Daher Touts TBM Charter Duty
The airframer believes the speedy turboprop single makes an ideal introduction to private aviation
California-based Part 135 charter provider Mountain Lion Aviation was so impressed by the TBM 930 on display at NBAA '17, that they brought it home with them as a souvenir. The speedy turboprop single has since racked up 430 flight hours, and carried 475 passengers on 300 flights on its way to becoming a favorite platform in the company's fleet.

Daher Aircraft (Booth 5079, Static ISD05) highlighted the first commercial operator of the airframer’s TBM 930 this week at NBAA 2018. Truckee, California-based Part 135 charter provider Mountain Lion Aviation acquired the aircraft that was exhibited by Daher at the static display at last year’s NBAA show, and since then the operator has notched 430 flight hours in the turboprop single on 300 flights that carried 475 passengers.


“We focus on a small, elite group of clientele that really is used to the private level of aviation and we provide that for them on demand,” said Devin Noe, the operator’s chief possibilities officer. “We fly that plane nonstop to Chicago from Truckee, we go to Dallas. Our clients just love it, and it has really opened doors for us with operating costs to get people into private aviation.” She added that the aircraft allows the company to get into all the smaller airports, with runways under 3,000 feet.


“We salute the TBM 930’s successful charter introduction by Mountain Lion Aviation, which has accumulated an impressive first year of activity,” said Daher Aircraft president Nicolas Chabbert, adding that at present 10 charter firms around the world operate 17 TBMs. “This is clear indication that our very fast turboprop has an important role to play in the point-to-point air charter market.”


The French aircraft manufacturer has thus far delivered 248 TBM 900 series airplanes—the TBM 900, 910 and 930—and its order book currently holds another 266. The entire 900-series TBM fleet has logged 1.6 million flight hours, with more than 700 in the North American market and 141 based in Europe.


With direct operating costs of $2.48 per nautical mile, the manufacturer sees the aircraft as an ideal entry-level business aviation platform. “The one thing that is still hanging is we need to get the market educated to single-engine operations,” said Chabbert.


He noted the company is further increasing its digital presence through its Me & My TBM application, with 43 aircraft currently enrolled. According to the company, it will eventually provide interconnectivity with other services, through a virtual assistant, for functions such as transferring flight data to the service center, flight operations, or other pilots, flight planning, fuel and ground service scheduling, and even booking car service and hotels in the destination city.


Daher plans to link its TBM Care proactive data analytics platform through the app as well, allowing the company to perform diagnostic tracking and proactively prevent problems.