All Safety News – Page 1292

  • News

    Relative progress

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Tim Furniss/LONDON Lockheed Martin delivered the second major piece of NASA's $550 million Gravity Probe B (GP-B) spacecraft to Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, on 27 May. The delivery marks a major milestone in the protracted development of a spacecraft which, in 2000, will attempt to verify two ...

  • News

    Datalink weather set for GA cockpits

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC Weather graphics and other flight information could be widely datalinked to the cockpits of general aviation (GA) aircraft by year-end if a US Federal Aviation Administration initiative runs to schedule. The FAA believes the Flight Information Services (FIS) digital datalink will improve GA safety by ...

  • News

    Regulators get tough on Canada's taxi operators

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Canadian air taxi operators have been presented with a list of 71 recommendations designed to improve safety by a task force set up by air transport regulator Transport Canada. The Safety of Air Taxi Operations (SATOPS) task force was set up in January 1996 following a Transport Canada review ...

  • News

    Air France calculates the cost of pilots' strike action

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    The pilots' strike at Air France has cost the airline around Fr100 million ($17 million) a day since 2 June. The strike has crippled airline operations in the build-up to the 1998 World Cup, for which it is the official carrier. On 5 June, the carrier was operating around ...

  • News

    MD-11 line will halt in early 2000

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Boeing has decided to terminate production of the MD-11, with the last delivery, possibly the 200th aircraft, scheduled for February 2000. The move was expected, even though the tri-jet gained a surprise seven-month reprieve last November when Boeing elected to continue marketing the freighter version ...

  • News

    Messier-Bugatti tests power by wire

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Ian Sheppard/LONDON Messier-Bugatti has installed a prototype electro-hydraulic actuator (EHA) in an Airbus Industrie "iron bird" test rig at Aerospatiale's Toulouse systems development centre, as part of an industry drive to replace cumbersome hydraulics with electric cables. The EHA is a key technology for all electric, or power ...

  • News

    Last of the line

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LONG BEACH The roll-out of a new aircraft is a major event for any airframe manufacturer, but, for Boeing's Douglas Products division, the 10 June unveiling of the 717-200 is nothing less than pivotal. Coming hard on the heels of the news that the MD-11 line is ...

  • News

    CAL pursues big fleet revamp

    1998-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/Singapore Brent Hannon/Taipei China Airlines (CAL) has issued airframe and engine manufacturers with a fresh request for proposals for up to 36 new widebody aircraft, while rival Taiwanese carrier EVA Airways has postponed its decision on a new fleet of ultra long haul passenger aircraft. CAL has ...

  • News

    Noisy pilots face jail

    1998-06-03T15:10:00Z

    Airline pilots whose aircraft infringe airport noise regulations in Israel will face $41,000 fines or six months in prison if a proposed law is approved. Put forward by the environment ministry, despite Civil Aviation Authority and pilot opposition, the law would double penalties for a second contravention. The International Federation ...

  • News

    Cathay rethinks 777-200 fleet

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SEATTLE Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific Airways plans to review the future use of its four Boeing 777-200s, following the introduction of the stretch -300 into service. The carrier is also disposing of an initial two surplus Boeing 747-200s to Virgin Atlantic Airways in an effort to rationalise types and ...

  • News

    Bombardier remains bullish on 70-seat turboprops

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Bombardier flew the second de Havilland Dash 8-400 regional turboprop on 26 May from its plant in Downsview, Ontario. The aircraft is expected to join the first -400 at Bombardier's flight test centre in Wichita, Kansas, within a few weeks, according to the company. Despite having booked only 32 ...

  • News

    Unwanted Garuda MD-11s and A330s head for new homes

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Garuda Indonesia has reached agreement with Boeing to return six leased MD-11s, which in turn are being placed with Brazilian carriers Varig and VASP. Airbus Industrie is also assisting the Indonesian airline to find homes for six leased A330-300s. The Boeing tri-jets will be withdrawn from service within ...

  • News

    Taiwan safety

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    In the wake of a series of fatal accidents, Taiwan has now established a Flight Safety Commission modelled on the USA's National Transportation Safety Board. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Routes

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    -Kenya Airways has signed a code-sharing deal with Alitalia on its twice-weekly Rome-Nairobi route, strengthening its ties with the KLM/Northwest alliance which now includes the Italian flag carrier. -The US Transportation Department has approved a codeshare alliance between American Airlines and the TACA Group of six Central American airlines, which ...

  • News

    Rolls-Royce completes Trent 8104 design and waits for 777-X

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Rolls-Royce is expected to complete design work on the 454kN (102,000lb)-thrust Trent 8104 by the start of June and is still "on track" to run the first engine in December, despite the slowdown of the Boeing 777-200X/300X derivative programme for which the powerplant is being developed. ...

  • News

    FAA decides to extend wiring checks to non-Boeing types

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC The USA's major airlines have agreed to check fuel tank wiring in a controlled sample of Lockheed and McDonnell Douglas aircraft to determine whether they need mandatory inspections like those recently ordered for older Boeing airliners. The high-time passenger aircraft which the US Federal ...

  • News

    Air France pilots unions use the World Cup as a political football

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS French pilots' unions are using football's World Cup contest to threaten a series of strikes against Air France, the official carrier for the event. Recent meetings with president Jean-Cyril Spinetta have failed to resolve the management demand for salary cuts of up to 15% in exchange for a ...

  • News

    BA income slips, but analysts forecast recovery

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON As had been predicted, British Airways saw profits slip after a troubled year which included a damaging cabin crew strike. The fall was less than expected, however, and optimism is growing among financial analysts that the worst of the bad news is now over. The final ...

  • News

    Japanese carriers see their profits plummet

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE All three of Japan's largest carriers, Japan Airlines (JAL), All Nippon Airways (ANA) and Japan Air System (JAS), slid back firmly into the red as their latest round of annual reports showed the impact of currency losses, a depressed home market and increased competition. JAL recorded ...

  • News

    Top of the props

    1998-06-03T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/MONTREAL Later this month Pratt & Whitney Canada will receive Transport Canada certification for its PW150A turboprop. Flat-rated at 3,780kW (5,070shp) for take-off on Bombardier's de Havilland Dash 8Q Series 400, the engine has virtually double the power of any other member of the PW100 family from which it ...