All Networks news – Page 1415
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Coming together
In a hangar in Marietta, Georgia, the prototype Lockheed Martin/Boeing F-22 air-superiority fighter stands amid an impressive array of sample parts and prototype components ranging from avionics connectors to fuselage bulkheads. "We were not talking viewgraphs," says F-22 programme general-manager Gary Riley, referring to the critical design-review (CDR), ...
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Dassault updates CATIA
DASSAULT SYSTEMES, in association with IBM, has released the latest upgrade of its CATIA computer-aided-design software. In addition to a range of functional enhancements, Version 4, Release 1.4 allows the CATIA to be operated on stand-alone Hewlett-Packard workstations for the first time. Since the release of CATIA ...
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MAS and Virgin postpone code-share beginning
MALAYSIA AIRLINES (MAS) and Virgin Atlantic have delayed the start of their code-sharing arrangement until May, after a review by Australia's International Air Services Commission. The two airlines were due to launch twice-daily joint services between London and Kuala Lumpur on 26 March. Australian Government approval, however, is ...
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PAL looks to jets as Fokker 50s go
PHILIPPINE AIRLINES (PAL) is considering a plan to replace its Fokker 50 turboprops with a fleet of new turbofan aircraft. The move is designed to enable domestic fares to be raised and airline losses reduced. The airline operates ten Fokker 50s, leased from AFT, for use on domestic ...
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Lufthansa to retreat from railway battle
LUFTHANSA IS considering dropping its shorter domestic routes because of the expansion of Germany's high-speed rail network. Executive board member Klaus Nittinger says that all air routes equivalent to 2h or less of ground travel time could be dropped as the rail network expands to provide more convenient ...
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Deutsche BA looks at going all-Boeing
DEUTSCHE BA IS considering dropping its five Fokker 100s, to consolidate into an all-Boeing 737 jet-fleet alongside its Saab turboprop aircraft. Managing director Richard Heideker says that, while Deutsche BA sees its domestic network as necessary to maintain market awareness, future expansion will be focused on international routes, ...
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European airports caution on passenger growth
EUROPE'S CONGESTED airports managed to overcome capacity constraints to post an 8% rise in passenger traffic during 1994, but the region's leading hubs at London and Paris warn that growth cannot be maintained without new infrastructure investments. Although passenger growth within Europe was close to the world average, ...
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Showdown looms on JAA rules
A CRISIS IS EMERGING over the certification of derivative airliners in Europe as the Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) declines to grant "grandfather rights" for key airworthiness requirements. McDonnell Douglas (MDC) MD-90s and Boeing's new 737 family are the primary aircraft affected by rules introduced since their forerunners gained ...
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BA plans high-capacity fleet to fill Heathrow
BRITISH AIRWAYS has outlined radical plans to raise the size of aircraft, which it flies from London's heavily congested Heathrow Airport. As part of the plan, BA is increasing pressure on Boeing for a stretched, 500-seat, 747 to come into service within the next four years. It is ...
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Chinese Start-Up
China's latest start-up carrier, Daxueshi Aviation, began services in late March equipped with five Harbin Y-12 turboprops. The privately owned airline is operating in support of oil companies in the remote Xinjiang region of western China. Source: Flight International
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Ice and poor management hit Viscount
THE OFFICIAL UK report on 1994's fatal crash of a Vickers Viscount freighter, following multiple engine ice-ingestion, severely criticises the crew's actions and the airline's emergency checklist. Two of the 36-year-old aircraft's four Rolls-Royce Dart turboprops flamed out after ingesting ice at 18,000ft (5,500m). The crew of the ...
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Kuwaiti A340 Delivered
Kuwait Airways has taken delivery of the first of four Airbus A340-300 airliners on 29 March. The aircraft is the first to be fitted with the 150kN (34,000lb)-thrust CFM56-5C4, the most powerful engine in CFM International's CFM56 range. The Kuwaiti A340s will be operated on routes to New York via ...
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Keeping track
The Traxon cargo automation system is now well established, but some significant technical and political obstacles remain. Mark Lyon reports. Air cargo doesn't achieve its potential for most airlines. Industry critics want carriers to work more closely with air freight forwarders so these two partners ...
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Airports
London/Luton has formed a joint venture with venture capitalists Nash, Sells & Partners to build a rail station at the airport. The venture capitalists will take an 80 per cent stake in the $7.6 million project. The $3.2 billion Denver International Airport finally opened for commercial operations at ...
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Direct flop
Euro Direct Airlines, the ambitious UK independent, ceased operations at the end of February after 10 months of operation. The airline blamed high operational costs for its inability to obtain a reasonable return. Source: Airline Business
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Sunny prospects
The future of the European charter industry looks bright despite increased threats from liberalisation and low-cost scheduled competition. Paul Holubowicz reports on the sector's considerable strengths.The imminent demise of the European charter sector has been regularly predicted since the 1970s, when 'charter' was often considered to be synonymous with a ...
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Make believe airline
Airline Business editor Richard Whitaker learned from his mistakes when he helped run an airline for four years. But the shareholders were not pleased with the result. 'We saw it coming . . . We took too long to do anything . . . We turned it around ...
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A gift for niches
With its gradual privatisation and firm focus on being a successful niche carrier, Finnair sees only benefits in Finland's entry into the European Union. Sara Guild visits Helsinki. The special gifts that might be expected to come with being the official carrier for Santa Claus since the 1980s have ...
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Overhauling costs
The US carriers are proving slow to react to calls for over-reliance on labour cost cuts to give way to a reengineering of the entire way in which airlines do business. Jane L Levere reports. While cost-cutting is nothing new to the US airline industry, the term 'reengineering' represents a ...
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More to gain in Ukraine?
Two-year-old startup Ukraine International Airlines is building on projected annual growth rates of 25 per cent, while its capital Kiev could ultimately challenge the supre-macy of Moscow as an international hub for the CIS states. At the same time the carrier's senior management is talking with potential partners, ...