I have a feeling that, since the plane was not home-bred, it doesn't sell because Cessna doesn't really want it. Kinda like the MD-11 when Boeing bought MD. Plus the Columbia is maintenance hungry.Yea we will see. For all intent and purpose, the Corvallis could have pro D.C. that theory but Cirrus continues to outsell the Corvallis.
You would think you couldn't trademark a public name and national park. Or at the very least there is some sort of fair use.Denali....you'd think GMC would have that trademarked? Maybe it's Yukon Denali...
That's the first thing that came to mind. Maybe that's their intention.
You would think you couldn't trademark a public name and national park. Or at the very least there is some sort of fair use.
But Honda isn't known for aviation. Honda is known for great reliable cars. Cessna is the Honda of the skies. Plus my guess is if you can afford a HondaJet the only Honda in your driveway is an NSXThat's a big gamble. I highly doubt the HondaJet will sell to the demographic of people who have no clue about aviation, but they have an Accord in the driveway.
I had a mountain bike called a Denali. I traded it for a sweet 1989 Bottechia, replica of the one Lemons won the tour of France on. But that's not important right now.You would think you couldn't trademark a public name and national park. Or at the very least there is some sort of fair use.
I had a mountain bike called a Denali. I traded it for a sweet 1989 Bottechia, replica of the one Lemons won the tour of France on. But that's not important right now.
You guys are failing to realize the brand loyalty of a large group of people that would like to move up to an aircraft like this but are entangled in a life long two step with Cessna. Many owner operators come up like this and Cessna putting g1000 in its 172 and its Mustang is working the heck out of that model.
I agree with @killbilly , they know what they are doing. If they fail with this aircraft, it doesn't mean they weren't sure that they were right, before they bravely went ahead.
Stay in your armchairs, succeed or fail, I'd say they are righteous.
Based on my experience in the DC metro area and it's endless supply of taxpayer money flowing in, the number might be 100 here. I tend to exaggerate to make my stories better (I'm from NJ), so maybe it's actually 50. I can think of 3 or 4 that came out of my alma mater flight school.Who actually knows, firsthand, a person who is an owner-operator that started on skyhawks and moved on to wanting something in this class? You always hear people referring to this theoretical segment of the GA market but how many are there actually? Like 100? And most of them already own Pilatus?
Based on my experience in the DC metro area and it's endless supply of taxpayer money flowing in, the number might be 100 here. I tend to exaggerate to make my stories better (I'm from NJ), so maybe it's actually 50. I can think of 3 or 4 that came out of my alma mater flight school.
I can tell you from conversation with Cessna people, that is exactly the model they pursue. Keep the flight deck the same and let people move up thru the airframes.
The only thing missing is the light twin with g1000, we always used the DA42 for that mission to prep guys for the mustang. (2 of them I can think of and one other that ended up getting a phenom. And another I can think that pulled back a bit and settled into a Merridian)
I see what you mean, but I don't know how many they gotta sell to stay in the black.See that market is so small to begin with, and already saturated with products, that Cessna can't possibly expect this airplane to do well for their bottom line in that market alone. They need the Planesense and the Surf Air and the Boutiques of the world, and the Air Method's and AMRGs, who all own PC-12s and are all happy with them.
Fair point. They got that one wrong, in my opinion. But they've gotten a whole lot right.