Specifications
AI Description
- Avionics: Collins Proline 21 WAAS/LPV, Dual Garmin GTN-750TXi’s, L3 FA2100 Cockpit Voice Recorder, TCAS TPU66A, ADS-B In & Out, RVSM.
- Engines: Pratt & Whitney JT15D-5A, TBO 3,500 hours, Engine #1: 2,240 SOH, Engine #2: 2,238 SOH.
- Interior: Executive 9-passenger configuration, dual 4-place club seating, white leather seats, royal blue carpeting and side panels, private belted flushing aft lavatory, mid-cabin storage, dual executive writing tables, DVD and CD player.
- Exterior: Matterhorn white with blue and gold accent striping.
- Maintenance: Phase I-V inspections completed by Textron Aviation in April 2025.
- Additional Equipment: Thrust reversers, EROS oxygen masks, Freon air conditioning, emergency locator transmitter, KGP 860 EGPWS, remote audio panel, Jupiter USB box with charging ports.
- Features: Equipped with flushing lavatory, RVSM, terrain awareness and warning system, traffic collision avoidance system, weather radar, and cockpit voice recorder.
About this Model
Overview
The Cessna Citation V (Model 560) is a light jet positioned between early Citation II variants and later “Encore” evolutions, offering higher cruise performance and improved climb compared with earlier straight-wing Citations while retaining practical runway capability. It is commonly used for regional business missions, multi-stop days, and access to smaller airports where larger cabin jets may be less flexible. Buyers typically evaluate it as a proven, widely supported platform with straightforward systems and a cabin sized for small teams.
Mission Fit
In typical operation the Citation V is well matched to owner-operators and corporate flight departments needing efficient point-to-point travel for 4–6 passengers plus baggage, often with one fuel stop for longer trips. It performs best when planned around light-jet payload/range tradeoffs—more passengers, bags, or adverse winds will reduce range or require a stop.
Cabin
The cabin is configured as a light-jet executive interior, usually with a center aisle and club seating. For its class, the Citation V offers a usable work-and-conversation environment, though it remains a compact cabin with limited stand-up space and modest aft baggage compared with larger jets. Noise levels and ride quality are typical of legacy light jets; passenger comfort is strongest on regional stages rather than very long sectors.