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BOMBARDIER GLOBAL EXPRESS(2002)

Specifications

Year2002
Serial Number9025
RegistrationN925G
Total Hours5,721
LocationUnited States
RegionNORTH AMERICA

Broker

Global Jet Sales

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AI Description

  • Maintenance: Maintained under FAR Part 91; 240-Month Inspection completed on May 1, 2021; Pre-Purchase Inspection scheduled for October 1, 2025.
  • Engine: Model BR710A2-20; CorporateCare maintenance program; Engine 1 TCSN: 2465; Engine 2 TCSN: 2469.
  • Avionics: Equipped with Honeywell systems including ADF, Autopilot, FMS, GPS, and Weather Radar; Dual Honeywell communication radios; Honeywell EGPWS for terrain awareness.
  • Features: Equipped with Aft Lavatory, Cockpit Voice Recorder, Forward Crew Lav, Forward Galley, Winglets, High-Speed Data/Wi-Fi, and ADS-B capability; Standard features include RVSM, SATCOM, and TCAS.
  • Interior: Executive configuration for 13 passengers; New cabin soft goods and entertainment systems installed in 2021; Forward galley and dual club seating arrangements.
  • Exterior: Completed in 2017; Color scheme: Matterhorn white with titanium, blue, and gray metallic stripes.

About this Model

Overview

The Bombardier Global Express is a large-cabin, ultra-long-range business jet built to connect major city pairs with minimal stops while maintaining a multi-zone cabin environment. It sits in the intercontinental segment where range, cruise altitude capability, and cabin volume matter more than short-field flexibility. For buyers, the appeal is a combination of long legs, a wide and tall cabin cross-section, and systems sized for extended operations at high altitudes.

Mission Fit

Best aligned with long-range missions that justify a large-cabin aircraft: overnight sectors, oceanic crossings, and routes where avoiding fuel stops reduces schedule risk. It is less optimized for short-runway access or high-cycle regional shuttle use, where a smaller jet can be more practical.

Cabin

The cabin is typically arranged as a true long-range workspace and rest environment, commonly with distinct seating and lounge/dining zones and an enclosed aft lavatory; many aircraft include a crew rest area to support long duty days. The cross-section supports comfortable aisle movement and a more residential feel than smaller-cabin jets. Baggage access and galley capability vary by configuration and refit history, so specific aircraft layouts should be reviewed closely.