboprops beyond 200 nmi (370 km), representing 45% of 70-seat turboprops flights in 2017, leading Widerøe to switch to E-Jets E2 except for destinations with short runways and severe weather conditions north of the Arctic Circle or AirBaltic to replace its 12 Q400s by CSeries.[7] From 2018 to 2037, ATR forecasts 3,020 turboprop deliveries : 630 with 40–60 seats and 2,390 with 61–80 seats.[8]

Hybrid aircraft edit

As legacy regional aircraft are used on very short sectors like connecting islands, their replacements could be hybrid or electric aircraft. Hybrid-electric aircraft propulsion remains impeded by energy storage, high-power electric distribution and the lack of certification framework. ATR Aircraft dismiss a fully electric propulsion as carrying the same payload over the same distances as an 18 t (40,000 lb) ATR 42, current batteries would weigh 21 t (46,000 lb).[9]

Current projects are small 10-seaters, like the Israeli Eviation Alice or the Boeing-backed Zunum Aero ZA12 powered by a Safran Ardiden turboshaft and targeting 40-80% lower operating costs. The French VoltAero Cassio based on the Cessna 337 Skymaster like the U.S. Ampaire, U.S. Wright Electric works with Spain’s Axter Aerospace to re-engine a nine-seater and the Cessna Caravan is re-engined with a MagniX electric motor. United Technologies is re-engining a Dash 8 Q100 on one side with a 1 MW (1,300 hp) gas turbine and a 1 MW (1,300 hp) electric motor instead of the current 2,150 hp (1.60 MW) Pratt & Whitney Canada PW121, for at least 30% energy savings.[9]

Design edit

Turboprop regional aircraft edit

Regional airlines serving small hubs or airports with short runways will often use turboprop aircraft with propeller engines versus jet engines. de Havilland Canada (Dash 7 and Dash 8), Antonov (An-24 and An-140), Xi'an Aircraft Industrial Corporation (MA60, MA600 and MA700) and ATR (ATR 42 and ATR 72) are manufacturers of this type.

Regional jets edit

 
By October 2018, 1,800 Canadair Regional Jets have been delivered[10]

A regional jet (RJ) is a jet airliner with less than 100 seats. The first one was the Sud-Aviation Caravelle in 1959, followed by the widespread Yakovlev Yak-40, Fokker F-28 and BAe 146. The 1990s saw the emergence of the most widespread Canadair Regional Jet and its Embraer Regional Jet counterpart, then the larger Embraer E-Jet family and multiple competing projects. In the US, they are limited in size by scope clauses.

Accommodation edit

 
Cabin of an Embraer E-190.

Seating on regional airliners tends to be narrow and tight, and passengers typically are restricted from bringing on board carry-on items which would fit without difficulty in the overhead bins of larger aircraft. Often carry-on luggage is collected immediately prior to boarding and placed in the cargo hold, where it can be quickly retrieved by the ground staff while the passengers exit.[citation needed] Compared with bigger planes, many frequent fliers find regional jets cabins cramped and uncomfortable, with a lower ceiling, tight seating and single-class cabins forbidding a first-class upgrade.[11]

Operations edit

Costs edit

In the US, major carriers contracts with regional airlines on a per flight basis regardless of the number of passengers, and the major carrier keep the ticket revenue. These contracts are typically 10 year terms, the regional aircraft operators are certain of their revenue and have to control their costs to earn a return, but they face airline bankruptcies, fleet reductions and increasing operating costs. Major carriers avoid shouldering losses from regional aircraft operators and competition between regional airlines has grounded many regional aircraft.[citation needed]

In production aircraft edit

Regional Airliners[12]
Model First flight Net orders Deliveries Backlog MTOW (t) seats Range (nmi)
An-148/158/An-178 17/12/2004 54 35 19 41.9-52.4 68-99 1,350-2,160
AVIC MA60/MA600/MA700 25/02/2000 143 97 46 21.8-26.5 60-86 770-1,460
ATR 42-600 04/03/2010 74 41 33 18.6 48 720
ATR 72-600/600F 24/07/2009 661 444 217 23 70-78 830
De Havilland Canada Dash 8-400 31/01/1998 639 577 62 28.0–29.5 74–90 700-1,110
Comac ARJ21-700/900 28/11/2008 227 7 220 40.5–43.6 78–98 1,200
Embraer E-Jet/E-Jet E2 19/02/2002 1889 1457 423 38.6-61.5 66-146 2,150-2,850
Superjet 100 19/05/2008 161 139 22 49.4 98 2,390
Ilyushin Il-114-300 23.5 64 1,030
RUAG Dornier 228NG 12/11/2009 12 6 6 6.4 19 1,000
De Havilland Canada DHC-6-400 Twin Otter 01/10/2008 104 81 23 5.6 19 775
Cessna 408 SkyCourier 2019 50 50 19 900

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Guide to Feederline Aircraft". Flight International. July 27, 1972. p. 125.
  2. ^ Javier Irastorza Mediavilla (30 January 2018). "Turboprop market vs. oil price (ATR figures 2017 update)".
  3. ^ "Global turboprop capacity up 22% since 2009; Vancouver is 'Top of the Props' as Canada overtakes US to become top market". Airline Network News & Analysis. 30 Jan 2019.
  4. ^ "Airlines give propellers another spin". MSNBC. Bloomberg. 30 Apr 2008.
  5. ^ "Flight Fleet Forecast Summary". Flight Global. 2016.
  6. ^ "Ascend regional airliner fleet forecast". Flight Global. 13 October 2016.
  7. ^ Bernie Baldwin (Jan 12, 2018). "Turboprops Could Face Crossover Narrowbody Jet Challenge". Aviation Week & Space Technology.
  8. ^ "Turboprop market forecast 2018–2037" (PDF). June 2018.
  9. ^ a b Jens Flottau, Guy Norris and Graham Warwick (Jun 12, 2019). "Hybrids Considered For Regional Market As Incumbents Look At Options". Aviation Week & Space Technology.
  10. ^ Max Kingsley Jones (4 Oct 2018). "Challenger 600 marks 40 years in business". Flightglobal.
  11. ^ Barbara De Lollis; Barbara Hansen (September 5, 2006). "Regional jet use stabilizing". USA Today.
  12. ^ Craig Hoyle (9 Nov 2018). "World airliner directory – Regionals". Flight Global.

regional, airliner, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, only, original, research, should, removed, april, 2019, learn, when, remove, this, template,. This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message A regional airliner or a feederliner is a small airliner that is designed to fly up to 100 passengers on short haul flights usually feeding larger carriers airline hubs from small markets This class of airliners is typically flown by the regional airlines that are either contracted by or subsidiaries of the larger airlines Regional airliners are used for short trips between smaller towns or from a larger city to a smaller city Feederliner commuter and local service are all alternative terms for the same class of flight operations 1 A Dash 8 in front of a BAe 146 Contents 1 History 1 1 Post war era 1 2 Turboprop designs 1 3 Noise 1 4 Market forecast 1 5 Hybrid aircraft 2 Design 2 1 Turboprop regional aircraft 2 2 Regional jets 2 3 Accommodation 3 Operations 3 1 Costs 4 In production aircraft 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp The Douglas DC 3 first flew in 1935 and had a range of around 1 000 miles 1 625 kilometers To keep short routes economical airlines preferred using second hand aircraft than costlier new aircraft 1 Older aircraft were put into short haul service as they were replaced by new longer range designs Post war era edit Propeller aircraft of larger airlines were transferred to smaller airlines even the De Havilland Dragon Rapide biplane or the Douglas DC 3s in large surplus after the war which the Aircraft manufacturers wanted to replace The first piston powered airliners with 40 seats were the Martin 2 0 2s introduced in 1947 and Convair CV 240s 1948 Turboprop designs edit nbsp The Fokker F27 Friendship was introduced in November 1958The first turboprop powered aircraft emerged like the Vickers Viscount 75 seats introduced in 1953 and Fokker F27 44 52 seats 1958 Some smaller turboprop airliners were developed in the 1960s like the British Shorts Skyvan 19 seats 1963 and French Nord 262 29 seats 1964 or Brazilian Embraer EMB 110 Bandeirante 1973 This hand me down process of supplying aircraft continued with designs like the Convair 440 and Douglas DC 6 also serving in this role while the first jets were introduced By the mid 1950s demand for even more economical designs led to the production of the first custom feederliners These were almost always turboprops which had fuel economy on par with piston engine designs but had far lower maintenance costs Often the time between engine overhaul periods was five times that of the best piston engines Early examples of these designs include the Fokker F27 Friendship Avro 748 and Handley Page Dart Herald These designs were so successful that it was to be many years before newer designs bettered them enough to make it worthwhile in terms of capital investment to develop Among the first purpose built airliners developed for the CAB sanctioned local service airlines in the US the predecessors of the modern regional airliner industry was the interim and custom built Fairchild F 27 FH 227 s for the needs of these smaller but expanding airlines of the late 1960s There were a few other exceptions generally tailored to more specific roles For instance the Handley Page Jetstream first flight in 1968 was intended for fewer passengers at much higher speeds displacing smaller designs like the Beechcraft Queen Air The Fairchild Swearingen Metro developed from the original Queen Air through a number of stages filled a similar niche By the 1970s the first generation regional airliners were starting to wear out but there had been little effort in producing new designs for this market A varied list of light transport aircraft supplanted by newer and more modern 30 seat designs by Shorts with their Shorts 330 and 360 as well as other aircraft manufacturers replaced and sometimes provided growth to established commuter markets Additional development came to the regional airline industry with the arrival of some of the earlier De Havilland Canada types such as the Dash 7 delivered in 1978 but this was tailored more to the short range and STOL Short Take Off and Landing role than as a regional airliner Feedback from the airlines was fairly consistent and De Havilland responded with the Dash 8 in 1984 which had economic benefits over the earlier generation machines and was faster and quieter as well nbsp The ATR 72 was introduced in October 1989In the early 1980s the Dash 8 s success sparked off development of a number of similar designs including the ATR 42 72 Saab 340 Embraer Brasilia and Fokker 50 Consequently there were a relatively large number of aircraft offered by manufacturers in this sector of the market pushing older 1950s designs from Fokker Vickers and others into retirement Due to the high level of competition production of a number of these types ceased Saab AB exited the civil aviation market and wrote its debts off Daimler Benz Aerospace pulled the plug on Dornier and British Aerospace ended production of their BAe Jetstream 41 after 100 delivered By 2006 only the ATR 42 72 models and the Dash 8 remained in production Turboprop airliner deliveries are correlated with oil prices with a lag of a few years 2 In 2018 245 4 million two way seats were offered on turboprop flights up from 201 4 million in 2009 with 97 of flights below 500 nmi 930 km and 87 below 300 nmi 560 km and an average capacity increasing to 51 seats from 44 seats in 2009 The largest user was Air Canada with 12 7 million seats followed by Flybe with 10 3 million and Wings Air with 9 24 million Canada was the largest market with 30 5 million seats then Indonesia with 14 3 and the US with 13 4 The busiest turboprop airport was Vancouver 2 75 Million seats followed by Toronto Pearson 2 64 then Seattle Tacoma 2 39 3 Noise edit Although turboprops are quiet to outside observers propwash makes them noisy inside 4 Active noise reduction should reduce the cabin noise of the Bombardier Q400 or the ATR 72 600 Market forecast edit Flight Global fleet forecasts 3 081 turboprop deliveries for a 63 billion value and 4 042 regional jet deliveries for a 130 billion value for the 2016 2035 period 5 In turboprops ATR with 12 of the market should dominate the Dash 8 Q400 3 while Embraer with 40 should lead the Regional Jets market above the Mitsubishi MRJ 17 and Superjet 100 4 while Bombardier Aerospace moves to the small narrowbody aircraft with the CSeries and doesn t develop the CRJ700 series 2 6 Embraer claims crossover regional jets are more cost efficient than current turboprops beyond 200 nmi 370 km representing 45 of 70 seat turboprops flights in 2017 leading Wideroe to switch to E Jets E2 except for destinations with short runways and severe weather conditions north of the Arctic Circle or AirBaltic to replace its 12 Q400s by CSeries 7 From 2018 to 2037 ATR forecasts 3 020 turboprop deliveries 630 with 40 60 seats and 2 390 with 61 80 seats 8 Hybrid aircraft edit As legacy regional aircraft are used on very short sectors like connecting islands their replacements could be hybrid or electric aircraft Hybrid electric aircraft propulsion remains impeded by energy storage high power electric distribution and the lack of certification framework ATR Aircraft dismiss a fully electric propulsion as carrying the same payload over the same distances as an 18 t 40 000 lb ATR 42 current batteries would weigh 21 t 46 000 lb 9 Current projects are small 10 seaters like the Israeli Eviation Alice or the Boeing backed Zunum Aero ZA12 powered by a Safran Ardiden turboshaft and targeting 40 80 lower operating costs The French VoltAero Cassio based on the Cessna 337 Skymaster like the U S Ampaire U S Wright Electric works with Spain s Axter Aerospace to re engine a nine seater and the Cessna Caravan is re engined with a MagniX electric motor United Technologies is re engining a Dash 8 Q100 on one side with a 1 MW 1 300 hp gas turbine and a 1 MW 1 300 hp electric motor instead of the current 2 150 hp 1 60 MW Pratt amp Whitney Canada PW121 for at least 30 energy savings 9 Design editTurboprop regional aircraft edit Regional airlines serving small hubs or airports with short runways will often use turboprop aircraft with propeller engines versus jet engines de Havilland Canada Dash 7 and Dash 8 Antonov An 24 and An 140 Xi an Aircraft Industrial Corporation MA60 MA600 and MA700 and ATR ATR 42 and ATR 72 are manufacturers of this type Regional jets edit nbsp By October 2018 1 800 Canadair Regional Jets have been delivered 10 Main article Regional jet A regional jet RJ is a jet airliner with less than 100 seats The first one was the Sud Aviation Caravelle in 1959 followed by the widespread Yakovlev Yak 40 Fokker F 28 and BAe 146 The 1990s saw the emergence of the most widespread Canadair Regional Jet and its Embraer Regional Jet counterpart then the larger Embraer E Jet family and multiple competing projects In the US they are limited in size by scope clauses Accommodation edit nbsp Cabin of an Embraer E 190 Seating on regional airliners tends to be narrow and tight and passengers typically are restricted from bringing on board carry on items which would fit without difficulty in the overhead bins of larger aircraft Often carry on luggage is collected immediately prior to boarding and placed in the cargo hold where it can be quickly retrieved by the ground staff while the passengers exit citation needed Compared with bigger planes many frequent fliers find regional jets cabins cramped and uncomfortable with a lower ceiling tight seating and single class cabins forbidding a first class upgrade 11 Operations editCosts edit In the US major carriers contracts with regional airlines on a per flight basis regardless of the number of passengers and the major carrier keep the ticket revenue These contracts are typically 10 year terms the regional aircraft operators are certain of their revenue and have to control their costs to earn a return but they face airline bankruptcies fleet reductions and increasing operating costs Major carriers avoid shouldering losses from regional aircraft operators and competition between regional airlines has grounded many regional aircraft citation needed In production aircraft editRegional Airliners 12 Model First flight Net orders Deliveries Backlog MTOW t seats Range nmi An 148 158 An 178 17 12 2004 54 35 19 41 9 52 4 68 99 1 350 2 160AVIC MA60 MA600 MA700 25 02 2000 143 97 46 21 8 26 5 60 86 770 1 460ATR 42 600 04 03 2010 74 41 33 18 6 48 720ATR 72 600 600F 24 07 2009 661 444 217 23 70 78 830De Havilland Canada Dash 8 400 31 01 1998 639 577 62 28 0 29 5 74 90 700 1 110Comac ARJ21 700 900 28 11 2008 227 7 220 40 5 43 6 78 98 1 200Embraer E Jet E Jet E2 19 02 2002 1889 1457 423 38 6 61 5 66 146 2 150 2 850Superjet 100 19 05 2008 161 139 22 49 4 98 2 390Ilyushin Il 114 300 23 5 64 1 030RUAG Dornier 228NG 12 11 2009 12 6 6 6 4 19 1 000De Havilland Canada DHC 6 400 Twin Otter 01 10 2008 104 81 23 5 6 19 775Cessna 408 SkyCourier 2019 50 50 19 900See also editList of regional airliners Regional jetReferences edit a b Guide to Feederline Aircraft Flight International July 27 1972 p 125 Javier Irastorza Mediavilla 30 January 2018 Turboprop market vs oil price ATR figures 2017 update Global turboprop capacity up 22 since 2009 Vancouver is Top of the Props as Canada overtakes US to become top market Airline Network News amp Analysis 30 Jan 2019 Airlines give propellers another spin MSNBC Bloomberg 30 Apr 2008 Flight Fleet Forecast Summary Flight Global 2016 Ascend regional airliner fleet forecast Flight Global 13 October 2016 Bernie Baldwin Jan 12 2018 Turboprops Could Face Crossover Narrowbody Jet Challenge Aviation Week amp Space Technology Turboprop market forecast 2018 2037 PDF June 2018 a b Jens Flottau Guy Norris and Graham Warwick Jun 12 2019 Hybrids Considered For Regional Market As Incumbents Look At Options Aviation Week amp Space Technology Max Kingsley Jones 4 Oct 2018 Challenger 600 marks 40 years in business Flightglobal Barbara De Lollis Barbara Hansen September 5 2006 Regional jet use stabilizing USA Today Craig Hoyle 9 Nov 2018 World airliner directory Regionals Flight Global Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Regional airliner amp oldid 1191659878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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