Aircraft Finder

BOMBARDIER LEARJET 75(2017)

BOMBARDIER LEARJET 75
1 / 8
Asking Price
$8,995,000

Specifications

Year2017
Serial Number45-561
RegistrationN12JS
Total Hours1,024.8
LocationNORTH AMERICA + CANADA, UNITED STATES - FL
RegionNORTH AMERICA

Broker

Freestream Aircraft Limited

Visit website

AI Description

  • Passenger Capacity: 9 passengers
  • Interior Features:
  • Aft belted lavatory
  • Forward galley with pod doors
  • Executive seating configuration: four (4) executive seats with fold-out tables in both forward and aft cabins
  • Galley equipment includes hot liquid container, ice drawer, two ice compartments, trash storage, and microwave oven
  • Connectivity: five 110V outlets in cabin, two in cockpit, iPod connector, media player (CD, Blu-ray)
  • Exterior:
  • Base paint color: Matterhorn White
  • Stripe colors: Gama Grey Silver, Titanium Blue, Dark Blue
  • Engines:
  • Honeywell TFE731-40BR-1B
  • Total hours: 1111.9
  • Total cycles: 748
  • Enrolled in JSSI maintenance program
  • APU: Honeywell RE100, total time: 345.4 hours, enrolled in JSSI
  • Avionics:
  • Garmin 5000 Phase 3
  • Dual Garmin GIA-63W communication radios
  • TCAS II, ADS-B Out, Synthetic Vision System
  • Additional Equipment:
  • Winglets, increased FOD protection antennae
  • Gogo AVANCE L5 for high-speed data/Wi-Fi
  • Maintenance Program: CAMP (Computerized Aircraft Maintenance Program)

About this Model

Overview

The Learjet 75 is a late-generation Learjet family light jet designed around fast cruise, strong climb, and a conventional business-jet cabin for 6–8 passengers depending on layout. It is commonly selected by owner-operators and corporate flight departments that value time-to-climb and point-to-point utility within North America and similar regional networks, while keeping the footprint and operating complexity of a light jet.

Mission Fit

In typical use, the Learjet 75 fits 300–1,500 nm stage lengths with schedule-driven turns. It can cover longer legs under favorable conditions, but mission planning is more comfortable when reserves, alternate requirements, and passenger/baggage loads do not push the airplane to its limits. If your core mission is transcontinental with consistently high payload and comfort expectations, step-up categories generally fit better.

Cabin

The cabin is a classic light-jet environment: a club seating area with a compact forward galley/refreshment center and an aft lavatory. Seating and storage are adequate for business travel, but passenger movement is more constrained than in midsize cabins, and carry-on management matters when traveling with larger groups. Noise and ride quality are typical for the class, with the best experience achieved when the aircraft is operated at the high flight levels in cruise.