All air transport news – Page 2364

  • News

    GE changes CF34 containment system after test

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    General Electric plans to test a redesigned containment system for the CF34-8C1 engine being developed for the Canadair CRJ700 after earlier fan-rig tests revealed potential flaws. The test is expected to take place at the company's Ruston Gas Turbines site in the UK in September. In spite of ...

  • News

    Dasa's Airbus conversion orderbook expands

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Daimler-Benz Aerospace (Dasa) Airbus will subcontract six Airbus A300B4 cargo conversions to its French partner Sogerma in 1998, as its orderbook swells and it seeks additional conversion capacity. The company expects its A300B4 conversion to be certificated by mid-September. It has recently taken orders and commitments for a ...

  • News

    Garuda take-off abort was 'a mistake'

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Japan's Aircraft Accident Investigation Commission (AAIC) is reportedly set to blame the pilot for the June 1996 fatal crash of a Garuda Indonesia McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 at Fukuoka, southern Japan. Japanese newspaper reports say that the AAIC investigators have concluded that the captain incorrectly decided to abort the ...

  • News

    Continental power

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Rolls-Royce has received a $75 million order for RB.211-535E4B engines to power five Continental Airlines Boeing 757s, the first of which is due to be delivered in June 1998. Continental has also placed a contract with Rolls-Royce Canada for the repair and overhaul of the engines of its 21-strong 757 ...

  • News

    SAS postpones decision on replacements for 767 fleet

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    The decision by SAS on a possible replacement for its long-haul fleet of 14 Boeing 767s is now not expected until 1998. A final decision could run into 1999 as the airline looks hard at the cost justification for the investment. The Scandinavian airline expects to take 15-20 ...

  • News

    Prospect of sell-off looms for Air Niugini

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Papua New Guinea's incoming finance minister Roy Yaki has confirmed that the Government is "seriously looking" at privatising Air Niugini, which he describes as being in "a dire financial situation", and surviving on "daily cash takings". He also confirms reports that the previous PNG Government had "-received a ...

  • News

    French cabinet nears decision on aerospace privatisations

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/paris The French Government has promised to reveal its decision on the futures of Aerospatiale and Thomson-CSF before the end of September, and has said that the creation of an Airbus company should be a "priority". The future of the two state-owned aerospace giants has ...

  • News

    Prime suspect

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Boeing says that it may be late delivering some aircraft this year, because neither it nor its suppliers can keep up with its delivery schedule. Rolls-Royce says that its results are not as good as they should have been because it is working too much overtime and because its suppliers ...

  • News

    South Korea considers plan to extend production of F-16s

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE A proposal to extend licence-production of the Lockheed Martin F-16C/D Korean Fighter Programme (KFP) appears to be gaining support, as budgetary pressure grows for the follow-on F-X fighter project to be delayed. A squeeze on South Korean defence expenditure is forcing the ministry of ...

  • News

    More than collision avoidance

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Harry Hopkins/LONDON An unplanned-for side-effect of the fitting of the traffic-alert and collision- avoidance system (TCAS) to airliners - compulsory already in the USA, and shortly to be so in Europe - is that pilots can have a much greater awareness of the positions of other aircraft around ...

  • News

    Maturing nicely

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/Fort Worth Risk will be a deciding factor in who wins the competition to develop the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF). An unprecedented effort is under way, therefore, funded by government and industry, to reduce the risk attached to technologies judged critical to meeting the affordability and performance ...

  • News

    Boeing fights to stay on schedule

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOSANGELES Boeing is temporarily transferring "several hundred" assembly workers from the 767 line to the adjacent 747 line as part of an effort to stave off impending delivery delays, which may result in the late handover of at least one of each model this year. ...

  • News

    easyJet considers new 737 and A320 in fleet-expansion plans

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    easyJet has expanded its plans for the acquisition of new Boeing 737s, and is now considering the Next Generation -700, as well as an offer of A320s from Airbus. The company is in final negotiations and says that a firm order should be placed soon. The Luton, UK-based ...

  • News

    Japan Airlines sells DC-10-40 fleet to Omega-led consortium

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPOREMax Kingsley-Jones/LONDON An Omega Air-led consortium has reached an agreement to purchase Japan Airlines' (JAL) entire fleet of 20 McDonnell Douglas DC-10-40s, for sale or lease and possible conversion into freighters. NI Aircraft Leasing, a subsidiary of Japan's Nissho Iwai, has acquired the rights to ...

  • News

    Klimov holds MiG-29 engine talks in Iran

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Russian engine design bureau Klimov is in negotiations with Iran for a licence-production agreement for its RD-33 engine, which powers the MAPO MIG MiG-29 Fulcrum. Senior officials from MAPO MIG, of which Klimov now forms a part, confirm that "an RD-33 engine licence-manufacturing agreement in Iran" is being ...

  • News

    World 'ignores' life-saving equipment

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    The Korean Air (KAL) Boeing 747-300 fatal crash at Guam on 6 August has highlighted the need for use of minimum safe-altitude warning (MSAW) systems at airports worldwide, says the Flight Safety Foundation (FSF). There was a fault in the Guam MSAW software when KAL's 747 hit a ...

  • News

    SASCommuter confirms selection of 15 Dash-8 400s

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    SASCOMMUTER confirms that it plans to sign a $350 million deal for 15 Bombardier de Havilland Dash 8-400 turboprops, plus 18 options, representing the largest single order to date for the Canadian manufacturer's new high-speed 70-seat aircraft. The Dash 8-400 selection will fill a gap between the mainline ...

  • News

    Swissair and Lufthansa study 747 replacements

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Airbus could land two more prestige customers for its A340-600 later this year, as Swissair and Lufthansa examine the aircraft to replace their Boeing 747 "Classic" ßeets. Swissair says that it expects to make a decision on the long-term future of its 747-300 ßeet by the year-end. The Ìve aircraft ...

  • News

    Global Aircraft puts flexible propeller under test

    1997-09-03T00:00:00Z

    A flexible self-optimising propeller which combines the advantages of fixed-pitch and constant-speed units is being tested by US firm Global Aircraft of Starkville, Mississippi. Production of the Quasi-Constant-Speed (QCS) propeller, priced at $3,500, is set to start this month, initially aimed at experimental aircraft. Production of units certificated for general-aviation ...

  • News

    Airline Business 100 - 1997

    1997-09-01T13:26:00Z

    Rank Airline Revenue US$M OpResult US$M NetResult US$M net margin % fleet Total emps Revenue Tonne kilometres (mil) Revenue Pax km Pax millions Load Factor % Year End 96 95 Pax ...