Specifications
Aircraft Details
• Aircraft located in Melbourne, Florida, for sale by Dassault Aviation
• Used aircraft with 1,086 total airframe hours and 268 landings
• Equipped for EU OPS 1 (EASA - Part CAT) Public Transport
• Engines: Pratt & Whitney PW307A (3), each on ESP Gold, 1,082 hours SNEW, 268 cycles
• APU: Honeywell GTCP36-150FN, 685 hours, on MSP Gold
• Avionics: Honeywell Primus Epic (EASY II 5th Cert), SBAS/LPV, ADS-B Out, SVS, CPDLC ATN-B1, FANS-1A+
• Connectivity: Honeywell JetWave Ka-band WiFi, Iridium
• Cabin: 14 seats with 3rd crew seat, forward and aft lavatories, limited edition Harmony interior (light beige leather, brown carpet, greige divans, hickory wood veneer, satin nickel plating)
• Galley: Central water system, Nespresso coffee maker, thermal carafes, microwave, high-temp oven
• Entertainment: 3D interactive map, 10.6" touchscreen, iPad remote controls, 2TB media server, HD monitors, HDMI/USB ports
• Additional: Life rafts, telescoping tow bar, LED lighting, 5G RA filter, fresh 48M inspection completed June 2026, "1C" inspection due April 2030
• Modifications: Second handrail, vacuum toilet, CTS QAR, ice detector, smartprobes, smoke hood
About this Model
Overview
The Falcon 7X is an ultra-long-range business jet designed around a tri-jet layout and Dassault’s flight-control philosophy, balancing intercontinental legs with access to a broader set of airports than many similar-size long-range jets. It is commonly selected for missions that combine long stage lengths, variable weather/terrain considerations, and a preference for a refined cabin and strong high-speed cruise performance.
Mission Fit
Mission planning typically centers on long legs at high cruise speeds with the ability to carry meaningful payload while keeping options open for alternates. The aircraft’s performance profile can be a differentiator when runway or climb performance constraints are part of the trip, though it may be more aircraft than necessary for predominantly regional flying.
Cabin
The 7X offers a true large-cabin environment with multiple cabin zones depending on layout, supporting a mix of work and rest. Buyers generally experience low cabin noise and a stable ride, with cabin configurations often including a galley sized for long missions and an aft lavatory. Cabin flexibility is a key theme: operators can emphasize seating density, lounge areas, or dedicated rest capability depending on typical stage length and passenger count.