Engineering:Cessna Citation family

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Short description: Business jet family
Citation family
Cessna 525B Citation CJ3 Opera Jet OM-OPA, LUX Luxembourg (Findel), Luxembourg PP1350972612.jpg
A Cessna 525B CJ3 behind a Citation Mustang
Role Business jet
Manufacturer Cessna
First flight 15 September 1969
Introduction 1972
Number built 8,000
Variants Citation I / I/SP
Citation II/SII/Bravo
Citation III-VI-VII
Cessna Citation V/Ultra/Encore
Citation Excel/XLS/XLS+
CitationJet/CJ series
Citation Mustang
Citation X
Citation Sovereign
Citation Latitude
Citation Longitude
Citation Hemisphere

The Cessna Citation is a family of business jets by Cessna that started in 1972 with the entry into service of the first model.[1] In the fifty years following the 1969 first flight, more than 7,500 Citations were delivered, forming the largest business jet fleet.[2] Deliveries reached 8,000 by 2022, while logging over 41 million flight hours.[3]

The line started with the small Citation I prototype flying on September 15, 1969, and produced until 1985, developed into the 1978-2006 Citation II/Bravo, the 1989-2011 Citation V/Ultra/Encore and the CitationJet since 1993. The standup Citation III/VI/VII was delivered from 1983 to 2000; its fuselage was reused in the Citation X/X+ delivered from 1996 to 2018, the Sovereign from 2004 to 2021 and the Excel since 1998. The Mustang was a Very Light Jet delivered from 2006 to 2017 while the flat floor fuselage Latitude has been delivered since 2015 and the larger Longitude from 2019.

The aircraft are named after Citation, a champion American Thoroughbred racehorse who won the American Triple Crown.[4]

Lineage

Citation deliveries timeline
1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
510 Mustang
500 Citation I / 501 Citation I/SP 525 CitationJet/CJ1 CJ1+ M2
525A CJ2 CJ2+
525B CJ3 CJ3+
525C CJ4
550 Citation II Bravo
560 Citation V Ultra Encore Encore+
560XL Excel XLS XLS+
650 Citation III VI/VII 680 Sovereign Sovereign+
680A Latitude
700 Longitude
750 Citation X X+ Hemisphere
Fuselage cross-section:     = Citation I   = Citation III   = Latitude

Models

Citation I

Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation I

Citation II/Bravo

model 550 Citation II
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation II

Citation III/IV/VI/VII

Model 650 Citation III
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation III

Citation V/Ultra/Encore

CitationJet

Model 525A CitationJet CJ2

CitationJet (trainer)

Main page: Engineering:Cessna 526 CitationJet

The Model 526 CitationJet was a twin-engine, two-seat tandem military trainer developed from the Model 525 as a candidate for the Joint Primary Aircraft Training System competition (JPATS). The two models share 75% of their parts, including wing, engines, landing gear, and other systems. First flown in December 1993, the 526 did not succeed at the JPATS contest, and only two examples were built in total.[5]

Citation X/X+

Model 750 Citation X
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation X

Excel/XLS/XLS+

Model 560XL Citation Excel
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation Excel

Sovereign

Model 680 Citation Sovereign
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation Sovereign

Mustang

Model 510 Citation Mustang
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation Mustang

Columbus

Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation Columbus

Latitude

Model 680A Citation Latitude
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation Latitude

Longitude

Model 700 Citation Longitude
Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation Longitude

Hemisphere

Main page: Engineering:Cessna Citation Hemisphere

Current models

Model Length Span Area Sweep Inside Pax. MTOW Cruise Range Engines Thrust
525 Citation M2[6] 42 ft 7 in
12.98 m
47 ft 3 in
14.40 m
240 sq ft
22 m2
0 ° 58 in
1.5 m
7 10,800 lb
4,900 kg
404 kn
748 km/h
1,540 nmi
2,850 km
2 FJ44-1AP-21 3,930 lbf
17.5 kN
525 Citation CJ3+[7] 51 ft 2 in
15.60 m
53 ft 4 in
16.26 m
294 sq ft
27.3 m2
0 ° 58 in
1.5 m
9 13,870 lb
6,290 kg
416 kn
770 km/h
2,040 nmi
3,780 km
2 FJ44-3A 5,640 lbf
25.1 kN
525 Citation CJ4[8] 53 ft 4 in
16.26 m
50 ft 10 in
15.49 m
330 sq ft
31 m2
12.5 ° 58 in
1.5 m
10 17,110 lb
7,760 kg
451 kn
835 km/h
2,170 nmi
4,020 km
2 FJ44-4A 7,242 lbf
32.21 kN
560XL Citation XLS+[9] 52 ft 6 in
16.00 m
56 ft 4 in
17.17 m
370 sq ft
34 m2
0 ° 68 in
1.7 m
9 20,200 lb
9,200 kg
441 kn
817 km/h
2,100 nmi
3,900 km
2 PW545C 8,238 lbf
36.64 kN
680A Citation Latitude[10] 62 ft 3 in
18.97 m
72 ft 4 in
22.05 m
543 sq ft
50.4 m2
16.3 ° 77 in
2.0 m
9 30,800 lb
14,000 kg
446 kn
826 km/h
2,850 nmi
5,280 km
2 PW306D1 11,814 lbf
52.55 kN
700 Citation Longitude[11] 73 ft 2 in
22.30 m
68 ft 11 in
21.01 m
537 sq ft
49.91 m²
28.6 ° 77 in
1.96 m
12 39,500 lb
17,917 kg
476 ktas
882 km/h
3,500 nmi
6,482 km
2 HTF7700L 15,200 lbf
68 kN

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

  1. "Cessna delivers milestone 7,000th Citation as NetJets' first Citation Latitude" (Press release). Textron Aviation. June 27, 2016.
  2. Kate Sarsfield (18 Sep 2019). "Cessna marks 50th anniversary of first Citation flight". Flightglobal. https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/cessna-marks-50th-anniversary-of-first-citation-flig-460932/. 
  3. O'Connor, Kate (15 February 2022). "8,000th Cessna Citation Delivered". AVweb. https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/business-aviation-news/8000th-cessna-citation-delivered/. 
  4. Szurovy, Geza (1999). Cessna Citation Jets. Osceola, Wisconsin: MBI Publishing Company. pp. 15–16. ISBN 0-7603-0785-7. 
  5. Taylor, Michael J. H. (1996). Brassey's World Aircraft & Systems Directory. London: Brassey's. p. 128. ISBN 1-85753-198-1. https://archive.org/details/brasseysworldair0000unse/page/128. 
  6. "Citation M2". http://cessna.txtav.com/en/citation/m2. 
  7. "Citation CJ3+". http://cessna.txtav.com/en/citation/cj3. 
  8. "Citation CJ4". http://cessna.txtav.com/en/citation/cj4. 
  9. "Citation XLS+". http://cessna.txtav.com/en/citation/xls. 
  10. "Citation Latitude". http://cessna.txtav.com/en/citation/latitude. 
  11. "Citation Longitude". http://cessna.txtav.com/en/citation/longitude. 

Notes

External links