All MRO news – Page 594
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News
FAA hits Japan Air Lines repair shops
THE US FEDERAL Aviation Administration has barred Japan Airlines (JAL) from performing maintenance work on US-registered aircraft because repair stations at Narita and Haneda airports conducted unauthorised repairs. William White, the FAA's deputy director of flight standards, says that no aircraft are grounded because of the action. White ...
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AAR
Service company AAR Allen Group International, has appointed William Bailey, vice-president for operations. He was most recently general manager for engine-services business at General Electric's aircraft-engine business group in Cincinnati, Ohio. Jim Clark is named general manager of AAR's Netherlands aircraft-components maintenance centre. Source: Flight International
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Airmotive
Christopher Andrews has been appointed vice-president of quality assurance and engineering, at engine over-haul company, Dallas Airmotive of Dallas, Texas. Andrews is a member of the Professional Aviation Maintenance Association. Michael McClain is named director of new-business development. Source: Flight International
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World maintenance
Pratt & Whitney has won a ten-year contract from World Airways, covering maintenance of the PW4462 engines which power the US carrier's fleet of seven McDonnell Douglas MD-11s. P&W will perform the work at its overhaul centre in Cheshire, Connecticut. Source: Flight International
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Aeroplex approval
Aeroplex of Central Europe Aircraft Technology Center (ACE) has won JAR 145 approval from Europe's Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA). Budapest based Aeroplex, a maintenance joint venture between Malev Hungarian Airlines and Lockheed Martin Aircraft Service (LMAS) of the USA. Source: Flight International
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Lucas picks up more Boeing work
Lucas Aerospace Cargo Systems of the USA is to supply aluminium structural assemblies for Boeing 767 flap-track fairings, under a contract awarded by BP Chemicals. The deal valued at over $5 million, runs until 2001, and Lucas will begin just-in-time deliveries of the kits this year. BP Chemicals ...
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Cathay profits turn up over first half of 1995
CATHAY PACIFIC produced a better-than-expected performance for the first half of 1995, after overcoming what the airline admits was a poor start to the year. Japan's Kobe earthquake early in the year resulted in the cancellation of ten Cathay flights and added further gloom to the already depressed ...
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Textron piston production to grow
Ramon Lopez/WILLIAMSPORT TEXTRON LYCOMING production of piston engines following Cessna Aircraft's decision to revive its single-engined general-aviation (GA), and Piper Aircraft's emergence from four years of bankruptcy protection. Cessna, a sister company within the Textron group, decided to re-introduce the 172, 182, 206 and Turbo ...
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Spar markets 'virtual-reality' ADAAPS safety-analysis system
David Learmount/ LONDON SPAR AEROSPACE is to market the "virtual-reality" safety-incident analysis system developed by Canada's National Research Council (NRC). The Canadian Company says that almost all the major North American carriers are showing significant interest (Flight International, 5-11 July). Spar Applied Systems is to ...
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Passengers become more sophisticated
Sir - The recent stand made by a group of UK charter carriers against low-quality flight operations is long overdue (Flight International, 12-18 July, P8 and Letters, 26 July-1 August, P39). In all markets, passengers are price-sensitive, but they are also quality-conscious. Premium-class passengers, in particular, have become ...
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Duncan pushes turnaround performance
DUNCAN AVIATION IS guaranteeing customers a reduced turnaround time for the maintenance, refurbishment, or painting of light- and medium-sized business-jets. Lincoln, Nebraska-based Duncan's new PowerTurn programme specifies penalties if the company fails to redeliver the aircraft by the guaranteed date. "[Corporate] flight departments are increasingly expected to maximise ...
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Learjet crash blamed on miswiring
THE FATAL CRASH of a Learjet 35A on 14 December, 1994, in Fresno, California, was caused by improperly installed electric wiring which led to an inflight fire, says the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). Two pilots were killed and 21 people on the ground injured when the ...
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Il-76MF flown at last
ILYUSHIN'S STRETCHED version of the IL-76, the MF, finally had its first flight on 1 August from the Chkalov production plant-owned airfield in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The 40min flight went well, according to test pilot Anatoly Knystov. A shortage of funds and the late availability of a suitable engine ...
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USAir changes tack on unions...
USAIR HAS ABANDONED efforts to win $2.5 billion in union concessions over the next five years, and plans instead to negotiate labour savings in contract talks. The decision to drop the talks with four unions follows disclosure of a $113 million second-quarter net profit. Union workers appear to ...
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Wilcox wins WAAS deal
Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC THE US FEDERAL Aviation Administration has awarded Wilcox Electric a $475 million incentive-fee contract to develop and produce the world's first wide-area augmentation system (WAAS), which makes the global-positioning system (GPS) usable for all phases of civil flight. Award of the contract ...
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ARIA to lease DC-10 freighters
Paul Duffy/SHANNON AEROFLOT-RUSSIAN International Airlines (ARIA) is to acquire two McDonnell Douglas (MDC) DC-10-30F freighters to expand its cargo services to the USA and the Far East. The aircraft are expected to arrive in Moscow by the middle of August, for introduction into service in September. ...
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Sabena and Swissair tie the knot
SABENA AND SWISSAIR have made their marriage official with the signing of the final documents on 25 July. The deal will give the Swiss carrier a 49.5% stake in its Belgian partner (Flight International, 26 July-1 August). Joint work groups are already studying various alliance projects, with initial ...
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FANS datalink component becomes operational
A PROTOTYPE OF the new oceanic-sector workstation - the controller's link to the Future Air Navigation System (FANS) - is now in operational testing at the US Federal Aviation Administration's Oakland, California, air-route traffic-control centre. The workstation, called the telecommunications processor, represents the first phase of the ...
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Aviadvigatel
Debate over the reliability and life of the Aviadvigatel Perm PS-90A, the only series-produced turbofan engine in Russia, has raged on during the past year. Only two PS-90As were manufactured in 1994, and it is believed that none has been built so far this year. Many of the ...