All news – Page 6971
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News
GE changes CF34 containment system after test
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 ...
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Dasa's Airbus conversion orderbook expands
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 ...
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EVA turns sights on Europe in search for partner
Following confirmation of its tie-up with Continental Airlines, Taiwan's EVA has now turned its attention to finding a European partner. The two front runners are believed to be existing Continental partner, Air France, or Virgin Atlantic. "Air France is a good alliance for us, and could be for ...
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Frequency dispute jams talks on global-positioning access
Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC Despite the breakthrough earlier this year when the US Departments of Transportation (DoT) and Defense (DoD)agreed to allow commercial users access to parts of the military global-positioning system (GPS), the two sides are now deadlocked over the choice of a frequency for a new dedicated ...
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Garuda take-off abort was 'a mistake'
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 ...
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Continental power
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 ...
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SAS postpones decision on replacements for 767 fleet
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 ...
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US Airways seeks to fly back to Gatwick
Fearing a long delay in winning a Philadelphia-London Heathrow route, US Airways has asked the US Transportation Department for immediate approval to serve the transatlantic market via London Gatwick. The US carrier previously served Gatwick from Charlotte North Carolina, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, but gave up the routes to ...
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ValuJet probe shows cockpit shortcoming
Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC Improved cockpit emergency training might have prevented pilots of a ValuJet McDonnell Douglas DC-9 from being overcome by smoke and fumes from a cargo fire, says the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). The verdict follows its probe into the fatal crash of ...
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Prospect of sell-off looms for Air Niugini
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 ...
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Chinese airlines propose flotations
China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines are each planning to sell additional shares on the domestic Shanghai exchange, following their successful initial public offers in Hong Kong and New York. Shanghai-based China Eastern plans to sell shares representing around 6.5% of the airline to Chinese investors, raising ...
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French cabinet nears decision on aerospace privatisations
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 ...
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Lufthansa to study low-cost airline option
Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH Lufthansa is considering establishing a new, low-cost airline to combat continuing losses on its domestic network. The new service could eventually have a fleet of some 50 aircraft and would offer ticket prices 20% below current Lufthansa levels. The German airline says that it ...
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Hexcel/Fiberite bid
Hexcel has dropped its $300 million bid to take over all of Fiberite after anti-trust concerns over the joining of the two US materials companies. Instead, Hexcel will pay $37 million to acquire Fiberite's satellite-composites business and a free world licence to use its prepreg technology for aerospace applications. In ...
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P&WC Rus aims for subcontractor network in Russia
Pratt & Whitney Canada's new Russian subsidiary, formed after the break-up of the engine joint venture with Klimov, is planning to establish a network of subcontractors to make parts within Russia. Klimov's resistance to such outsourcing was a key reason behind the break-up of the original venture. P&WC ...
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Samara and Kazan plants join in new Russian engines venture
The continuing integration process within the Russian aerospace industry has led to the creation a joint venture around the NKEngines design bureau in Samara and Kazan Engine production plant. The operation, registered as the NK Engines finance-industrial group (FPG), will design and build a range of rocket and aero-engines. ...
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ARIA included on 1998 public auction list
Aeroflot Russian International Airlines (ARIA)has been included in a list of companies to be privatised at public auctions in 1998. Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow's main international gateway, is also included among the candidates. Maxim Boiko, who heads Russia's committee for state property, says that the list has been ...
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Prime suspect
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 ...
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AIM-9X is entered for Australian contest
Following political lobbying by the USA, the Australian defence ministry is to allow the Hughes AIM-9X short-range air-to-air missile (AAM) to be offered for the Royal Australian Air Force's (RAAF) next-generation short-range AAM requirement. The RAAF had initially discounted the AIM-9X on the basis that the missile would ...
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Japan and South Korea may share Arrow
Israel has offered Japan and South Korea participation in the Arrow anti-tactical ballistic missile system programme. Any such co-operation, however, is dependent on approval from the US Department of Defense, which is providing the bulk of the funding. Japan and South Korea are interested in the Israeli Arrow ...