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Business Air News Bulletin
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Tamarack welcomes CitationJet winglet showdown
An Active Winglet-equipped Cessna CitationJet will be flown by 30-year pilot and aircraft owner Wick Zimmerman, and an unmodified flat-wing aircraft will be flown by Mike Laver, owner of Carolina Turbine Support.

Tamarack Aerospace has organised a fly-off between an unmodified CitationJet and a Tamarack-transformed CitationJet. The event has been set up as a real-world comparison between Tamarack Active Winglet performance on a Cessna CitationJet and a ‘flat-wing’ CitationJet without Active Winglets. The fly-off is scheduled to commence on 26 January from Portland, Maine to West Palm Beach, Florida. The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA) is documenting this weather-permitting event, with multimedia journalists aboard both aircraft. The National Aeronautic Association (NAA) will document the race for the potential setting of a record speed between this city pair in for this type of aircraft.

Tamarack CEO Nick Guida is confident in the Tamarack-transformed jet's ability to perform. “This will be the first fly-off comparing an Active Winglet aircraft and a flat-wing aircraft operating under the same conditions,” he shares. “Active Winglet mods on Citations can result in up to a 33 per cent fuel savings, depending on weather conditions and other variables, so the Active Winglet competitor may make the approximate 1,292-mile trip without a stop.”

The Active Winglet-equipped Cessna CitationJet (N44VS) will be flown by 30-year pilot and aircraft owner Wick Zimmerman, CEO and co-founder of Outside the Lines, an Anaheim, California headquartered design and build company specialising in bespoke water features and fountains. The unmodified flat-wing aircraft will be flown by aviation veteran Mike Laver, owner of Carolina Turbine Support, a Tamarack transformation centre and authorised Mitsubishi MU-2 service centre based in Aiken, South Carolina.

“The fly-off is very exciting. I'm going to do my best to win the race,” says Laver. ”This kind of race has never been done before, and it will put to rest once and for all any question about the value of these Active Winglet installations. I'll pay attention to how high and how fast the Active Winglet jet performs.”

“I am looking forward to the aviation community seeing how my Active Winglet equipped aircraft performs against the flat-wing,” adds Zimmerman, who reports several cross-country flights that have required multiple expensive and time-consuming fuel stops before he invested in Active Winglets. “Active Winglets also make a dramatic difference getting into and out of places that are high and hot,“ he continues. “For example, when we're operating out of Salt Lake City, the takeoff and climb is a game-changer. With Tamarack Active Winglets, we went straight up to 40,000 in just under 26 minutes. We were still climbing at 500-plus feet per minute when we levelled off. You could hear the controllers gasping.”

Tamarack Active Winglets are comprised of a wing extension, a winglet and an autonomous load alleviation system. The sustainable Active Winglet technology features an instantaneous and autonomous adjustment to turbulence, affording smoother and safer flights, quicker climbs, fewer stops, up to 33 per cent reduced fuel use and more stable approaches.

Laver decided to participate in the race before his Carolina Turbine Support business became a newly minted Tamarack transformation centre located in December last year.

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