All news – Page 6312
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News
Clear air ahead for turbulence detector
Honeywell aims to develop a system within three years that will be able to detect clear air turbulence (CAT), for which there are no predictive warning systems available. The company plans to certificate a combined microwave and infrared radar to detect all types of turbulence, including CAT. It has ...
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Urgent GE90 removal starts on worldwide 777-200 fleet
Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Paul Lewis/WASHINGTON DC General Electric has begun removing the first of 90 GE90 engines from the worldwide Boeing 777-200 fleet after turbine blade separations caused two in-flight shutdowns and one turnback. The problems, all of which afflicted 777-200ERs operated by Saudi Arabian Airlines, were caused by ...
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Crystal clears way for mid-year start
US start-up carrier Crystal Airways aims to begin all business-class services using Boeing 757 and 767 twinjets from the US east coast by the middle of this year. Tim Rivers, president and chief executive of Tampa, Florida-based Crystal, says flights will be launched from Tampa to Baltimore Washington International ...
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China Eastern nears A340-500/600 deal
China Eastern Airlines expects to receive government approval soon to allow it to go ahead with a planned acquisition of Airbus A340-500/600s. According to Flight International's sister on-line service Air Transport Intelligence, industry sources in Hong Kong and Shanghai say the acquisition request is in the final stages of ...
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Canada 3000 aims to fill void left by Canadian takeover
Paul Lewis/WASHINGTON DC Canada 3000 Airlines is positioning itself to become the country's second international carrier. It plans a major expansion in scheduled services and fleet size, following the recent takeover of Canadian Airlines by Air Canada. Toronto-based Canada 3000 has unveiled plans to launch services to India, Japan and ...
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KLM uk's no-frills buzz gets off the ground
Buzz, the new low-cost subsidiary of KLM uk, began operations on 4 January with promises of "strong market growth" in the European low-cost sector over the next five years. Based at London Stansted, UK, the carrier competes with the existing UK-based low-cost airlines Ryanair, easyJet and British Airways subsidiary Go. ...
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BWIA introduces rebranded TriStar
Rebranded Caribbean airline BWIA West Indies Airways has introduced its new colour scheme on its long-haul fleet of Lockheed TriStar 500s. The livery change is the first in almost 30 years for the Trinidad and Tobago carrier and is part of an update that involves the acquisition of Boeing 737-800s ...
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Year-end Boeing deals bolster order intake
Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON The "big two" airliner builders - Airbus Industrie and Boeing - passed the 800 order mark between them in the closing days of 1999. Both manufacturers also achieved their output targets, delivering a record 914 aircraft between them. Boeing spent last month rapidly gaining ground on ...
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Airports
The Netherlands Government has decided that the construction of an international airport on an offshore island to serve Amsterdam is not feasible. It will instead allow Schiphol Airport to be expanded. Aircraft movements will increase from 420,000 to 600,000 in 10 years, while a sixth runway will be constructed by ...
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Boeing plans 'automotive' line for 717
Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Boeing is finalising confidential plans to introduce a new production concept for the 717-200 twinjet that uses methods adopted by the automotive industry and which have never been applied to an aerospace line. The company aims to have everything in place for the switchover to the new ...
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Air Canada takes action to restructure Canadian debt
Brian Dunn/MONTREAL Air Canada is moving to restructure the debt and other long-term obligations of Canadian Airlines International after getting the go-ahead to buy its rival. Canadian owes bondholders, lessors and banks C$1 billion ($680 million). Over C$2.2 billion in capital and operating-lease payments are due over the next few ...
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BFGoodrich loses plant and jobs
US parts supplier BFGoodrich (BFG) is to consolidate its landing gear business, closing at least one plant and eliminating 500 jobs. The move should generate most of the $35 million in annual savings projected when BFG merged with Coltec Industries in July. The merger brought together Coltec's Menasco landing ...
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Aegean wraps up Air Greece takeover
Greek independent Aegean Aviation has completed its takeover of Air Greece, announced in October, doubling its size and making it the second largest airline in the country after state-owned Olympic Airways (Flight International, 20-26 October, 1999). Aegean now holds 96% of Air Greece - formerly owned by shipping company ...
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Aerospace beats the Y2K bug
Airline, air traffic control and airport reports from around the globe show that the millennium bug has not caused any computer glitches. The exceptions have been with the control of some ageing satellites (see P17). International Air Transport Association (IATA) director general Pierre Jeanniot says: "No Y2K-related incidents were ...
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Repairs put Terra on target
Tim Furniss/LONDON NASA has rectified major computer and antenna faults that occurred on its $1.3 billion Terra spacecraft shortly after its launch last month. The Terra, the flagship of NASA's Earth Observing System (EOS) programme, was launched into polar orbit on 18 December on an Atlas IIAS operated by ...
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TWA looks at stretched 757s to replace ageing 767 fleet
Guy Norris/LONG BEACH TWA is "in discussion" over the possible acquisition of Boeing 757-300s as part of a fleetwide modernisation plan aimed at settling the composition of its narrowbodies for the next 10 years. The airline is considering the 240-seat twinjet as a replacement for its ageing 767-200 ...
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Routes
America West will begin services from its Phoenix hub to Hartford, Connecticut, in April, using an Airbus A319. British World Airlines has been awarded a five-year contract from Integrated Aviation Consortium to transport oil workers between Aberdeen and Scatsta in the Shetland Islands from April. Up to three British ...
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Marketplace
Debis AirFinance has selected the CFM International CFM56 to power 10 of the 30 Airbus A320 family aircraft it has on order. Martinair has taken delivery of a Rolls-Royce RB211-powered Boeing 757-200 on a four-year lease from ING Lease International Management Equipment. Negotiations are under way for a second example. ...
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Two Cubana crashes add to sad year-end toll
David Learmount/LONDON A series of airline accidents has cast a shadow over the year-end holiday period, with Korean Air suffering its third hull loss in 1999 and Cubana having two fatal crashes within five days. The main accidents in the last days of 1999 include: 21 ...
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Instrument failure suspected in crash
David Learmount/LONDON A faulty attitude director indicator (ADI) on the captain's side appears to have been a major factor in the Korean Air (KAL) Boeing 747-200 freighter crash on 22 December near London Stansted Airport, UK, according to details in a UK Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB) interim bulletin. ...