All Safety News – Page 1334

  • News

    FedEx MD-11 crash still mystifies NTSB

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    The reason for the crash of the Federal Express Boeing MD-11 freighter which overturned and burst into flames after landing at Newark airport, New Jersey, USA on 31 July is still puzzling National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators, partly because the last 5s of flight data recorder (FDR) information has ...

  • News

    Formosa has third major 228 accident

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Formosa Airlines has suffered its third fatal Dornier 228 accident in five years, with the loss of one of the Taiwanese regional airline's 19-seat 228-200s on approach to the Taiwanese island of Matsu. The aircraft hit high ground during a visual approach in poor-weather, killing all 16 passengers and crew. ...

  • News

    Paris congestion sees calls for more capacity

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS Continued air traffic congestion in France has led to renewed calls for more capacity at Paris' two main airports. But airlines which file more than one flightplan in an attempt to obtain the air traffic control (ATC) take-off slot they want are under criticism for causing ...

  • News

    Kitty Hawk/Kalitta companies take decision to merge

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Kitty Hawk, the Dallas-based charter passenger and cargo air carrier, has agreed to merge with the Ypsilanti, Michigan-based Kalitta Companies, which includes American International Airways (AIA), American International Cargo, American International Freight, Flight One Logistics, Kalitta Flying Services and OK Turbines. In a related transaction, Kitty Hawk will ...

  • News

    Guam crash MSAA alert

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Minimum-safe-altitude-alert (MSAA) systems on some 200 airport radars across the USA are undergoing checks for a possible software fault, the US Federal Aviation Administration has confirmed. This follows the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) discovery that an MSAA system in Guam which might have prevented the 6 August Korean Air ...

  • News

    Olympic near the edge

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    During take-off from Iraklion, Crete, on 12 August, an Olympic Airways Boeing 737-200Adv shed the tyre tread from two of its main wheels and the pilot elected to abort the take-off run. The aircraft, carrying 110 passengers, came to rest 200m from the runway end, just beyond which there is ...

  • News

    New Zealand officials examine delayed crash warning-

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/Cairns New Zealand's Transport Accident Commission is probing whether paint on the radar-altimeter antennas may have degraded the performance of the ground-proximity warning system (GPWS) on an Ansett New Zealand Bombardier de Havilland Dash 8, which crashed at Palmerston North, New Zealand, in June 1995, with the ...

  • News

    -and get tough on maintenance deficiencies

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    In its toughest punitive move to date, New Zealand's Civil Aviation Authority is to ground the small Palmerston North-based operator United Aviation because of "serious maintenance deÌciencies" discovered during audits. The airline, which ßies a small ßeet of piston twins, suffered a fatal accident with one of its ...

  • News

    Olympic 727 written off during landing in storm

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    An Olympic Airways Boeing 727-200Adv's landing gear was ripped off and its left wing destroyed when the pilot steered it off the runway while landing at Thessaloniki, northern Greece, airport authorities have confirmed. The pilot appears to have been attempting to avoid overrunning into the sea. On 12 ...

  • News

    Reflected glory

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Peter Henley/SEATTLE The dilemma which Boeing faced when launching its Next Generation 737 was whether to update the proven model or start afresh. The big 737 operators wanted an updated 737 for fleet commonality, but they demanded a version which would fly faster, higher and more economically. They ...

  • News

    Industry applauds IFR rule

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC US AVIATION groups have commended the US Federal Aviation Administration for finalising the single-engine instrument flight rule (SEIFR), permitting revenue passenger operations in single piston- and turbine-engine aircraft. Regulators had previously feared that engine failures on single-engined aircraft flying in weather on instruments ...

  • News

    FedEx approaches IAI over all-cargo turboprop requirement

    1997-08-20T00:00:00Z

    Ari Egozi/TEL AVIV Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI) has been approached by FedEx with a proposal for it to develop a turboprop-powered all-cargo aircraft to replace its fleet of 160 Boeing 727 freighters. The proposed aircraft would be larger than the Ayres Loadmaster now under development for ...

  • News

    Flight deck symposium

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    The first airlines to be involved in the experimental phase of the International Air Transport Association's (IATA) "flight safety buddy" system could be paired-up within a year says IATA director general, Pierre Jeanniot. The "buddy" concept is a major plank of IATA's seven-point safety strategy to halve the ...

  • News

    Chinese safety scrutinised after China Northern MD-82 overrun

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/Singapore Chinese air safety is coming under renewed scrutiny after a China Northern Airlines McDonnell Douglas MD-82 was badly damaged during an aborted take-off from Dalian Airport in the north of China. The aircraft suffered about $10.5 million worth of damage after overrunning the end ...

  • News

    Airlines oppose FAA 747 recommendations

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    AIRLINE organisations have collectively told the US Federal Aviation Administration that more study is required before the agency orders any costly changes in the way it certificates commercial-aircraft fuel tanks. They question the efficiency of measures recommended by the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) for preventing the ...

  • News

    Cathay profits dip as traffic disappoints

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Cathay Pacific Airways saw profits for the first half fall marginally under pressure from currency fluctuations, an unexpected drop in traffic and the recent grounding of its Airbus A330-300 aircraft fleet. The Hong Kong carrier reported a net profit of just above HK$1 billion ($130 million) for the ...

  • News

    Help me, buddy

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    If anybody had any illusions that the airline industry could relax about its safety record, events of the last few days should have dispelled them. In the space of ten days, at least three large airliners and one small one were destroyed in the course of regular services ...

  • News

    Revised figures force New Zealand insurers to review premiums

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Aviation insurance underwriters in New Zealand, whose premiums have traditionally favoured turbine-powered helicopters over piston types, are now reviewing the differential rates they offer turbine operators. Aviation underwriter Arden Jennings told New Zealand's Aviation Industry Association conference at New Plymouth on 31 July that 11 of the 400 ...

  • News

    Next Generation 737s move closer to JAA approval

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Boeing has TAKEN a crucial further step towards gaining European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) approval to carry up to 149 passengers in its 737-700 and 189 passengers in its 737-800, the JAA confirms. The Authority's Board has just reviewed recommendations from the JAA Committee about Boeing's proposal for ...

  • News

    Korean Air investigators focus on possible CFIT

    1997-08-13T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE The investigation into the crash of a Korean Air (KAL) Boeing 747-300 in Guam which killed 227 people, has begun to focus on controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) as a possible cause. US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) team leader George Black has stated ...