All Airframers articles – Page 1379

  • News

    Profits on a plateau

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole In the final analysis, the airline industry's financial results for 1998 were once again a mix of the encouraging and the depressingly familiar. Overall profitability came out at almost identical levels to the year before. The industry should perhaps take heart from that fact, given the dire ...

  • News

    Passenger seat restraint

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole Continuing fall-out from Asia's economic crisis reverberated around markets last year as is clear from the latest passenger airline rankings. But it is concerns over falling yields rather than traffic that are now taking centre stage. Last year posed something of a test of resolve for airline ...

  • News

    Mergers

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Turnkey Boeing 737 operator Eastwind Airlines of New Jersey has been put up for sale by owner UM Holdings, with an asking price of $10 million, including its operating certificate. TRW Aeronautical Systems' Lucas Aerospace division has finalised its purchase of German engine systems company Pierburg Luftfahrtgerate Union from Kolbenschmidt ...

  • News

    Marketplace

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Korean Air has taken delivery of the first two of six Pratt & Whitney PW4098-powered Boeing 777-300s it has on order. Two more -300s are due next year, and the final two in 2001 and 2002. The deliveries are about 12 months later than originally scheduled, partly due to a ...

  • News

    Win some, lose some

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Israel has selected the Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-229 to power 50 Lockheed Martin F-16Is ordered earlier this year. The contract includes industrial co-operation between P&W and Israeli defence companies and is valued at about $220 million. Deliveries begin in 2002. Egypt has meanwhile selected the rival General Electric F110-229 for ...

  • News

    Mind games

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Twenty months into one of the most controversial accident investigations of the decade, SilkAir has told the world that a pilot who apparently intended to kill himself and 103 others was "by the best standards of the industry-fit to fly". To put it charitably, this demonstrates a disturbing readiness ...

  • News

    KLM uk eyes low-cost route

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Lois Jones LONDON Fierce competition from low-cost carriers at its London Stansted base is forcing KLM uk to rethink its market position and restructure. Launching its own no-frills service is one possibility. The KLM regional subsidiary is to axe six unprofitable routes from 12 September and streamline its fleet. The ...

  • News

    PAL enters cargo venture talks with Lufthansa

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/SINGAPORE Struggling Philippine Airlines (PAL) is talking to Lufthansa about a joint cargo service between Manila and Frankfurt, which could mark PAL's return to Europe after a year away. According to PAL, the proposed block space agreement will come into effect on 1 November, with PAL buying ...

  • News

    CAL goes on spending spree

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Nicholas Ionides ATI SINGAPORE Taiwan's China Airlines (CAL) has finalised a long-awaited fleet renewal plan with $5.6 billion worth of orders for up to 36 aircraft from Airbus Industrie and Boeing. The split order, the largest in the history of Taiwanese civil aviation, covers firm orders for 13 Boeing ...

  • News

    Better times beckon in the South Pacific

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    David Knibb SEATTLE Airlines of the South Pacific islands have had one of their best years ever, led by Fiji's Air Pacific. Two of the region's chronic losers are showing profits, but the scene at Air Niugini stays turbulent. Fijian flag carrier Air Pacific had a record year, posting ...

  • News

    Philippines toughs out 'protectionist' attack

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Nicholas Ionides ATI SINGAPORE The Philippine Government has come under attack for growing protectionism in its air services policy, but mounting criticism appears only to have toughened its stance. Accusations of protectionism were lodged by Taiwan in July when its national carrier, China Airlines (CAL), was hit with a 30-day ...

  • News

    American opens door for Latin alliance

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    David Knibb SEATTLE A common alliance with a US partner has spawned a ground-breaking venture between two Latin American airlines. LanChile and Aerolineas Argentina have launched an air cargo joint venture, citing their common connections with American Airlines as a catalyst for the deal. "The relationship with American Airlines ...

  • News

    KLM, Alitalia produce the goods with cargo deal

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Peter Conway LONDON Airline alliances tend to generate much rhetoric about cargo partnerships, but little action. However, the tie-up between KLM and Alitalia, announced in July, looks set to be different. Cargo departments within the two carriers have already gone further in their planning than KLM's long-running tie-up with Northwest. ...

  • News

    Airports

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Brussels Zaventem Airport is planning to spend BFr1 billion ($26 million) to build a new air traffic control tower. This has become necessary because the view of one of the runways from the existing tower will be obstructed when terminal construction work is completed. The new 75m (246ft)-high tower will ...

  • News

    Aloha Airlines sets its sights on first services to US mainland

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Aloha Airlines plans to start services to the US West Coast next February, marking the first time in the airline's 53-year history that it has ventured away from its Hawaii-based Pacific inter-island network. The new services will include two daily round-trip flights between Hawaii and Oakland, ...

  • News

    Reflectone aims for closer Airbus link

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Reflectone has completed delivery of four Airbus A320 full flight simulators, and is discussing a possible closer alliance with the European consortium. Three of the Level D-standard devices have been installed in the new Airbus Training Centre in Miami Springs, Florida, where they will be used to provide flight and ...

  • News

    Regional aid ruled illegal

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The long and bitter dispute between Brazil and Canada over government subsidies for regional jet sales has been settled by the World Trade Organisation (WTO), which has upheld earlier rulings that such activities are illegal. An appeal panel's investigation found that original WTO rulings were correct and ordered that ...

  • News

    AB Airlines becomes a low-fares casualty

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Industry analysts have been keenly awaiting a first casualty among the new generation of low-cost airlines. The waiting was finally over last month as London-based AB Airlines went into administration. AB has been around since late 1993, but came to the fore a year ago as it made a ...

  • News

    AAIC calls police in SilkAir 'suicide' crash

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/SINGAPORE Indonesian accident investigators say they have contacted police after formally confirming that a SilkAir Boeing 737-300 may have been deliberately crashed by one of the crew in December 1997, near Palembang, Sumatra. All 104 passengers and crew on board the 737, which was operating flight MI185 ...

  • News

    Future unclear as MD-90 TrunkLiner is almost ready to fly

    1999-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/SINGAPORE The first of only two Boeing MD-90-30Ts that will be built under licence in China is nearing completion, but doubts hang over the future of the aircraft and its factory. According to Boeing, flight testing of the first aircraft will start soon, with delivery to Shenzhen ...