Surf Air

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Surf Air
Surf Air logo.svg
IATA ICAO Callsign
None URF SURFAIR
Founded2013 (2013)
Commenced operationsJune 13, 2013 (2013-06-13)
Focus cities
Fleet size12
Destinations11
HeadquartersHawthorne, California, USA
Websitewww.surfair.com
Previous logo

Surf Air is a Los Angeles-based aviation marketplace that offers members access to private charter flights for a fixed monthly fee.[1][2] Many Surf Air flights are operated by Advanced Air which flies a fleet of Pilatus PC-12 aircraft.[3]

Service areas[]

As of March 2019, the company serves five California airports: Hawthorne (HHR), Oakland (OAK), San Carlos (SQL), Santa Barbara (SBA), and Truckee (TRK).[4]

In June 2017, Surf Air announced its acquisition of Texas-based air travel provider RISE, expanding service across Texas. They now service flights to and from Austin Bergstrom, San Antonio International, Dallas Love Field, Houston Hobby, and David Wayne Hooks in Northwest Houston. Dallas entrepreneur Nick Kennedy, who founded RISE, will serve as president of the Texas and southeast region for Surf Air.[5]

In July 2017, Surf Air started operations in Europe, debuting its maiden trip from London to Ibiza.[6] Surf Air in Europe will operate under the same subscription model where customers pay a monthly fee starting from £1,750 ($2,180) for unlimited travel.[7] Surf Air will start connecting London to Zurich during the week and Ibiza in Spain at weekends.[8] It has plans to add routes to Cannes, Munich, Luxembourg and Milan.[7] Surf Air currently has one Embraer Phenom 300 private jet in its fleet in Europe. The company plans to feature dozens more aircraft within the next three to five years.[6] In October 2017, Surf Air began offering a membership that provides all-you-can-fly in both the European and US networks for £3,150.[9] In March 2018, Surf Air announced its European arm would launch 10 new routes, mainly focused around Zurich, Switzerland and Milan, Italy. New cities being served by Surf Air will include Brussels, Basel, Geneva, Munich, Vienna, and Luxembourg.[citation needed]

History[]

The company was founded by David Eyerly, Wade Eyerly, Peter Bi, Scott Porter, Cory Cozzens and Reed Farnsworth. Surf Air emerged in 2012 from MuckerLab, a Los Angeles-based business incubator. Angel investors included Paige Craig, Aviv Grill and Bill Woodward. A Series A round of venture capital was completed in June 2013 with investment from Anthem Venture Partners, NEA, TriplePoint Capital, Siemer Ventures, Baroda Ventures, Gilad Elbaz, Eytan Elbaz, Rick Caruso, Jeffrey Stibel, Mike Walsh, and actor Jared Leto. The company has raised at least $9 million from investors, including $500,000 from VegasTechFund (a venture capital fund launched by Tony Hsieh), Velos Partners, and Base Ventures. In August 2014, Surf Air raised $8 million in new equity funding and secured a $65 million loan to place a five-year order for 15 new Pilatus PC-12 planes, with an option to buy 50 more over that timespan. In February 2014, Wade Eyerly stepped down as CEO and was replaced by former Frontier Airlines CEO Jeff Potter. At the time, the company had about 430 members. Wade Eyerly, Cory Cozzens and Reed Farnsworth formed Beacon Air in 2015 but shut it down in 2016.

Surf Air announced the sale of its 2,000th membership in September 2015, 2,500th in December 2015 and 3,000th in June 2016. As of October 2017 it has 5,000 customers.[7] In May 2016, Surf Air received 2 additional aircraft phasing out their older legacy PC-12s. On May 16, 2017, Surf Air flight operations were transitioned to Encompass Aviation and has its principal base of operations in Hawthorne California. Sudhin Shahani took over as Chief Executive of Surf Air in 2017 after Jeff Potter exited.[10]

As of 2017, charges started from $1,950 per month plus a $1,000 signup fee.[11]

Encompass Aviation has quietly completed the take over of all Surf Air operations retaining all its pilots and aircraft. Encompass is based in Hawthorne California and is a FAA Part 135 operator.[12]

In February 2018, Surf Air launched on-demand charter enabling customers to charter the entire aircraft, including airplanes not in the Surf Air fleet.[citation needed]

In June 2018, it was reported the IRS had put liens totaling nearly $2.5 million against Surf Air for unpaid Federal Excise Tax. At the same time, Surf Air said it was changing operators for California flights to Advanced Air Charter from Encompass. Encompass said Surf Air was behind on payments due for operating flights for Surf Air members.[citation needed]

In October 2018, Surf Air announced a new membership program - Surf Air Express - targeting less frequent travelers with an annual membership fee and the payments for each flight.[13]

In December 2018, Surf Air's European arm went into liquidation.[14] Customers lost $272,000 in deposits and membership fees, according to final accounts from the liquidation.[citation needed]

In February 2020, announced the acquisition of Blackbird. With the acquisition, the company created Surf Air Mobility Corporation.[15]

Fleet[]

A Pilatus PC-12 of Surf Air at San Carlos Airport (December 2014)

As of June 2016, the Surf Air fleet consists of the following aircraft:

Surf Air fleet
Aircraft Active Orders Passengers Notes
Pilatus PC-12 NG 12 15+50[16] 8 N809SA, N816SA, N817SA, N819SA, N821SA, N824SA, N828SA, N829SA, N849SA, N850SA, N853SA, N874SA

Orders are NG version, 15 orders and 50 options.

Certification[]

Surf Air does not own or operate any aircraft. All flights arranged by Surf Air for its members are performed by independent, third party FAA-licensed and DOT-registered air carriers.[17]

Noise complaints[]

Residents from around San Francisco Bay Area have complained of excessive noise caused by Surf Air.[18][19] They have formed a group named Calm The Skies.[20] San Mateo County has acknowledged the noise issue caused by Surf Air. Part of the County solution is to introduce an arrival procedure called "Bayside Visual Approach" that underwent testing in 2016,[21] which shifts flights and noise from San Mateo County to the city of Sunnyvale in neighboring Santa Clara County. A curfew has also been discussed in addition to other measures to mitigate the noise.[22][23]

References[]

  1. ^ "Surf Air's Ampaire Acquisition Could Speed Up Hybrid-Electric Aviation | Aviation Week Network". aviationweek.com.
  2. ^ "Surf Air Mobility agrees to purchase US company Ampaire". www.aerospace-technology.com.
  3. ^ Thurber, Matt. "Advanced Air Takes Over Surf Air Flying". Aviation International News.
  4. ^ "Surf Air 2019 California Schedule" (PDF). Retrieved March 18, 2019.
  5. ^ "Dallas startup Rise bought by California's Surf Air as chase for business travelers ascends". dallasnews.com. 7 June 2017.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b "Surf Air Now Offers Unlimited Flights on Private Jets Through Europe - Architectural Digest". architecturaldigest.com.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c A.W. (10 October 2017). "All-you-can-fly membership models are slowly catching on". The Economist.
  8. ^ "Surf Air Will Take Its Subscription Airline Model to Europe in May". fortune.com.
  9. ^ "Will Californian flying club Surf Air take off in the UK?". The Independent. 17 September 2018.
  10. ^ "JOINING THE CLUB" (PDF). Aviation International News.
  11. ^ "California's Private Air Travel Membership - Surf Air - Surf Air". Surf Air.
  12. ^ Trautvetter, Chad. "Encompass 'Quietly' Takes Over Surf Air Cali Flights". Aviation International News. Retrieved 2021-03-01.
  13. ^ https://robbreport.com/motors/aviation/surf-air-express-semi-private-2824594/
  14. ^ https://document-api-images-prod.s3.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/docs/TgwrrvvASqj4lntzuKXk_LGc6vjPmB9tYQqqhg1qAx8/application-pdf?X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Content-Sha256=UNSIGNED-PAYLOAD&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAWRGBDBV3CFNVUXUH%2F20190211%2Feu-west-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Date=20190211T160653Z&X-Amz-Expires=60&X-Amz-Security-Token=FQoGZXIvYXdzEFAaDIEISRPxd4mk0oDigCK3A%2BsDDwrWjE%2BHVigmWS6LbpY7ZXQ9E6QwPrvkXmayfowT1kGzaeCeasRWPEnlD0ErQTn6%2BqiiCYjWOvGjLeXtNJiks%2Fg4kTgN3G%2BQb9mmm6ydazBOykS21tAQKHHc23iNileINbQRey2JOqeWQaxBgVpwfj7V3hb0MB2eH23JKsCGJia3ooUmlfZoa5n1IZSRCbjU2o4oapuAVtZAhKnXpPuXg%2FbZ87Y7O9ISQj3Kw0K8i%2BUrF4vzs606NPKncGPlbfP6a2uWDeRkC1KZ%2F9ek4Vxs85Ed3MKtw1YnMyjs6q%2BKDPt059H8awGPX2h0l9Ne6MVV6M%2BRZn737OU9hZo4v0%2BJst7GYHN9zeBvRZUk7nvthPfFT0SiapjD0XyhOJ%2BMdfMJK2szxyZ5vYavoVTrXymV982rF3sSW6%2FGg2OE8E2gE8rRQtw9IlbQ2X6WoTwe4pdKWkCM%2Bn665WGyEJjqHYVci%2BGbMzq4stNnDZJYSz7lgE4jHnlBhmC0GnkMiXaVrScy9K%2FXTHpqmlFrjonld4zujBF5S0Gr95JyWg1IIB%2Bdi7UATlvqoF8uzEA4%2FTCI%2BAHkaGtr78Eo%2BISG4wU%3D&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Signature=a9627147a1b4d72dd933638b6cfdf6822da34c6a2c652256fa2a4085e7dc25b3
  15. ^ "Surf Air Announces Acquisition Of Aviation Marketplace BlackBird". finance.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  16. ^ "California's Surf Air orders 15+50 Pilatus PC-12NGs". ch-aviation.com. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  17. ^ "Legal". Surf Air. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  18. ^ "Calm the Skies mounts protest against Surf Air at San Carlos Airport". The Mercury News. June 21, 2017.
  19. ^ "Protesters at San Carlos Airport complain of Surf Air noise". The Almanac. June 18, 2017.
  20. ^ "Calm The Skies". Calm The Skies Organization.
  21. ^ "Federal Aviation Administration approves Surf Air route to take planes over Bay". Palo Alto Online. June 23, 2017.
  22. ^ "Board of Supervisors to Consider Noise Abatement Solutions at San Carlos Airport | County Manager's Office". cmo.smcgov.org. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
  23. ^ "County may put lid on 'noisy aircraft' at San Carlos Airport". The Almanac.

External links[]

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