VeritasJet™ models aircraft performance as a multi-dimensional, mission-dependent system rather than a single-metric ranking.
While traditional comparisons often emphasize range, real-world aircraft performance is defined by a combination of factors
including payload, runway capability, fuel efficiency, and cabin characteristics.
All scores are derived from structured performance data and normalized within aircraft categories using percentile ranking (CDF).
This allows consistent comparison across different aircraft types while preserving relative strengths and trade-offs.
Scores are computed directly from underlying performance data using a consistent mathematical framework.
No manual ranking or subjective adjustment is applied; results reflect the relative position of each aircraft within the dataset.
VeritasJet™ is formulated as a network-based operational utility model, where aircraft performance is evaluated in terms of
expected mission accessibility across a standardized global airport graph under realistic operational constraints.
While model design choices exist, all computations are deterministic, reproducible, and derived from physical and operational
constraints rather than subjective scoring or manual ranking adjustments.
The objective is not to identify a universally “best” aircraft, but to provide a data-driven framework that reflects how different
designs perform under varying operational constraints and mission profiles.
Developed from experience in aircraft advisory and performance evaluation.