All news – Page 7676

  • News

    Boeing wins first round of JAA certification row over new 737

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/LONDON BOEING HAS WON the first round of a battle to have its new 737 family of aircraft declared as derivatives by the European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA). The move will allow the US company to claim "grandfather rights" and avoid having to meet current safety regulations ...

  • News

    TWA refiles

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Trans World Airlines (TWA) has won the backing of its creditors to go ahead with its "pre-packaged" Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, aimed at smoothing the airline's latest restructuring plan. Creditors had feared that they would be left vulnerable if an unplanned filing took place during the debt-for-equity restructuring. TWA plans ...

  • News

    Solitair rescue plan hits new snags

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    EFFORTS TO BAIL OUT Solitair, the Swedish aircraft lessor, have run into further setbacks, with its planned rescuer, Vestar Capital, pulling out from underwriting the troubled company's share issue. Vestar had agreed to buy a 25% share of Solitair from GPA and to underwrite the company's rights issue. ...

  • News

    Cleaning up

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    The international civil-aviation community is bracing itself for the next imposition of environmental standards for aircraft. These new standards should lead to a significant reduction in the impact of airliners on the environment, which can only be welcomed. Unfortunately, there is a danger that individual pressure groups pandering to local ...

  • News

    Raytheon light jet will have composite fuselage

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC RAYTHEON AIRCRAFT'S new light business-jet, internally designated the PD 374, will have an all-composite fuselage and be powered by uprated Williams Rolls-Royce FJ44 turbofans. Rockwell-Collins will supply the integrated avionics, including flat-panel displays. The PD 374 is intended as a direct competitor to ...

  • News

    Space sector absorbs most of Lockheed Martin cost cutting

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ATLANTA LOCKHEED MARTIN'S space sector will bear the brunt of a consolidation plan intended to save $1.8 billion a year through the elimination of 12,000 jobs and the closure of 12 plants and laboratories over the next five years. The plan will cost $1.7 billion, the company ...

  • News

    Satellite-navigation-approach first for Alaska Airlines 737-400

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    AN ALASKA AIRLINES Boeing 737-400 has been flown successfully on satellite-navigation (satnav)-based instrument approaches to a 300ft (90m) decision height at Juneau, Alaska without using any ground-based navigation aids. The pioneering flight was undertaken by Boeing and Smiths Industries as a proof-of-concept demonstration to the US Federal Aviation ...

  • News

    Shuttle docks with the Mir

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    MARKING THE FORMAL end of the space race, a record ten people were orbiting the Earth aboard a single spacecraft as the US Space Shuttle Atlantis/STS 71 docked to the Russian Mir 1 space station on 29 June. The assembly of a 223t spacecraft in orbit was the ...

  • News

    Military aircraft bosses ousted at Daimler-Benz

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH THREE SENIOR executives have left Daimler-Benz Aerospace's (DASA's) military-aircraft division following board dissatisfaction with the operation's performance. Division president Klaus-Jurgen Wolfert is to go, along with head of development Wolfgang Kuny and finance and contracts chief Reinhold Faltlhauser. The three are expected to leave ...

  • News

    Air France gives Europe to Air Inter

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Gilbert Sedbon/PARIS AIR INTER, traditionally France's domestic trunk airline, is to become the Air France Group's low-cost European operation, if plans unveiled by the Group's chief executive, Christian Blanc, go ahead. Blanc says that the operation would be running by 1997, when the intra-European-Union "open-skies" policy ...

  • News

    German budget committee clears Eurofighter financing at last

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    THE GERMAN parliamentary budget committee has finally cleared Government funds to cover the costs of the 1992 reorientation of the Eurofighter programme. The committee has twice rejected the proposal to pay DM375 million ($270 million) - a sum agreed after months of wrangling between the defence ministry and ...

  • News

    United

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Judy Bishop has been named vice-president for North America sales at United Airlines, of Chicago, Illinois. She was formerly regional manager for passenger sales. Dan Walsh becomes vice-president for the North America East Region. Walsh, who will be based in New York, was previously Los Angeles, California, regional manager for ...

  • News

    STAR-1 weapon tested on F-16

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    TAAS, FORMERLY ISRAEL MILITARY Industries, has test flown the STAR-1 anti-radiation weapon on a Lockheed Martin F-16. The carriage trials are part of a plan to develop the weapon, a variant of the company's Delilah decoy, for customers requiring a stand-off capability for air-defence suppression missions. The system will be ...

  • News

    Vnukovo forms link with ARIA

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    MOSCOW-BASED Vnukovo Airlines has announced a deal with Aeroflot-Russian International Airlines (ARIA) to co-operate on Russian domestic, intra-CIS routes, and some international services. The international destinations are those in Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. Co-operative arrangements are intended to improve passenger services, enable sales-office sharing, ...

  • News

    Airbus tests ATC datalink

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    AIRBUS INDUSTRIE, in association with Aerospatiale and the Eurocontrol air-traffic-control (ATC) centre at Maastricht, the Netherlands, has begun in-flight trials of equipment enabling ATC by datalink. The aircraft being used in the tests are green A320s being ferried from Airbus' Toulouse, France, assembly plant to Hamburg, Germany, for ...

  • News

    Has ValuJet broken the mould?

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    ValuJet has been rewriting the rules for low-cost US start-ups, but for how long can it keep on growing? Kevin O'Toole/ATLANTA ValuJet's success has been remarkable by any standard. With its own distinctive brand of low-cost operations, and scant regard for conventional wisdom, the start-up carrier has stormed ...

  • News

    Canada offers to host NATO training

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ATLANTA CANADA HAS submitted a "power-by-the-hour" proposal to host advanced flying-training for European NATO nations. The NATO Flying Training in Canada (NFTC) proposal is backed by an industry team, led by Bombardier and including British Aerospace and CAE, which would own and operate the aircraft and simulators ...

  • News

    DASA Inspector takes shape

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    DAIMLER-BENZ Aerospace's (DASA) Space Infrastructure division in Bremen is constructing a 70kg prototype free-flying servicing spacecraft, dubbed the Inspector. The commercial feasibility of the vehicle, which will be used to inspect and repair spacecraft, will be studied jointly by DASA, RSC Energia of Russia and Rockwell Aerospace under ...

  • News

    Radar first

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Westinghouse has received a $3 million contract to retrofit Portuguese air force Lockheed C-130Hs with its APN-241 predictive-windshear radar. Deliveries begin in November. The contract marks the first international, and first retrofit,sale of the radar, which is in production for new US Air Force C-130Hs and the C-130Js now under ...

  • News

    Detection success

    1995-07-05T00:00:00Z

    Westinghouse's AAR-54(V) passive missile-warning system detected and classified all 14 missiles fired during US Navy live-fire demonstrations. The ultraviolet-based system was mounted on a QF-4 drone and used to cue an ALE-47 flare dispenser. Source: Flight International