All air transport news – Page 2275

  • News

    Lockheed Martin drops acquisition

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Douglas Barrie/LONDON Lockheed Martin has abandoned its attempt to acquire Northrop Grumman, exasperated with US Government opposition to its proposed $8.3 billion deal. After what has proved to be more than 12 months of fruitless negotiation, Lockheed Martin walked away from the planned acquisition on 16 July, describing ...

  • News

    Marketplace

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    -Continental Airlines has taken delivery of its first of 28 Boeing 737-800s. -Airtours International has confirmed its order for two additional Rolls-Royce Trent 700-powered A330-200s, bringing its orders for the type to four. The second batch will be delivered in the fourth quarter of 1999 for operation by Airtours' Danish ...

  • News

    More Asian carriers negotiate order deferrals

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Korean Air (KAL) and Singapore Airlines (SIA) are negotiating with Airbus Industrie and Boeing to defer up to 16 widebody aircraft due for delivery in 1999 and 2000, as Asia's economic downturn takes its toll on air traffic. Industry and airline sources suggest that KAL is ...

  • News

    Nuclear experts aid air safety

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Ian Sheppard/LONDON Sandia National Laboratories is helping the US Federal Aviation Administration to devise a new approach to airline safety which the FAA hopes will assist its 3,500 inspectors in tracking safety trends and predicting airline operating deficiencies. Calling on its knowledge from decades of systems engineering work ...

  • News

    P&W begins to assemble PW7000 prototype

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Pratt & Whitney is preparing to assemble the next Joint Technology Demonstrator Engine (JTDE), the XTE-66. The demonstrator, which will begin tests later this year, also forms an initial prototype of the next generation PW7000 fighter engine family. Like the XTE-66, the PW7000 family is planned around the XTC-66 core. ...

  • News

    Pacific ambitions

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/GUAM Below the warm, crystal-clear waters of Bikini Atoll lagoon lies the mammoth Second World War aircraft carrier USS Saratoga. Almost 270m long, she is bigger than the Titanic and is the world's largest diveable underwater wreck. Resting upright on the bottom, her bridge is a mere 12m below ...

  • News

    PAL rescue plan goes into extra time

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Philippine Airlines (PAL) has been given US and Philippine bankruptcy protection until the end of July, allowing the local Securities Exchange Commission (SEC)-appointed "rehabilitation committee" extra time to finalise and present a financial rescue plan. The troubled national carrier is temporarily shielded by the SEC from any claims made ...

  • News

    Pressure points

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    International pressure is mounting for the process of aircraft accident investigation to be opened up, just as it is increasing on those countries seen to be underperforming in airline safety. It is vital to understand the positive and negative effects of this pressure for transparency, however. Investigators themselves are ...

  • News

    Proteus confirms options to take Fairchild Dornier 728JETs

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Proteus Airlines, the fast-growing French carrier which is a launch customer for the Fairchild Dornier 328JET, has confirmed its commitment for 10 options on the 70-seat 728JET. It is also "positioned" on the yet-to-be-launched 90-seat version. The decision to move to larger aircraft is part of the airline's strategy ...

  • News

    TrunkLiner future lies in the balance as China nears decision

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    The future of the troubled Boeing MD-90 TrunkLiner programme is hanging in the balance with the Chinese Government expected to decide the fate of the programme shortly. Aviation Industries of China (AVIC) is facing the prospect of its second major setback in recent months after the collapse of the ...

  • News

    Virgin Express aims for Ireland

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Ian Sheppard/LONDON Brussels-based low-cost carrier Virgin Express will this month apply for a Republic of Ireland air operator's certificate (AOC). This will see the airline establish a new base in Ireland at a fraction of the cost of operating from Belgium. The airline says it has no intention ...

  • News

    Double standards

    1998-07-22T00:00:00Z

    Any remaining doubts that action on airline safety is needed in South Asia and Asia-Pacific have been dissolved by the accidents that occurred in the first six months of 1998. After the 2 February Cebu Pacific Air fatal accident, the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) broke its characteristic neutral silence ...

  • News

    Endevco sensor

    1998-07-15T15:58:00Z

    Endevco has introduced a new lightweight sensor for monitoring rotating components such as bearings. The Californian company, a subsidiary of the UK's Meggitt, says the output from its Isotron accelerometer, which costs $600, can be fed directly to recording equipment . Source: Flight International

  • News

    EC allows American/BA alliance in exchange for Heathrow slots

    1998-07-15T13:09:00Z

    Carriers on both sides of the Atlantic are stressing that there is still all to play for despite the European Commission's long-awaited ruling on the British Airways and Lufthansa transatlantic alliances. Major US airlines are already gearing up to lobby the US Department of Transportation to increase access to ...

  • News

    Honeywell airports

    1998-07-15T07:00:00Z

    Honeywell has acquired Daimler-Benz Aerospace's airport systems unit, a supplier of lighting products and landing systems. Honeywell Airport Systems already makes global positioning based ground vehicle tracking systems and the satellite landing system (SLS), which is set to become the world's first such system to win operational approval. In March, ...

  • News

    Aeropostal enters widebody world with A310s

    1998-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Venezuela's LAV Aeropostal has added its first widebodied types - two Airbus A310s - on lease from Airbus Industrie. The Latin American airline has concluded a deal to acquire two 11-year-old Pratt & Whitney PW4000-powered ex-Pan Am/ Delta Air Lines A310-300s on five-year leases from Airbus Industrie Leasing. Deliveries ...

  • News

    A310 seizure forces Afrique suspension

    1998-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Debt-laden Air Afrique has been forced to suspend its long-haul route network following the seizure of its four Airbus A310-300s by creditors. The Abidjan, Ivory Coast-based carrier, which is owned by 11 French-speaking West African nations and the French Government, has been struggling financially since the CFA Franc, the ...

  • News

    Bombardier rethinks turboprop marketing

    1998-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC Bombardier has acknowledged the need to rethink the marketing strategy for its de Havilland Dash 8 family as the growing success of regional jets makes selling turboprops airliners more difficult. "The road is going to be bumpy, as the excitement is around jets," says Bombardier ...

  • News

    Boeing catches up with 737 output

    1998-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Boeing is working its way through the backlog of Next Generation 737s built before last-minute modifications, including a revised horizontal stabiliser leading edge and novel upward opening emergency exits, which were required for US and European certification. Twenty of the 28 737-700s completed before certification have now been delivered with ...

  • News

    BR715 clears last certification hurdle before 717 flight

    1998-07-15T00:00:00Z

    BMW Rolls-Royce has completed the last major test of the BR715 turbofan for the Boeing 717 before engine certification, scheduled for September. The full engine fan blade-off test involved releasing the fan blade by detonating an explosive charge at the root, with the fan running at maximum rotational speed. ...