The Dassault Falcon 900, commonly abbreviated as the F900,[2] is a
French-built corporate
trijet aircraft made by
Dassault Aviation.
Development
The Falcon 900 is a development of the
Falcon 50, itself a development of the earlier
Falcon 20. The Falcon 900 airframe design incorporates
composite materials.
Other models include the Falcon 900-B, featuring an increased range, and the Falcon 900EX featuring other improvements in engines and range and an all-
glass flight deck. The Falcon 900C is a companion to the Falcon 900EX and replaces the Falcon 900B. Later versions are the Falcon 900EX EASy, and the Falcon 900DX.[3] At
EBACE 2008, Dassault announced another development of the 900 series: the Falcon 900LX,[4] incorporating high mach blended
winglets designed by
Aviation Partners Inc.
In 2023, the 900LX equipped price was $44.7 million.[5][6]
Announced in 1984, original production. Powered by three 20
kilonewtons (4,500
pounds-force)
Garrett TFE731-5AR-1C
turbofan jet engines.[7] It was certified in 1986 by French and U.S. aviation authorities.
Falcon 900 MSA
Maritime patrol version for
Japan Coast Guard; this variant is equipped with search radar and a hatch for dropping rescue stores.[8]
Falcon 900B
Revised production version from 1991,[8] powered by 21.13 kilonewtons (4,750 pounds-force) TFE731-5BR-1C engines.[9]
Long range version with 22.24 kilonewtons (5,000 pounds-force) engines; this variant features TFE731-60 engines, with a range of 4,500 nautical miles (8,334 kilometres; 5,179 miles). Avionics by (
Honeywell Primus). It entered service in 1996.[9]
Falcon 900EX EASy
Long range version produced from 2004 to 2009; fitted with Honeywell / Dassault Primus Epic EASy avionics. TFE731-60 engines.[10]
Falcon 900DX
Shorter-range production type with TFE731-60 engines.[3]
Falcon 900LX
Current production variant of EX fitted with blended winglets; range of 4,750 nautical miles (8,797 kilometres; 5,466 miles).[11]
On 14 September 1999, a Falcon 900B (registered SX-ECH) operating for the Greek Government by
Olympic Airways, was descending to land at
Bucharest, Romania, when the
autopilot disengaged and several
pilot-induced oscillations occurred. The impact of unfastened passengers with the cabin and aircraft furniture resulted in fatal injuries to seven passengers, serious injuries to two, and minor to another two. Among the victims was
Giannos Kranidiotis, then deputy foreign minister for Greece.[20]
On 13 February 2021, a Falcon 900EX corporate jet (N823RC) experienced a landing gear collapse after an aborted takeoff at
Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport, California. Although the aircraft sustained significant damage, all five occupants on board escaped without injuries. The flight crew explained that during the takeoff attempt, the captain applied back pressure to the control yoke, but the nose failed to rotate to a takeoff position. After multiple attempts, the captain decided to reject the takeoff by reducing thrust and applying maximum brakes. As a result, the aircraft overshot the runway and the landing gear collapsed upon reaching a gravel pad. The
NTSB investigation revealed that the captain did not possess a valid pilot certificate due to an emergency revocation by the
FAA two years earlier. This revocation occurred because the captain had falsified logbook entries and records for pilot proficiency checks, competency checks, and training events while serving as a check pilot for a Part 135 operator.[21]
^
ab"Archived copy"(PDF). DGAA.it.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 20 December 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2012.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)
^Cicalesi, Juan Carlos; Rivas, Santiago (August 2010). "New Bolivian Presidential Transport". Air International. Vol. 79, no. 2. p. 5.
The Dassault Falcon 900, commonly abbreviated as the F900,[2] is a
French-built corporate
trijet aircraft made by
Dassault Aviation.
Development
The Falcon 900 is a development of the
Falcon 50, itself a development of the earlier
Falcon 20. The Falcon 900 airframe design incorporates
composite materials.
Other models include the Falcon 900-B, featuring an increased range, and the Falcon 900EX featuring other improvements in engines and range and an all-
glass flight deck. The Falcon 900C is a companion to the Falcon 900EX and replaces the Falcon 900B. Later versions are the Falcon 900EX EASy, and the Falcon 900DX.[3] At
EBACE 2008, Dassault announced another development of the 900 series: the Falcon 900LX,[4] incorporating high mach blended
winglets designed by
Aviation Partners Inc.
In 2023, the 900LX equipped price was $44.7 million.[5][6]
Announced in 1984, original production. Powered by three 20
kilonewtons (4,500
pounds-force)
Garrett TFE731-5AR-1C
turbofan jet engines.[7] It was certified in 1986 by French and U.S. aviation authorities.
Falcon 900 MSA
Maritime patrol version for
Japan Coast Guard; this variant is equipped with search radar and a hatch for dropping rescue stores.[8]
Falcon 900B
Revised production version from 1991,[8] powered by 21.13 kilonewtons (4,750 pounds-force) TFE731-5BR-1C engines.[9]
Long range version with 22.24 kilonewtons (5,000 pounds-force) engines; this variant features TFE731-60 engines, with a range of 4,500 nautical miles (8,334 kilometres; 5,179 miles). Avionics by (
Honeywell Primus). It entered service in 1996.[9]
Falcon 900EX EASy
Long range version produced from 2004 to 2009; fitted with Honeywell / Dassault Primus Epic EASy avionics. TFE731-60 engines.[10]
Falcon 900DX
Shorter-range production type with TFE731-60 engines.[3]
Falcon 900LX
Current production variant of EX fitted with blended winglets; range of 4,750 nautical miles (8,797 kilometres; 5,466 miles).[11]
On 14 September 1999, a Falcon 900B (registered SX-ECH) operating for the Greek Government by
Olympic Airways, was descending to land at
Bucharest, Romania, when the
autopilot disengaged and several
pilot-induced oscillations occurred. The impact of unfastened passengers with the cabin and aircraft furniture resulted in fatal injuries to seven passengers, serious injuries to two, and minor to another two. Among the victims was
Giannos Kranidiotis, then deputy foreign minister for Greece.[20]
On 13 February 2021, a Falcon 900EX corporate jet (N823RC) experienced a landing gear collapse after an aborted takeoff at
Montgomery-Gibbs Executive Airport, California. Although the aircraft sustained significant damage, all five occupants on board escaped without injuries. The flight crew explained that during the takeoff attempt, the captain applied back pressure to the control yoke, but the nose failed to rotate to a takeoff position. After multiple attempts, the captain decided to reject the takeoff by reducing thrust and applying maximum brakes. As a result, the aircraft overshot the runway and the landing gear collapsed upon reaching a gravel pad. The
NTSB investigation revealed that the captain did not possess a valid pilot certificate due to an emergency revocation by the
FAA two years earlier. This revocation occurred because the captain had falsified logbook entries and records for pilot proficiency checks, competency checks, and training events while serving as a check pilot for a Part 135 operator.[21]
^
ab"Archived copy"(PDF). DGAA.it.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 20 December 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2012.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)
^Cicalesi, Juan Carlos; Rivas, Santiago (August 2010). "New Bolivian Presidential Transport". Air International. Vol. 79, no. 2. p. 5.