Diamonds Double Down If investment boldness were measured on a scale of one to 10, the Cirrus line would rate about a seven while Diamonds foray into the diesel market with the Thielert-powered Twin Star would inch out there toward the ledge at a solid 11. You have only to look at the particulars to understand why this is so. When Diamond announced the Twin Star at the Berlin Airshow in 2002, it was proposing not only a new airframe, but one powered by a new technology engine adapted from an automotive design, a strategy that hasnt succeeded in the world of certified airplanes, although the idea has made inroads in the homebuilt segment. As we go to press this month, the chickens have, to repurpose the
This may or may not matter to owners, but Diamond clearly isn’t getting bogged down in the details. While it works to mollify some angry owners-which it must do-the company has plans to essentially double down the diesel bet. In late May, again at the Berlin Airshow, it was expected to unveil its own diesel engine, the so-called Austro line, to replace the Thielert products in Diamond and presumably other airplanes. By modern aerospace standards, this is utterly Carnegiean in its vertical boldness. No one does this sort of thing anymore. They juggle cellphone calls to a dozen vendors and then get twisted off when the vendors don’t deliver.
This strategy owes to two things, I think. Diamond principal Christian Dries is fed up with engine makers who don’t service what they sell and develop new products and he has a crystal clear vision of a future that doesnt include avgas tankers. There’s simply no way around this so as we bump uncertainly into the future, Dries knows that Jet A will drive it and sooner or later, someone is going to succeed with these engines. There’s little choice, really. This is no time for Timid Timmy at the helm.
Further stacking the chips in Diamonds favor is that it alone has the most diesel experience and this momentum counts for more than anything else. Yes, there are competitors-SMA, DeltaHawk, Lycoming, Continental, Wilksch, Powerplant Developments-but with the exception of SMA, all of these are startups with field experience that doesnt approach the Diamond/Thielert venture, which has hundreds of airplanes and thousands of flying hours behind it. Through painful, expensive experience, Diamond has learned what breaks and what doesnt and what sort of field support these engines will need. Its competitors have no idea. I don’t know if this means Diamonds double-down gamble will work or not. But despite the stumbles, its still way ahead of everyone else and its going to be fascinating to watch as Diamond untangles itself from Thielert and pushes it up with Austro.
-Paul Bertorelli