All news – Page 7295
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Dornier sets jet date
FAIRCHILD DORNIER could launch a turbofan version of its 30-seat Dornier 328 next month, with development of a stretched 50-seat turbofan to follow in mid-1997 after an eight-month definition phase. The turbofan development, an alternative to the long-awaited turboprop stretched-version of the aircraft, has already been deemed ...
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New Zealand Navy chooses Lynx
THE ROYAL NEW Zealand Navy (RNZN) has completed its replacement naval helicopter evaluation and recommended selection of the LHTEC T800-powered Westland Super Lynx. Sources in Westland and Kaman confirm that the RNZN's evaluation has favoured a Super Lynx. It is understood that the Navy's project office is now ...
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Deft manoeuvres
ONE OF THE loudest noises at the Farnborough air show has been from the chorus of detractors who criticise the more extravagant manoeuvres used by manufacturers in demonstrating their products. What relevance, they have asked, is there in demonstrating steep take-offs and low-speed, high-alpha passes with a large commercial airliner? ...
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Hughes homes in on missile
Hughes is pushing the attractions of a transatlantic procurement programme to the UK Ministry of Defence as part of its bid to win a competition to develop an extended-range active-radar-guided missile for the Royal Air Force. Although the US Air Force (USAF) has no requirement for a missile ...
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Condor power
Rolls-Royce is to provide the engines for up to 24 Boeing 757-300s ordered by German airline Condor in a deal covering 12 firm orders and 12 options. See P12. Source: Flight International
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Heading out west
The Ilyushin Il-103 trainer is being aimed at Western markets Paul Duffy/Moscow With Russian certification now awarded, and with US Federal Aviation Administration certification expected shortly, the Ilyushin Il-103 trainer has become the pathfinder with which manufacturers wish to bridge the void between East and West on ...
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Highly rated
Is cross-crew qualification delivering its promises? David Learmount/LONDONPaul Phelan/CAIRNS AS AIRLINES AND regulators start to gain experience with cross-crew qualification (CCQ) training and mixed-fleet flying (MFF), its potential is becoming clearer. Cathay Pacific Airways, with its unique Airbus Industrie A330/A340 MFF operation, now has 55 complete ...
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Competitive upgrade
Japan is redesigning its H2 booster to enable it to compete in the launcher market. Tim Furniss/LONDON AN UPRATED VERSION of Japan's H2 satellite launcher will have its first flight in 2000, in a late attempt to make a viable entry into the commercial-launcher market and ...
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Licencing and major regulatory issues
REGULATIONS which affect cross-crew qualification (CCQ) and mixed-fleet flying sometimes directly limit the number of commercial type-ratings a pilot is allowed to have on his licence, but in all cases specify the training necessary first to obtain the type ratings and then to maintain type-rating currency. The regulatory components are: ...
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The Cathay experience
CATHAY PACIFIC Airways has been operating mixed-fleet flying with its new Airbus Industrie A330/A340s since August 1995. This is a pioneering departure, in that it requires crews to be simultaneously qualified, on aircraft with two and four engines, a combination, which has never before been an industry-accepted practice for line ...
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Japanese/US bilateral talks falter
Japan's Minister of Transport has written to his US Department of Transportation (DoT) counterpart warning against the imposition of traffic sanctions, following the collapse in the recent round of air services talks. In a letter sent to US transportation secretary Frederico Pena, Japan's minister, Yoshiyuki Kamei, states that ...
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Green light given for Shanghai Pudong Airport construction
The Chinese Government has given the Shanghai municipal authority the green light to begin construction of the new Pudong International Airport. Aeroports de Paris has already been awarded a contract for the overall design of the Pudong Airport. Phases 2 and 3 will include the addition of three ...
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BAe's asset management effort reaps return with more deals
Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON BRITISH AEROSPACE says that its aggressive drive to limit losses from the group's extensive turboprop leasebook is beginning to produce results, with a series of new deals including the first sales of Jetstream J31s. BAe Asset Management Turboprops (AMT) announced plans to step up ...
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Boeing 737 mystery prompts airworthiness directives
Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC and David Learmount/LONDON The US National Transportation Safety Board's investigation into the USAir Pittsburgh crash has spawned airworthiness directives (ADs) requiring changes in the Boeing 737 flight-control system. This comes despite the fact that the investigation, the most exhaustive in the board's history, has failed ...
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Pricing row forces Virgin Express to delay new Geneva service
VIRGIN EXPRESS has been forced to postpone "until further notice" its new scheduled service to Geneva, following the Swiss authorities' objections to the company's low-fare policy. The Brussels-based carrier was to have begun services on 2 September. The proposed Virgin Express aimed to set fares at around half ...
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Lucent to test smart helicopter quieting
Use of smart materials to reduce helicopter rotor noise is to be studied by Lucent Technologies and Sikorsky Aircraft, under a three-year, $13 million contract sponsored by the US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Lucent is a new subsidiary of US telecommunications giant AT&T, and its Bell Laboratories research-and-development ...
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A coming of age
The powerful Trent 800 is carving out a big slice of the engine market for Rolls-Royce. Guy Norris/LOS A little over a year from now the world's longest jet airliner is due to fly from Everett, Washington. Powering the first flight of the Boeing 777-300 will be Rolls-Royce ...
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Bedek
Tommy Guttman has been appointed US director of marketing and business development for Israel Aircraft Industries' (IAI) Bedek Aviation Group. He will be based at the IAI US office in Arlington, Virginia. Guttman, who previously headed the North American desk at Bedek's headquarters at Ben Gurion International Airport, Israel, replaces ...
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EF2000 overtakes inflation rate
Sir - In May 1996, I noted an article which quoted the price of the Eurofighter EF2000 at £34 million ($56.6 million). Two months later, in the UK Times of 22 July, the price was quoted as £50 million. What is happening? I thought that inflation was supposed ...
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Contenders line up for Australian airport sale
AT LEAST SEVEN consortia, mostly backed by foreign interests, are planning to bid in the first tranche of Australia's postponed airport-privatisation programme, worth around A$4 billion ($3.2 billion). Sydney Airport will not be offered in the initial round, however, pending a decision on the location and opening date ...