All news – Page 6661
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Parker commits staff to UK
Parker Aerospace has placed a team of engineers and support staff into the British Aerospace engineering facility in Filton, UK. Parker, which has headquarters in Irvine, California, says it made the move in support of the fuel control and monitoring system for the new Airbus A340-500/600 programme. Source: Flight ...
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Litton's PRC subsidiary is celebrating a contract award worth up to $50 million.
PRC has been named primary subcontractor to OAO Corporation and will provide architecture analysis for the North America Air Defence (NORAD)/US Space Command Mission and Architecture Support (N/UMAS) contract. The nine-year, indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity contract has a ceiling value of $180 million. Source: Flight Daily News
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Vital links to medical experts
Remote Diagnostic Technologies has developed an inflight system which provides 24 hour access to medical experts. Recognising medical incidents cause the majority of aircraft diversions, Tempus 2000 can supply vital clinical data from any air, land or sea location. Designed for easy use by the non-expert,Tempus 2000 incorporates an ...
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Texan walks tall
Raytheon's $4 billion T-6A Texan II venture with the US Joint Primary Aircraft Training System remains on schedule after the addition of structural modifications. The next generation training aircraft set to replace the US Air Force's T-37 and Navy's T-34C has undergone load testing at all locations to generate ...
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Sights on $18.9m contract
The US Army Communications-Electronics Command has awarded Litton an $18.9 million contract for the production of advanced night vision systems and image intensification tube. The company says the total contract value, if all options are taken up, might be as high as $196.5 million. Work will be carried out ...
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Attention to detail
Metal Injection Mouldings (Hall 3, Stand A4) comes to Farnborough with the plan to bring its manufacturing of small steel components with intricate detail to a wider audience. The company's process can produce complex shapes and fine detail similar to die castings or plastic mouldings. The difference is that the ...
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US Army homes in on IMU
The US Army has placed orders for AlliedSignal's Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) for its next generation XM982 guided projectile. AlliedSignal claims it is the first major guided missiles award for an IMU that uses micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) technology which should bring increased accuracy and cost reductions. If the US Army ...
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Gyroscope under microscope
The European Space Agency (ESA) has awarded British Aerospace Systems and Equipment (BASE) a study and research contract worth more than $100,000 to evaluate the use of the company's silicon gyroscope for use in the space agency's satellite programmes. The BASA silicon vibrating structure gyroscope (VSG) is the world's ...
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Battery powers aircraft tug
A battery powered aircraft tug is sparking lots of interest on the Lektro stand in Hall 3. Taking just 6h to re-charge, the Lektro AP8850SD is capable of towing up to 100,000lb (45,000kg). Vice-president Valdis Skilins says Lektro was the first company in the world to develop the concept of ...
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PSL helping to plug the leak
It looks like a huge glass vat of pea green soup, but the specially made tank being displayed by PSL Aviation Systems serves a very good purpose. The company (Hall 1, Stand E36) is using the equipment to recreate a fuel leak, so that it can show off its Pinpoint ...
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$85m RJ deal boosts Avro
Mike Martin British Aerospace Regional Aircraft announced the sale of three Avro RJ100 aircraft at Farnborough '98 yesterday. The $80 million deal was with Swissair Group leasing arm Flightlease and the aircraft will be delivered in July, September and October, 1999. The order may have a deeper significance ...
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Big three look ahead to next millennium
Military Aerospace companies are spending considerable time and money on scenario planning for the next millennium. Industry journalists were given an intriguing insight into the thinking of three of the big players when representatives of British Aerospace (BAe), Saab and Lockheed Martin took part in a debate. Their starting ...
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Cost scuppers CFM's 'green' engine design
CFM International (CFMI) has decided to abandon its environmentally-friendly double annular combustor (DAC) technology in future powerplant designs because it is too expensive to make. The company is looking at ways of reducing emissions using a conventional combustor instead, as part of a wide-ranging study aimed at cutting the ...
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Marconi radar mooted for updated MiG-29
Alan Dron MAPO is looking at installing an air-to-air radar from the UK's Marconi Electronic Systems in its updated MiG-29SMT and two-seater UBT multi-role fighter aircraft, the Russian company said yesterday. General designer Mikhail Korzhuyev also revealed that the UBT, derived from the UB two-seat conversion trainer but ...
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Friday's Flying Display
1353 Supermarine Spitfire 1400 BAe Hawk BAe Harrier Panavia Tornado F3 BAe Nimrod Saab Gripen Eurofighter Typhoon 1443 Airbus A330 ...
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Contract renewed
British Airways Avionic Engineering (BAAE) is celebrating after its parent company renewed a major maintenance contract. The contract was awarded after BA undertook a full market test to ensure it was getting value for money. Mike Underwood, BA's general manager aircraft and maintenance purchasing, says: "BA demands world-class support ...
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Airbus wins the battle, but the war goes on
Karen Walker and Mike Martin Farnborough '98 turned into the show that Airbus Industrie was able to relish, but which Boeing might want to forget.. Boeing's problem was mainly one of timing, however. The company came to the show still smarting from highly public production problems and the ...
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UK firms tipped for major global expansion
Alan Dron A new 'British Empire' is on the horizon as two of the nation's largest defence and aerospace companies gear up for major expansions of their worldwide activities, says a report issued yesterday. British Aerospace (BAe) and GEC are tipped by analysts of US publication Defence Mergers ...
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Historic Avian back in the air after cornfield crash
Geoff Thomas One of the aircraft with the highest nostalgia ratings at Farnborough '98 nearly failed to make it at all. A mere two months ago, Avro Avian VH-UFZ lay rolled into a ball in a cornfield in the picturesque eastern English county of Suffolk- but yesterday it ...
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Airlines choose the new FMS
Seven major airlines have chosen the new Flight Management System (FMS), produced jointly by Sextant Avionique and Smiths Industries, for their Airbus fleets. Air France, America West, Asiana, China Northwest, China Southwest, US Airways and one other undisclosed US major, have bought the system for both retrofit use and ...