Aircraft Technical Data

Dassault Mystère/Falcon 20 & 200

Details
Country of Origin France
Type Mid size corporate jet and multirole utility transport
History

The Mystère or Falcon 20 and 200 family remains Dassault's most successful business jet program thus far, with more than 500 built. <p>Development of the original Mystère 20 traces back to a joint collaboration between Sud Aviation (which later merged into Aerospatiale) and Dassault in the late 1950s. Prototype construction began in January 1962, leading to a first flight on May 4 1963. This first prototype shared the production aircraft's overall configuration, but differed in the powerplant. The prototype was initially powered by 14.7kN (3300lb) Pratt & Whitney JT12A8 turbojets, whereas production Mystère 20s (or Falcon 20s outside France) were powered with General Electric CF700s. The first GE powered 20 flew on New Year's Day 1965. Throughout the type's production life Aerospatiale remained responsible for building the tail and rear fuselage. The Falcon 200 is a re-engined development of the 20 which Dassault first publicly announced at the 1979 Paris Airshow. A converted Falcon 20 served as the prototype, and first flew with the new Garrett ATF 3-6A-4C engines on April 30 1980. French DGAC certification was awarded in June 1981. <p>Apart from the Garrett engines, the Falcon 200 (initially the 20H) introduced greater fuel tankage and much longer range, redesigned wing root fairings and some systems and equipment changes. The 200 remained in production until 1988. <p>The Guardian is a maritime surveillance variant of the Falcon 200 sold the French navy (as the Gardian) and the US Coast Guard (HU-2J). AlliedSignal offers a Falcon 20 re-engine program with its TFE731 turbofan. More than 100 Falcon 20s have now been re-engined with 21.1kN (4750lb) TFE731-5ARs or -5BRs

Powerplants 20 - Two 20.0kN (4500lb) General Electric CF7002D2 turbofans. 200 - Two 23.1kN (5200lb) Garrett ATF 36A4Cs. In Falcon 20F-5 Retrofit Two Garret TFE731-5BR-2AC 21.1kN (4750lb)
Performance 20 - Max cruising speed 863km/h (466kt), economical cruising speed 750km/h (405kt). Service ceiling 42,000ft. Range with max fuel and reserves 3300km (1780nm). 200 - Max cruising speed 870km/h (470kt), economical cruising speed 780km/h (420kt). Service ceiling 45,000ft. Range with max fuel, eight passengers and reserves 4650km (2510nm). Falcon 20F-5 High Speed Cruise M.80 Max M.82 Range 2300nm
Weights 20 - Empty equipped 7530kg (16,600lb), max takeoff 13,000kg (28,660lb). 200 - Empty equipped 8250kg (18,290lb), max takeoff 14,515kg (32,000lb). Falcon 20F-5 MTOW 13.800kg (30350lb)
Dimensions Wing span 16.32m (53ft 7in), length 17.15m (56ft 3in), height 5.32m (17ft 6in). Wing area 41.0m2 (441.33sq ft).
Capacity Flightcrew of two. Typical main cabin seating for between eight and 10 passengers, optionally for as many as 14 in a high density configuration.
Production Production ended in 1988 when the last Falcon 200 was delivered, by which time 38 200s and 476 20s (including HU-2Js) had been delivered. The last 20 was completed in late 1983.
Related Links Dassault Mystère/Falcon 20 & 200

The backbone of this section is from the The International Directory of Civil Aircraft by Gerard Frawley and used with permission. To get your own copy of the book click here.