Hawker 800

Last updated
Hawker 800
Raytheon Hawker 850XPi AN1976827.jpg
Hawker 800 on approach
RoleMid-size business jet
National originUnited Kingdom
Manufacturer British Aerospace (BAe) (1983–1994)
Raytheon (1994–2007)
Hawker Beechcraft (2007–2013)
First flight26 June 1983
StatusIn service
Primary users Japan Air Self-Defense Force
Brazilian Air Force
Royal Saudi Air Force
Produced1983–2013
Number built650
Developed from British Aerospace 125

The Hawker 800 is a mid-size twinjet corporate aircraft. It is a development of the British Aerospace 125, and was assembled by Hawker Beechcraft.

Contents

Development

In April 1981, the British Aerospace (BAe) board sanctioned the programme to improve the British Aerospace 125-700 series. By May 1983 the new aircraft was ready for its first test flight.

The BAe 125-800 series has a number of modifications and changes over the 700, the most noticeable being the redesigned cockpit windscreen. Accompanying this are a modified rear fuselage fairing, as well as a glass cockpit and uprated (from 3,700 to 4,300 lb thrust) Garrett TFE731-5R-1H engines. British Aerospace also improved the wing by incorporating new outer wing sections. This helped to reduce drag and improve aerodynamic efficiency.

The 125-800 series would become a sales success. From the first BAe 125 flight in August 1961 it took nineteen years until the 500th airframe was sold. In a little over five years, British Aerospace were registering the 200th sale of the 800 series.

In 1994 Raytheon (which bought Beech Aircraft Corporation in 1980) acquired BAe Corporate Jets. The new entity was known as Raytheon Aircraft. In March 2007, Raytheon divested its aircraft manufacturing business to Hawker Beechcraft Corp., a company formed and controlled by GS Capital Partners and Onex Partners of Canada.

The last version was the Hawker 850XP, which was certified for operation in March 2006. The 850XP is identical to the 800XP except that it includes winglets, which have extended its operating range by 100 nautical miles (190 km). This version also incorporates upgraded avionics and a redesigned interior. The Hawker 850XP essentially fills the gap left behind by the Hawker 1000 when production of that aircraft ceased. In 2006, its unit cost was $13,786,100. [1]

Two new variants were announced in October 2006 for future deliveries: [2]

After the 2013 bankruptcy of Hawker Beechcraft, the surviving company, Beechcraft, discontinued its business jet range, including the 800 series, although the designs are still supported for parts.

By 2018, a 1980s-era 700s was priced for less than $500,000, a 1995 800A at $1.02 million and a 2012 900XP at $6 million. [4]

Design

Hawker 800XP Raytheon Hawker 800XP, Tarkim Aviation JP7358342.jpg
Hawker 800XP

The Hawker 800 was similar to most modern airframes in requiring sub-assemblies to be constructed away from the final point of manufacture. The fuselage sections, wings and control surfaces were manufactured and assembled in the United Kingdom in a combination of Hawker Beechcraft's own facility and those owned by Airbus UK, which inherited much of BAE Systems's civil aircraft manufacturing capacity. These sections are partially fitted out and installed with control surfacing and major systems before being shipped to Hawker Beechcraft's main manufacturing site in Wichita, Kansas for final assembly, fitting out and testing.

Military variants

Japan uses a maritime search and rescue variant of the Hawker 800. It is designated the U-125A in Japan Air Self-Defense Force service. This variant has large observation windows, a flare and marker-buoy dispenser system, life-raft and emergency equipment dropping system and enhanced salt water corrosion prevention. The aircraft also has a Toshiba 360-degree search radar, Melco thermal imaging equipment and other military communications equipment for its mission. [5]

A military version of the Hawker 800XP is in use by South Korea for tactical aerial reconnaissance, surveillance and SIGINT (SIGnals INTelligence) tasks, and 8 specially equipped aircraft were delivered in 2000. The Republic of Korea Air Force calls them RC-800s, and they are based at Seoul Air Base. [6]

Variants

With 48 built, this lower-cost, lighter-weight and shorter-range version of the 800XP competes with the Citation XLS and Learjet 60. In November 2017, used prices range from $2.2 million for early 2008 models to 3.8 million for late 2011 models. Its larger 604 cu ft (17.1 m3) cabin is typically configured with eight seats in double club or a four chair club followed by a three-place divan facing a single seat, and is pressurized by 8.5 psi (0.59 bar) to provide a 7,500 ft (2,300 m) cabin altitude at FL 410. Its 1,500 lb (680 kg) ventral fuel tank is replaced with a 47 cu ft (1.3 m3) external baggage compartment, leaving 8,500 lb (3,900 kg) of fuel in the wet wings. The cockpit has four-screen Rockwell Collins Pro Line 21 avionics and FMS-6000. [7] It takes off in 4,696 ft (1,431 m) at MTOW/Sea level. With a 20° quarter chord wing sweep, its maximum speed is Mach 0.80, it cruises at Mach 0.74 to 0.78 and long-range cruise is Mach 0.70 at 1,214 lb (551 kg) per hour midweight. First hour fuel burn is 1,900 lb (860 kg), second hour is 1,350 and 1,200 lb (610 and 540 kg) for subsequent hours. [7] B-checks are every 800 h, C-checks every 1,600 h and D-checks every 3,200 h and there are yearly maintenance checks. The landing gear is overhauled every 12 years. Its 4,750 lbf (21.1 kN) Honeywell TFE731-5BR have 2,100 h MPI and 4,200 h CZI inspection intervals, extendable to 2,500 h / 5,000 h with optional service bulletins, and MSP per engine. [7]

A Hawker 800 operated by Sun-Air of Scandinavia Raytheon Hawker 800XP, Sun-Air of Scandinavia JP7765191.jpg
A Hawker 800 operated by Sun-Air of Scandinavia

Able to fly nine passengers over 2,400 nmi, 475 Hawker 800XP have been sold for $10–13.5 million between 1995 and 2005. By July 2018, 467 were still in service, valued $1.4–2.4 million. [8]

Operators

Civil operators

The aircraft is operated by private individuals, companies and executive charter operators, and in fractional ownership programs.

Military operators

Flag of Japan.svg  Japan
Japan Air Self-Defense Force U-125A in flight JASDF U-125A (cropped).jpg
Japan Air Self-Defense Force U-125A in flight
Flag of Mozambique.svg  Mozambique
Flag of Nigeria.svg  Nigeria
Flag of Pakistan.svg  Pakistan
Flag of the Philippines.svg  Philippines
Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea

Accidents and incidents

Specifications (Hawker 800)

Data from Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1995-96 [24]

General characteristics

Performance

2,825 nmi (3,251 mi; 5,232 km) with max fuel and NBAA VFR reserves

Avionics

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

Related Research Articles

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References

Notes
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  5. "U-125 Peace Krypton". Federation of American Scientists . Retrieved July 31, 2008.
  6. "South Korea Spends $200M on RC-800 Fleet Maintenance & Ground Stations". defenseindustrydaily.com. Retrieved 2008-07-31.
  7. 1 2 3 Fred George (Nov 21, 2017). "Hawker 750: Operators Say Dispatch Reliability Is Rock Solid". Business & Commercial Aviation.
  8. Fred George (Jul 20, 2018). "Hawker 800XP: The Definitive Midsize Business Aircraft". Business & Commercial Aviation.
  9. 1 2 3 "World Air Forces 2020" . Flightglobal Insight. 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  10. Isby, David C.; Willis, David (December 2013). "Mozambique Rebuilding its Air Force". Air International . Vol. 85, no. 6. p. 26. ISSN   0306-5634.
  11. Armed Forces of the Philippines
  12. Deegan, Jim (August 7, 2008). "NTSB preliminary report issued in crash that killed Bethlehem-area pilots". The Express-Times. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  13. Ferraro, Nick; Vezner, Tad (July 30, 2008). "8 dead after Owatonna plane crash; missing accounted for". Pioneer Press. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
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  15. "Nine killed aboard charter plane that crashed Tuesday into Ellet apartment building in Akron". Akron Beacon Journal (Ohio.com). Retrieved November 10, 2015.
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  17. "Nonscheduled 14 CFR Part 135: Air Taxi & Commuter Accident occurred Tuesday, November 10, 2015 in Akron, OH". www.ntsb.gov. NTSB/CEN16MA036. Retrieved 2016-10-31.
  18. Allen Cone (October 18, 2016). "NTSB: Akron plane crash caused by 'litany of failures'". UPI. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
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  20. "Aspen airport reopens late Monday night after private jet goes off runway". Aspen Times. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
  21. Sinton, Kacie (2 Feb 2024). "Plane crashes on Utah-Colorado border with two on board, no survivors found". KKCO . Retrieved 8 Feb 2024.
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Bibliography