All Safety News – Page 1333

  • News

    Guam probe reveals US MSAW problems

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Software errors have been found and corrected on the minimum-safe-altitude warning (MSAW) systems at three US airports, the US Federal Aviation Administration has revealed. The MSAW alerts air-traffic controllers when an aircraft equipped with a Mode C transponder descends below minimum safe altitude during a landing approach. The ...

  • News

    Marketplace

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    ++ Virgin has confirmed that it will add two new Airbus A340-300s in 1998 (Flight International, 13-19 August ) but that one of the aircraft will be acquired on a four-year operating lease from International Lease Finance (ILFC). The aircraft will be delivered in March 1998, and will be joined ...

  • News

    Mesa Air regional-jet operation experiences a sluggish start

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Mesa Air Group says that its Texas-based regional-jet operation, started in May with two Bombardier Canadair Regional Jets (CRJs), is growing more slowly than anticipated. Marketing of the initial Fort Worth-Houston service is being intensified, and Fort Worth-San Antonio flights will be added in September, with a San Antonio-Colorado Springs ...

  • News

    Japanese consortium prepares plans to launch regional airline

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    An Okinawa-based Japanese business consortium is drawing up plans to launch an airline within three years, to operate domestic routes and, possibly, international services in the longer term. A group of 32 island investors led by Okinawa Electric Power has established a new company called Southern Cross to ...

  • News

    Qantas steps up battle to cut costs and raise yields

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDONPaul Phelan/CAIRNS Qantas chairman Gary Pemberton, unveiling a modest increase in profits for 1996/7, has warned that the carrier will have to step up its drive to cut costs and improve yields if it is to have a chance of further improvements over the coming financial year. ...

  • News

    Cathay to place orders with Airbus and Boeing

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Cathay Pacific Airways is planning to place orders for up to 20 additional new Airbus Industrie and Boeing widebody aircraft, as part of a large-scale expansion of its international operations. The airline is opening up the engine side of the competition to all three potential suppliers. ...

  • News

    Bombardier proposes Dash 8-300X flightdeck upgrade

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Bombardier is showing customers an upgrade of the 50-seat Dash 8-300, which incorporates the Sextant Avionique glass-cockpit suite being introduced on the new 70-seat Dash 8-400. The move would be in line with the Canadian company's moves to achieve a common type-rating across its turboprop family. The upgrade, ...

  • News

    Europe's B-RNAV plans in 'chaotic mess'

    1997-08-27T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS The attempt to introduce the new basic radio-navigation (B-RNAV) standards into European airspace by January 1998 has been termed a "chaotic mess" by the avionics industry as it faces a last-minute change of specification from the European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA). B-RNAV avionics will ...

  • News

    "Non-addition" Chapter 3 rules

    1997-08-20T17:10:00Z

    Sir - The editorial "Noise blight" (Flight International, 16-22 July) criticises the European Civil Aviation Conference and the European Commission for drafting "non-addition" rules for aircraft which are hushkitted to comply with Chapter 3 noise-certification standards, adding that the best environmental results will be achieved "-with the co-operation of the ...

  • News

    Taiwan's carriers close on widebody orders

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/TAIPEI Taiwan's two rival national carriers China Airlines (CAL) and EVA Airways are showing renewed interest in new ultra-long-haul aircraft, in response to the recent provisional launch of the Airbus Industrie A340-500/600 and a proposed open-skies agreement with the USA. Competition between Boeing and Airbus ...

  • News

    Delta takes lead

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Delta Air Lines has started to retrofit fire suppressors and smoke detectors in the cargo holds of its Boeing 737s, and plans to fit its entire narrowbody fleet with the safety devices. The US Federal Aviation Administration has given notice of proposed rulemaking indicating that such installations will be required ...

  • News

    Europeans unite on ozone layer

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Herman De Wulf/Brussels The European Commission (EC), Airbus Industrie and five European airlines have restarted the MOSAIC scientific programme, initially launched in 1995 to measure ozone depletion in the upper atmosphere. It is estimated that air transportation is responsible for 2-3% of all air pollution and, ...

  • News

    Europeans seem to have blocked cabin-safety meaures

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Sir - Some while ago (Flight International, 5-11 March) John Rickard of the Air Safety Group called for the UK Civil Aviation Authority to take unilateral action on certain cabin-safety proposals emanating from the Boeing 737 crash at Manchester Airport some 12 years ago. This action was apparently ...

  • News

    Studying off-design performance

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Sir - As is evident from the article "DC-8 training faulted" (Flight International, 23-29 July, P15), it took an accident [that of an Airborne Express McDonnell Douglas DC-8 in December 1996 in Virginia] to get the aviation community to notice an area about which simulator engineers have been crying for ...

  • News

    Cessna unveils new training programme

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    CESSNA HAS UNVEILED a computer-based instruction (CBI) programme to train pilots in fewer hours at its Cessna Pilot Centers (CPCs). The initial private-pilot course is to be introduced by US-based CPCs in the second quarter of 1998. Beginning in 1999, courses will be developed for other ratings and for international ...

  • News

    Racing against time

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Like a chill wind, news of the Korean Air Boeing 747 accident at Guam swept through the safety meeting in Vancouver, rattling nerves and unsettling delegates. Less than 24h earlier, almost at the exact time of the crash, attendees at the first Technology ...

  • News

    A330-200 flight-testing programme takes off

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/TOULOUSE Airbus Industrie's latest widebody, the long-range A330-200, had a successful maiden flight on 13 August, with the consortium's chief test pilot, William Wainwright, at the controls. The initial General Electric CF6-80E1A4-powered version is scheduled to be certificated in March 1998, and to enter service ...

  • News

    Trans-Tasman partners study operations link for efficiency

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CAIRNS Air New Zealand and Australia's Ansett Airlines are studying innovative ways of making flight operations and aircrew training more efficient, and are looking to include Singapore Airlines in some of the initiatives, taking advantage of the three-way alliance they announced in July. Under the ...

  • News

    Star offers leading role to Cathay/SIA

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE The recently established Star Alliance is set to further expand in Asia, with both Cathay Pacific Airways and Singapore Airlines (SIA) now holding separate discussions to join the global partnership. According to industry sources, talks between Star and the two Asian airlines have been ...

  • News

    World's first civil GPS satellite landing system obtains FAA approval

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    The Honeywell/Pelorus SLS-2000differential global-positioning-system (GPS) satellite landing system now has US Federal Aviation Administration Special Category 1 (SCAT-1) approval. The "fail-operational" SLS installation comprises three GPS "pseudolyte" Remote Satellite Measurement Units (RSMU) up to 100m from an SLS ground reference station. The RSMUs supply the station with a ...