11 May 2025, 17:45 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 14:48 |
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Joined: 01/01/10 Posts: 3499 Post Likes: +2473 Location: Roseburg, Oregon
Aircraft: Citation Mustang
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The M2 is a very nice plane. It's the CJ1's big brother. The higher thrust rating serves it well. I've flown one a couple times and reached 400kts TAS both times in cruise. Compared to the Mustang, it has some pros and cons. Pros would be speed, range, another seat, G3000, cabin width (+3"), cabin height (+3"), and the hot wing. Cons would be tighter cockpit, bleed air windshield heat, 0 leading edge wing sweep, less external baggage capacity (46 vs 57), and operating costs. It's a really solid airplane and is the gold standard for its category (but I like my Mustang better).
_________________ Previous A36TN owner
Last edited on 04 Jan 2019, 14:57, edited 1 time in total.
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 17:47 |
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Joined: 04/16/10 Posts: 2022 Post Likes: +897 Location: Wisconsin
Aircraft: CJ4, AmphibBeaver
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the M2, CJ1+, CJ1 and CJ are all the same basic airframe and configuration. The G3000 was a much lighter and more capable and integrated avionics platform. The lightness of it must have created some engineering challenges, as a result they (textron cessna) needed to take weight out of the back of the airplane to achieve a descent loading envelope. One thing they took away was a second fire bottle. The M2 has a single fire bottle. I believe, per a couple Textron maint techs, that the airplane was lightened up in the tail somewhere else too(this may be false).
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 19:00 |
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Joined: 09/16/10 Posts: 9006 Post Likes: +2064
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Username Protected wrote: 1100nm is fairly easy for a M2. You won't need to fill the tanks. Probably a 3-hr leg on average. Should use around 2,000 lbs of fuel. An 800lb reserve is typical, which leaves 1200lbs for total payload including the pilot. How much do you need? 1200 would swing it. I have been watching M2s on flight aware. It typically takes 3 hours to do 1000 nm (with winds) But they always land after 3 hours. Playing with the aircraft profile on fltplan.com doing sample trips. From full fuel it looked like I would have typically 400 pounds left, and that seemed too tight for my liking. 800 would be sweet.
_________________ Education cuts, don't heal.
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 19:32 |
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Joined: 06/23/09 Posts: 2320 Post Likes: +720 Location: KIKK......Kankakee, Illinois
Aircraft: TBM 850
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I looked at one vs the phenom 100. Both too range limited for me. I do like being able to get up to FL40......but I stayed with the TBM.
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 19:42 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 19994 Post Likes: +25044 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: Cons would be ... bleed air windshield heat That's a pro when it comes to replacement costs. The glass windshields are pricey. Quote: leading edge wing sweep That's really a pro. The Mustang had gratuitous leading edge sweep that just made the wing heavier and more expensive to build. At the speed of the Mustang, it has no material aerodynamic value, it seems to have been done just for looks. Quote: and operating costs. Mustang is definitely cheaper. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 20:37 |
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Joined: 01/01/10 Posts: 3499 Post Likes: +2473 Location: Roseburg, Oregon
Aircraft: Citation Mustang
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Username Protected wrote: Quote: leading edge wing sweep That's really a pro. The Mustang had gratuitous leading edge sweep that just made the wing heavier and more expensive to build. At the speed of the Mustang, it has no material aerodynamic value, it seems to have been done just for looks. Mike C. You're so wrong on that one. Completely incorrect. When you have a moment, talk to one of the Textron engineers that did the work.
_________________ Previous A36TN owner
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 23:15 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 19994 Post Likes: +25044 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: You're so wrong on that one. Completely incorrect. When you have a moment, talk to one of the Textron engineers that did the work. I did. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 23:23 |
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Joined: 05/23/13 Posts: 7848 Post Likes: +10209 Company: Jet Acquisitions Location: Franklin, TN 615-739-9091 chip@jetacq.com
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Username Protected wrote: It looks like the economy is headed for some difficulty and it will be interesting to see what that does to jet pricing later in the year. I will be the first to say that I do not watch the news... at all... so I'm probably not up on what the media says about the economy. Having said that, I do talk to business owners, executives, and people in the aircraft service industry all day... every day. Everyone is busy, everyone is positive... and maybe a little exhausted. I talked to two different M2 owners this week that will not sell their M2's until the end of the first quarter because that is when they take delivery of their new CJ3+'s I talked to one title company that closed 41 airplanes in one day. Each market I look at is showing more activity than I have ever seen, over 20 M2's have sold in the last 6 months and that is a "micro" market. I am sure that at some point it is going to drop, but we aren't there yet... probably not close. Probably not this year. I tell all of my clients that you cannot judge the market based on Controller, you'll see the same airplanes on there for months... when during that time period 20, 30 or 50 aircraft are actually selling. We have been in the King Air B200 market consistently for the last couple of years, we were very involved in that market all of 2018 and the very last airplane we closed in 2018 was a 1997 B200... I watched the same 40 - 60 airplanes languish on Controller while almost 100 B200's traded hands in 2018 including the one we closed on December 28th, that never saw the pages of Controller.
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Post subject: Re: Citation M2 Posted: 04 Jan 2019, 23:44 |
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Joined: 01/01/10 Posts: 3499 Post Likes: +2473 Location: Roseburg, Oregon
Aircraft: Citation Mustang
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Username Protected wrote: You're so wrong on that one. Completely incorrect. When you have a moment, talk to one of the Textron engineers that did the work. I did. Mike C. Did he happen to mention where the design concept originated?
_________________ Previous A36TN owner
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