Apparently Alenia & Airbus having been having a bit of a slanging match at the Singapore Airshow regarding their respective aircraft, the C27J and the C295. In Singapore, Alenia and Airbus Trade Barbs Over Transport Capability | Defense News | defensenews.com Anyway near the end of the article it is mentioned that the Portuguese Air Force C295 on display at Singapore is heading to New Zealand for demonstrations. Now I am of the opinion that the C295 does not meet the requirements of NZDF, because of its short legs, low cargo capacity and it being underpowered.
The article cites some Peruvian Air Force evaluation documents regarding their evaluation of the C295 and the C27J. It notes the cost of moving freight between Lima and Juliaca and the author kindly converts the Peruvian currency into US dollars (for the C27J) being US$70,000. I wanted to see what the C295 cost was in US dollars, so as a check I converted the C27J cost (137,489 nuevo soles) into US dollars using XE Currency Converter - Live Rates which converted to US$48,772.41. When I converted the C295 cost it came to US$72,052.37, so I think the author made a typo. The exchange rate I used was 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 0.354737 USD and this was Mid-market rates: 2014-02-13 07:11 UTC. So based on the Peruvian figures cited, the C295 would take 18 hrs 20 min longer, to move 2.6 tons less, at a cost of US$23,279.96 more than the C27J over the same route (457 nautical miles). If those figures are correct, even at a 20% higher procurement cost, the C27J would be a far wiser and more economical procurement in the longer term. That could be attractive to the bean counters.
Edit: Update. According to Flight Global the C295 will be in NZ to perform a maritime patrol demonstration for NZDF. http://www.flightglobal.com/news/ar...e-unit-targets-new-sales-then-airlift-395850/
The article cites some Peruvian Air Force evaluation documents regarding their evaluation of the C295 and the C27J. It notes the cost of moving freight between Lima and Juliaca and the author kindly converts the Peruvian currency into US dollars (for the C27J) being US$70,000. I wanted to see what the C295 cost was in US dollars, so as a check I converted the C27J cost (137,489 nuevo soles) into US dollars using XE Currency Converter - Live Rates which converted to US$48,772.41. When I converted the C295 cost it came to US$72,052.37, so I think the author made a typo. The exchange rate I used was 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 0.354737 USD and this was Mid-market rates: 2014-02-13 07:11 UTC. So based on the Peruvian figures cited, the C295 would take 18 hrs 20 min longer, to move 2.6 tons less, at a cost of US$23,279.96 more than the C27J over the same route (457 nautical miles). If those figures are correct, even at a 20% higher procurement cost, the C27J would be a far wiser and more economical procurement in the longer term. That could be attractive to the bean counters.
Edit: Update. According to Flight Global the C295 will be in NZ to perform a maritime patrol demonstration for NZDF. http://www.flightglobal.com/news/ar...e-unit-targets-new-sales-then-airlift-395850/