IFL has CRJs now...

Great looking bird, especially with those Dart motors. Perform well?
Back in my Canadian wilderness days, you could hear a Hawker (748) before you saw it.


Those damned Darts. My ears are still ringing.
 
Back in my Canadian wilderness days, you could hear a Hawker (748) before you saw it.


Those damned Darts. My ears are still ringing.

The Viscounts we used to have here at TUS doing charter were loud with 4 of them, but that was a while ago.
 
It will never happen, how many powerlines are tall enough to fly an RJ under? It just doesn't fit their mission...

I still remember management coming to PHX for a meeting with the pilot group, saying "Ameriflight will be the first freight operator of the CRJ". Nevermind the fact that some European company was already using them to haul mail.
 
Great looking bird, especially with those Dart motors. Perform well?

Well, before that I had flown Aero Commander 500's, so that was my frame of reference. The Darts had water injection that was good for a few minutes and it was fine until you turned the water off. After that you'd get 500 to 1000 fpm depending on how hot it was and how heavy you were. I was flying mail on an Evergreen subcontract between LAS and LAX. Many a time we had to circle once or twice to meet the MEA on the airway climbing out of LAS.

All training was done in the airplane with it empty. It did damn well with one feathered and no freight in the back. Pretty heavy on the rudder though....

The 580 could do on one motor what we could do on two. Totally different animal. I think they were 4000 shp per side wet and we were 3000 with the dart.

This might have been me. Have to check my logbook.

 
Last edited:
I still remember management coming to PHX for a meeting with the pilot group, saying "Ameriflight will be the first freight operator of the CRJ". Nevermind the fact that some European company was already using them to haul mail.

Interesting, as IFL was the launch customer for the first U.S. conversion, that was announced years ago.
 
We have FOQA at NetJets now, meaning the Phenom 300 and Encore will have it. Modern world with standardization, it doesn't matter what's in the back or how big/small the airplane is.
 
Interesting, as IFL was the launch customer for the first U.S. conversion, that was announced years ago.

This was going on 3 years ago, before the IFL order was announced. Truthfully, I don't think the big market for CRJ freighters is going to be the 200. It will be the 700/900 as they get parked in large numbers down the road.
 
This was going on 3 years ago, before the IFL order was announced. Truthfully, I don't think the big market for CRJ freighters is going to be the 200. It will be the 700/900 as they get parked in large numbers down the road.

I guess that would depend on the mission. I can see a 200 replacing some of the smaller runs and doing more with less. Like two or three stops on current UPS-Fedex runs that are currently served by companies like AMF.
 
I guess that would depend on the mission. I can see a 200 replacing some of the smaller runs and doing more with less. Like two or three stops on current UPS-Fedex runs that are currently served by companies like AMF.
Hopefully their scope doesn't allow it.
 
I think UPS is wide open with this. FedEx limits feeder flying to 8000 pounds I think. MAC or Empire ATR guys might know more.

I'm only Caravan scum, but I'm not sure if FedEx's contract allows the feeders to fly jets. I know IFL group has a Falcon 20 run that does TVF-MEM, but IFL isn't technically a FedEx feeder. We used to fly Fokker F-27s (Which the ATRs replaced), and now the ATRs are getting really old and ratty. Plus, they break all the time so there's that too. I've heard rumors about replacements to include the CRJ, but I'm not sure if that's even possible.
 
LOL, you guys are funny. CRJ's at AMF... Bwaaaaahahahhahahahhahhahahhahahhah..... Those clowns can barely maintain their current dying fleet of crap laced flying poop as it is. El Oel
 
Back
Top