IAI Westwind


The IAI Westwind is a business jet initially produced by Aero Commander as the 1121 Jet Commander.
Powered by twin GE CJ610 turbojets, it first flew on January 27, 1963 and received its type certification on November 4, 1964, before the first delivery.
The program was bought by Israel Aircraft Industries in 1968, which stretched it slightly into the 1123 Westwind, and then re-engined it with Garrett TFE731 turbofans into the 1124 Westwind.
The MTOW aircraft can carry up to 8 or 10 passengers, and 442 were produced until 1987.

Development

Aero Commander

The Westwind was originally designed in the United States by Aero Commander as a development of its twin-propeller namesake aircraft, first flying on January 27, 1963 as the Aero Commander 1121 Jet Commander.
After successful testing, the aircraft was put into series production with deliveries to customers beginning in early 1965.
After initial testing of the prototype it was modified to production standard with an addition 2ft 6in to the fuselage length and increased payload and maximum weights. The second prototype first flew on 14 April 1964 which was followed by the first production aircraft in November 1964. Type approval was awarded by the FAA in November enabling the first customer delivery on 11 January 1965.
Shortly thereafter, Aero Commander was acquired by North American Rockwell. The Jet Commander created a problem, since Rockwell already had an executive jet of its own design, the Sabreliner, and could not keep both in production because of anti-trust laws. Therefore, the company decided to sell off the rights to the Jet Commander, which were purchased by IAI in 1968.

Israel Aircraft Industries

Jet Commander production amounted to 150 aircraft in the United States and Israel before IAI undertook a series of modifications to create the 1123 Westwind. These included stretching the fuselage and increased maximum takeoff, maximum landing, and maximum zero-fuel weights, with the wing modified to incorporate double-slotted flaps and drooped leading edges and tip tanks. The trimmable horizontal stabiliser was also modified to have increased span and more travel. Not long after the aircraft went into production, the original General Electric CJ610 turbojet engines were replaced by more fuel-efficient Garrett TFE731 turbofans There were also numerous airframe modifications, such as drooped leading edges on the wings, a dorsal fin, revised engine pylons and nacelles, and further increases in maximum takeoff, maximum landing, and maximum zero-fuel weights. With improvements to a number of onboard systems incorporated as well, these changes resulted in the 1124 Westwind delivered from 1976.
In 1976, in the wake of the terrorist takeover of the Savoy hotel in Tel Aviv, the Israeli Air Force decided to use the Westwind as the basis for a maritime patrol aircraft, which became known as the IAI Sea Scan. It had originally been developed to meet a requirement for the United States Coast Guard to replace the Grumman HU-16 Albatross. The Dassault Falcon was selected instead.
In 1980, deliveries of the Model 1124A commenced; modifications included a new wing centre-section and the addition of winglets to the tips. The revamped aircraft was called the Westwind II, replacing the original design in production. IAI built its last Westwind in 1987, after a total of 442 Jet Commanders and Westwinds had been built, switching production to the Astra.
By 2018, 1980s Westwind 1124s were priced from $300,000 to $700,000.

Design

The Jet Commander/Westwind was of broadly conventional business jet arrangement, with two engines mounted in nacelles carried on the rear fuselage. However the wings were mounted halfway up the fuselage instead of the typical low-wing arrangement of aircraft in this class.
At FL310 and, the 1124 burns per hour, and at.

Variants

ModelApprovedEnginesThrustMmoCeilingMTOWpaxfuelSerials
1121Nov 4, 1964CJ610-1/-50.76583-120
1121ASep 19, 1967CJ610-10.7658121-131
1121BApr 23, 1968CJ610-50.7658132-150
11238 Dec 1971CJ610-90.76510  36 built
112417 Mar 1976TFE-731-3-1G0.76510
1124AApr 17, 1980TFE-731-3-1G0.78510

The 1122 Type Certificate was cancelled, the two airplanes manufactured have been converted to model 1123.
The 1124N Sea Scan is a Maritime surveillance aircraft, the 1124 was renamed Westwind I after the introduction of the 1124A Westwind II.
The 1121C is an unofficial designation for 1121 aircraft modified under a Supplemental Type Certificate with an increased all-up weight available from 1971.
The 1123 Westwind was stretched by.

Operators

Civil operators

Military operators

Accidents and incidents

The Rockwell 1121 had 21 Hull-losses accidents causing 45 fatalities, and the IAI 1124 had 25 Hull-losses accidents causing 47 fatalities.
The latest, on March 29, 2020, an air ambulance operated by Lionair, caught fire and exploded during take off at Manila Airport, killing all five passengers and three crew.

Specifications (1124A Westwind II)