The Bombardier CRJ/Mitsubishi CRJ or CRJ Series (for Canadair Regional Jet) is a family of regional jets introduced in 1991 by Bombardier Aerospace. The CRJ was manufactured by Bombardier Aerospace with the manufacturing of the first CRJ generation, the CRJ100/200 starting in 1991 and the second CRJ generation, the CRJ700 series starting in 1999.

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Bombardier CRJ series
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General information
TypeRegional jet
National originCanada
ManufacturerBombardier Aviation
StatusIn service
Primary usersSkyWest Airlines
Number built1,945[1]
History
Manufactured1991–2020
Introduction date19 October 1992 with Lufthansa CityLine[2]
First flight10 May 1991
Developed fromCanadair Challenger 600 series
VariantsBombardier CRJ100/200
Bombardier CRJ700 series
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The CRJ programme was acquired by Japanese corporation Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI RJ Aviation Group) in a deal that closed 1 June 2020. Bombardier subsequently completed the assembly of the order backlog on behalf of Mitsubishi.

Bombardier claims it is the most successful family of regional jets in the world.[3] Production ended in December 2020 after 1,945 were built.

Background

The family consists of the following aircraft generations and models/derivatives:

  • CRJ100/200
    • CRJ100 – maximum of 50 passenger seats
    • CRJ200 – maximum of 50 passenger seats, improved CF34-3B1 engine
      • CRJ440 – CRJ200 limited to 44 passenger seats
  • CRJ700 series
    • CRJ700 – maximum of 78 passenger seats
      • CRJ550 – CRJ700 limited to 50 passenger seats
    • CRJ900 – maximum of 90 passenger seats
      • CRJ705 – CRJ900 limited to 75 passenger seats
    • CRJ1000 – maximum of 104 passenger seats

Divestment

As of November 2018, following Bombardier's decisions to sell the CSeries to Airbus and the Q Series to De Havilland Canada, the company was looking at "strategic options" to return the CRJ to profitability. Analysts suspected that it might decide to exit the commercial aircraft market altogether and refocus on business aircraft.[4][5] That prediction came to pass on 25 June 2019, when a deal was announced to sell the CRJ programme to Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the parent company of Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation.[6] Mitsubishi had a historic interest in the CRJ programme, having sounded out risk-sharing options with Bombardier, and were at one point expected to take a stake in its SpaceJet venture during the 1990s.[7][8] Bombardier ceased new sales and announced that production of the CRJ would continue at Mirabel until the current order backlog was complete.[9] The deal was to include the type certificate for the CRJ series; Bombardier worked with Transport Canada to separate the CRJ certificate from that of the Challenger.[10]

Closure of the deal was confirmed on 1 June 2020, with Bombardier's service and support activities transferred to a new Montreal-based company, MHI RJ Aviation Group.[11][12] MHI RJ has not renamed the aircraft, and its website referred simply to the CRJ Series.[13][14]

The final Bombardier CRJ to be produced, a CRJ900, finished production and was delivered to SkyWest Airlines on 28 February 2021.[15]

In 2021, Mitsubishi investigated restarting production on the CRJ550, a variant of the CRJ700 limited to 50 passenger seats, similar to the nominal seating capacity of the 100/200 models. Restarting production would involve building a new plant, as the former plant is now making Airbus A220s, and taking the tooling out of storage. However, as of March 2024, Mitsubishi has not pursued a restart.[16][17][18]

Specifications

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Cimber Air CRJ-200
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CRJ-700 (top) and CRJ-900 (bottom)
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Air Nostrum CRJ-1000
More information Variant, CRJ100 ...
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References

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