Ask Envoy and only Envoy and its always over 300. The only thing that I won't ask about speeds when Envoy is number 2 departing is an L-1011. Its the only civilian aircraft I've worked that will no doubt out run their CRJ's in the climb. Does anyone know why they're the outlier?
All discussions aside. I was not aware eagle was the only CRJ-700 operator that climbed out at over 300kts. That's just the way the capts flew.
As to why, you'll probably have to go back to the initial cadre CRJ pilots at Eagle when eagle first got them. They were all senior, waiting for their turn to flow to AA when it came to a halt after 9/11. These guys were pretty nonstandard and pretty much flew barber pole everywhere - from their turboprop habits flying jetstreams, metros, whatever eagle flew at the time when they were the separate airlines. They flew the crj the same way.
So there is a lot of pilots left who flew with these guys that still fly fast (300+) but not right at the barber pole-1.
Now that the senior group of pilots are gone over to be AA's problem, the capts left there now flying are more conventional and standard
As far as I know most folks fly 250 to 10k, 2.5 nose up pitch to the low 20's and accept the resulting climb rate and airspeed whatever it ends up being. We' werent targeting a specific airspeed other than over 300 in the climb in the mid-to high- teens.
Switchover to .79 climb. cruise power set on the cyan donuts which results in .83 cruise everywhere.
You'll probably also find eagle CRJs to be faster if they're #1 on approach. The modus operandi is 230kts to about 1800ft -2000ft AGL. then flaps 1, 8, 20 and gear to slow and the remaining flaps out on schedule as the aircraft slows to arrive at Vapp by 1000ft AGL
Apu on and two engine taxi on the ground. Anything to waste fuel.
Plus every captain has a fuel score on how much fuel they are saving by being fuel efficient. Every crj captain I have flown with at eagle was working on getting the worst score possible.