Mention the phrase “private jet” to the average person and one word
immediately pops into mind: Lear. Since its first flight in 1963, William
P. Lear Sr.'s innovative aircraft, built to replicate the performance and
amenities of a commercial airliner, has been tantamount with executive
business travel.
One of the inventors of the 8-track audio tape, the
holder of 150 aviation-related patents and a high school drop-out, Lear
abandoned his retirement in Switzerland to establish the Swiss American
Aircraft Company (SAAC). In 1959, SAAC began work on Lear's latest
invention—a private luxurious jet aircraft with the flexibility to fly
passengers and freight in and out of small airports around the world. Lear
undertook his bold gamble without the benefit of a market survey to
evaluate the consumer demand for such an aircraft, relying instead on pure
intuition.
Inspired by a single-seat Swiss strike fighter
aircraft, the FFA P-16 (flown as a prototype in April 1955 but never put
into production), Lear recruited a group of Swiss aircraft designers and
engineers to transform the fighter's wing and basic airframe design into
the cornerstone of a revolutionary aircraft—originally designated as the
SAAC-23 but soon renamed as the Learjet 23 Continental.
Problems with suppliers and production tooling in
Switzerland compelled Lear to shift assembly of the new aircraft to
Wichita, Kansas (under the new name of Lear Jet Industries), where the
prototype Learjet 23 made its first flight on October 7, 1963, from
Wichita's Mid-Continent Airport, nine months after work had begun on the
project. The original Learjet accumulated 194 hours of flight time in 167
test flights until it was destroyed in June 1964 when it crashed at
takeoff with a Federal Aviation Administration pilot at the controls. The
cause of the accident was determined to be pilot error—retraction of the
jet's lift spoilers was overlooked. However, a second prototype Learjet 23
soon received formal FAA certification on July 31, 1964.
The Learjet 23 became the first small jet aircraft to
enter mass production as well as the first to be developed and financed by
a single individual. Chemical and Industrial Corporation of Cincinnati,
Ohio, took delivery of the first production Learjet on October 13, 1964,
one year after its initial flight.
The 43-foot (13-meter) long Learjet 23 had a wingspan
of 35.5 feet (10.8 meters), weighed 12,750 pounds (5,783 kilograms) empty,
and was powered by a pair of General Electric CJ610-4 turbojet engines.
The original Model 23 was a seven-passenger jet (later increased to nine)
including two pilots, fully pressurized with windshield and large cabin
windows fabricated from stretched and laminated acrylic plastic. It could
fly at a top speed of 564 miles per hour (908 kilometres per hour) with a
range of 1,875 miles (3,018 kilometres).
Lear authorized a series of demonstration flights to
showcase the aircraft's capabilities by establishing several new world
aviation records. On May 21, 1965, pilots John Conroy and Clay Lacey, with
five passengers on board, flew a Learjet 23 on a 5,005-mile
(8,055-kilometers) roundtrip from Los Angeles to New York and back in just
11 hours, 36 minutes. Seven months later, on December 14, 1965, pilots
Henry Beaird and Ronald Puckett, plus five observers, climbed to an
altitude of 40,000 feet (12,192 meters) in a Learjet 23 in 7 minutes, 21
seconds—the new jet demonstrating that it could climb to 10,000 feet
(3,048 meters) faster than an F-100 Super Sabre fighter jet!
The new business jet was an immediate commercial
success, with more than 100 sold by the end of 1965 at an initial price of
$540,000 each. Unfortunately, the original Learjet 23 also developed an
unwanted reputation as a very demanding and unforgiving aircraft for the
average pilot to fly—a major factor in the strategic decision to quickly
design a successor.
The undisputed marketing success of the Learjet 23
spurred development of a new aircraft with improved low-speed handling
characteristics, coupled with increased range, size, and speed.
Approximately 105 Learjet 23s were built from 1963 to 1966 until replaced
by the improved Model 24 (the 150th Learjet built), which made
its debut in March 1966.
The all-metal fuselage of the Learjet 24 was a
flush-riveted semi-monocoque design. It was equipped with wingtip fuel
tanks that added 364 extra gallons (1,378 liters) of fuel capacity and
featured the added attraction of a "T-tail" configuration.
Lear Jet again quickly embarked on a campaign to
demonstrate the improved aircraft's performance. In the span of just four
days, from May 23 to 26, 1966, the Learjet 24 became the first business
jet to circumnavigate the globe, travelling 22,993 miles (37,004
kilometres) in 50 hours and 20 minutes of flying time, establishing or
breaking 18 aviation world records during the flight. In all, 259 Learjet
24s were produced.
The high cruising altitude and long endurance flight
capability of the Learjet also made it an ideal aircraft for target
towing, photo-surveying, and high-altitude mapping. A number of foreign
Air Forces, including Bolivia, Ecuador, Argentina, Mexico, Peru, and
Yugoslavia, modified the corporate jet for military missions.
As the private jet market became more competitive, Lear
Jet had difficulties remaining profitable and substantial operating losses
accumulated over the first few years of production. In 1967, the company
was sold to Gates Rubber Company of Denver, Colorado, and renamed the
Gates Learjet Corporation; since 1990, the jets have been produced by the
Canadian corporation Bombardier under the name of Learjet, Inc.
The Learjet, both as a technological innovation and a
commercial success, is widely recognized as a trailblazer in the business
jet industry. Few products, before or since, enjoy its instant name
recognition.