Friday will see the first flight in Montana on the new Tecnam P2012 Travellers on a trip from Wolf Point to Billings.
The new Tecnam P2012 Traveller is a short-haul airplane meant for the type of quick commuter flights Cape Air offers. The Essential Air Service routes are designed to connect rural communities to larger hubs and are heavily subsidized by the federal government.
Manufacturing of the Cessnas was discontinued in 1985, making it overdue for an upgrade, said Erin Hatzell, managing director of marketing and public relations with Cape Air.
Most airplanes in that category, 9-passenger commuter planes, are more than 35 years old and no longer in production, Hatzell said. This will be the first new model of its category in nearly four decades, she added.
About a 10 years ago, Cape Air began a partnership with Tecnam, an Italian airplane manufacturer, to design the new commuter plane.
In February 2020, Cape Air flew the first commercial flight with the new aircraft from Hyannis, Massachusetts to Nantucket.
Montana is the second of Cape Air's markets to be refleeted, behind the Midwest region.
Cape Air is headquartered in Hyannis and has purchased 30 of the new planes.
Eventually, the goal is for Cape Air to acquire 100 planes, Hatzell said.
Some of the airline's remaining 88 Cessna 402s will be sold, two were donated to Cape Cod Community College, and others will be repurposed as charter planes.
Billings currently has three Tecnam planes, with five more on the way to complete Montana's fleet.
The planes arrived about two weeks ago in Billings and pilots have wrapped up ground training to get acquainted with the new aircraft, said Hatzell.
The aircraft is only slightly larger than the Cessna but offers more space and an updated interior for passengers, Hatzell said. The speed of the plane remains largely unchanged.
Cape Air has operated for nearly eight years in Montana, offering multiple daily flights from Billings to Sidney, Glasgow, Glendive, Wolf Point and Havre. The airline offers flights across the U.S. and parts of the Caribbean.
"It's a pretty big deal that Montana is going to be refleeted," Hatzell said. "It really is going to be a great fit for the type of flying we do here and for our passengers."
Not often one sees where the passengers get bigger windows than the pilots! Poor design.
ReplyDeleteThose doors up front made the "A pillar" blind spot effect huge.
ReplyDeleteUgh! That aircraft design gives me the heebie-jeebies.
ReplyDeleteNice, the crew get their own doors! That'll make it easy to load passengers and cargo while crew perform ground duties.
ReplyDeleteInteresting that it has rounded windows but is unpressurized. It might not win the beauty contest on a Signature FBO tarmac, but it is a pretty solid performer for a short hopper commuter out of small airfields - a solid 190kt 800NM mission aircraft heavily loaded. That said, considering it moves this fast, I'd like to see wheel plants and gear strut aerodynamic enclosure. Would add several knots to cruise or save a notable amount of fuel at the same ops speed over the course of a year's operation.
ReplyDeleteI think people also fail to remember (or do not know) that this aircraft is meant to replace decades old twin Cessnas and Pipers (like the 402 mentioned here as well as the PA-31 Navajo) used as island hoppers in the Caribbean and elsewhere around the world by carriers. Carriers that cannot validate owning a more expensive to maintain and operate turboprop fleet like the Caravan which doesn't offer much more for a whole lot more money. It's a great little cargo option too for freight dog carriers in need of replacing older birds (and they are busier now more than ever with pandemic-era online ordering).