Falcons fly demanding missions every day. Flying into short mountain airstrips, crossing oceans, and sometimes landing in near-zero/zero conditions. But Falcons also perform specialized roles for governments, medevac operators and scientific organizations. In fact, about 10 percent of the entire Falcon fleet are out there, day in and day out, supporting those vital missions.
What makes Falcons such good multi-missions aircraft? High flexibility, impressive payloads, robust construction, advanced flight controls, and an engineering team that can adapt them to unique requirements.
Dassault Aviation has delivered 200+ multi-mission aircraft in more than 40 countries.
Falcons used for signals intelligence (SIGINT) missions require complex systems integration. External sensors and onboard stations analyze radio traffic and radar emissions, and relay data to command centers on the ground. Dassault engineers have long experience in military customization and work closely with SIGINT system providers to integrate intelligence gathering systems into the airframe.
Falcons make excellent air ambulances, not only due to their high payload and long-range capabilities, but because they can access smaller airports that may be closest to patients needing urgent care. Moreover, the Dassault engineering organization has the experience and talent to transform them into advanced airborne intensive care units, when that level of life-saving technology is required.