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Discussion of the Coaches' New Ride

AeroBuff99

Club Member
Club Member
You were right, and I Found it.



And it is a C650 Citation.

Registered to Bradley Flight LLC in Centennial

Unfortunately, the N Number is blocked and you can't track it. :mad::mad::mad::mad:

Model 650's are great airplanes, pain in the butt for my group because of all the variations (Citation III, VI, VII), but awesome for operators. They wanted to kill production several times when I started working but they kept getting orders. I think 2001 was when they finally rolled out the last one.
 
Model 650's are great airplanes, pain in the butt for my group because of all the variations (Citation III, VI, VII), but awesome for operators. They wanted to kill production several times when I started working but they kept getting orders. I think 2001 was when they finally rolled out the last one.

Um, Yeah.

Screen Shot 2016-01-28 at 10.14.20 AM.png


6750 airframes were manufactured in the family.

But only 350 of the C650 aka CIII/CVI/CVII

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cessna_Citation_family

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cessna_Citation_III
 
seriousness, is it common for coaches to "jet" around? are we ahead of the curve here? 2001 at the newest sees kinda old? or maybe airplanes are like boats, age doesn't matter like a car. Maybe we just like classics? BTW - they need to lose that stupid red stripe. Go get a Casey Kinnell to pimp that thing out in Gold&Black
 
Um, Yeah.
6750 airframes were manufactured in the family.

But only 350 of the C650 aka CIII/CVI/CVII

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cessna_Citation_family

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cessna_Citation_III
There are details that wikipedia doesn't have. The genealogy of a particular model doesn't affect the complexity of supporting that model as much as the variation of the serials within that model. E.G. the model 560 series has the Citation V, the Ultra, the Encore, and the Encore+, but each was a distinct configuration handled independently from one another. The 650 on the other hand had 4 distinct configurations within the Citation III alone. The VI barely existed, and the VII had various options that led to multiple configurations. The original Citation model 500 is the most complex because it is old and had several block point changes that were at random serializations.
 
seriousness, is it common for coaches to "jet" around? are we ahead of the curve here? 2001 at the newest sees kinda old? or maybe airplanes are like boats, age doesn't matter like a car. Maybe we just like classics? BTW - they need to lose that stupid red stripe. Go get a Casey Kinnell to pimp that thing out in Gold&Black
Jets age very well, especially when you refresh the interior. It is common practice for most schools to fly there head coaches privately. Some schools even own their own airplanes, more common though is just to charter one.
 
seriousness, is it common for coaches to "jet" around? are we ahead of the curve here? 2001 at the newest sees kinda old? or maybe airplanes are like boats, age doesn't matter like a car. Maybe we just like classics? BTW - they need to lose that stupid red stripe. Go get a Casey Kinnell to pimp that thing out in Gold&Black

Neuheisel used Brad Culkins' jet to recruit. We didnt keep detailed enough records and got dinged by the ncaa. But, no this isnt ahead of the curve.

And if Im not mistaken we are still using Brad Culkins' plane, so he might object to our repainting his plane.
 
Here is what we need. Probably going to have to win more. Would look sweet with Allbuff logo on tail?
latest
 
seriousness, is it common for coaches to "jet" around? are we ahead of the curve here? 2001 at the newest sees kinda old? or maybe airplanes are like boats, age doesn't matter like a car. Maybe we just like classics? BTW - they need to lose that stupid red stripe. Go get a Casey Kinnell to pimp that thing out in Gold&Black

Georgia's Kirby Smart is in a major recruiting battle with Notre Dame for the #1 recruit.


(Many UGA fans seem to find it ridiculous that they had to use a rental because the athletic department doesn't own a recruiting copter. :confused:)
 
seriousness, is it common for coaches to "jet" around? are we ahead of the curve here? 2001 at the newest sees kinda old? or maybe airplanes are like boats, age doesn't matter like a car. Maybe we just like classics? BTW - they need to lose that stupid red stripe. Go get a Casey Kinnell to pimp that thing out in Gold&Black
The bold. If an airplane is maintained properly, FAA certifications kept up to date, engines rebuilt/replaced as necessary, it will generally increase in value over time. It's a pretty big "if" on the front end though.
 
There are details that wikipedia doesn't have. The genealogy of a particular model doesn't affect the complexity of supporting that model as much as the variation of the serials within that model. E.G. the model 560 series has the Citation V, the Ultra, the Encore, and the Encore+, but each was a distinct configuration handled independently from one another. The 650 on the other hand had 4 distinct configurations within the Citation III alone. The VI barely existed, and the VII had various options that led to multiple configurations. The original Citation model 500 is the most complex because it is old and had several block point changes that were at random serializations.

Lack of commonality is a huge headache. You can sort of tell that Cessna has not done much defense contracting or a lot of fleet sales to airlines.
 
Jets age very well, especially when you refresh the interior. It is common practice for most schools to fly there head coaches privately. Some schools even own their own airplanes, more common though is just to charter one.
Oh and some Universities (About 30) have their own on campus airport....(Purdue, Miss. State, Ohio)...
 
If I get a chance I'll walk by the nearby airport and take a picture of Phil Knight's hanger (not Nike, his personal stuff). It's pretty spectacular, especially at night.

Edit - Found this because I'm too lazy to walk over there. And apparently it is Nike and not his. I was wrong about that.
 
Couldn't they get a giant Buff logo magnet and put it on the fuselage?
 
Georgia's Kirby Smart is in a major recruiting battle with Notre Dame for the #1 recruit.


(Many UGA fans seem to find it ridiculous that they had to use a rental because the athletic department doesn't own a recruiting copter. :confused:)

And some think CU is ahead of the game by using a private jet. We need a helicopter!
 
image.jpeg
Couldn't they get a giant Buff logo magnet and put it on the fuselage?

Something more along the lines of a pimped up BnG Soul Plane would turn heads when circling over the high school of a prized recruit.
 
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