All Safety News – Page 1342

  • News

    Marginal routes offer scope for turboprops

    1998-02-27T00:00:00Z

    The economic turmoil in Asia-Pacific could provide turboprop manufacturers such as Aero International (Regional) (AI(R)) with a major opportunity, senior vice-president, commercial, Alain Brodin said at the show. He says it is possible that airlines operating jets on marginal routes could move them to lower-cost operators which would use ...

  • News

    Swearingen's Asia target

    1998-02-27T00:00:00Z

    Why opt for secondhand when you can have a brand new executive jet for just $3.5 million With 103 firm orders - 60 per cent from the USA and 40 per cent from Europe - in its slipstream so far, Sino Swearingen is hoping its SJ30-2 will capture the ...

  • News

    Preston sells second TAAM to Boeing

    1998-02-27T00:00:00Z

    The Preston Group (Stand C132) has announced at the show the sale of a second Total Airport and Airspace Modeller (TAAM) licence to Boeing. Boeing has been using TAAM since 1994 to satisfy the needs of its commercial airline customers by simulating potential projects in the modernisation of air traffic ...

  • News

    CAE simulators

    1998-02-26T19:05:00Z

    Canada's CAE Electronics has received a contract from Delta Airlines for four flight simulators. CAE will design and manufacture one Boeing 777-200 FFS and three 777-200 Flight Training Devices (FTD), to be installed at the airline's new state-of-the-art training centre in Atlanta, Georgia. The order follows the recent ...

  • News

    New simulator for SAS

    1998-02-26T00:00:00Z

    One year from now, SAS Flight Academy's centre in Stockholm will begin using its second Boeing 737-600/700/800 Full Flight Simulator. SAS has announced the order for the second simulator, to be manufactured by CAE Electronics, at Asian Aerospace '98. SAS Flight Academy currently has a total of 15 Full Flight ...

  • News

    No clear explanation yet of China Air crash

    1998-02-26T00:00:00Z

    Taiwan's Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) says it will release a preliminary report into the cause of the 16 February China Airlines (CAL) Airbus Industrie A300-600R crash within ten days. Deputy director Lee Wan Lee of the CAA's flight standards department says the aircraft's flight data recorder (FDR) and cockpit ...

  • News

    Economic crisis puts region's deals at risk

    1998-02-26T00:00:00Z

    Geoff Thomas Manufacturers were continuing to put on a brave face at the show yesterday, despite ever-strengthening indications that the region's economic turmoil is indeed having an effect on the industry. Beyond the obvious threats to airliner orders, it was being suggested that seemingly unrelated moves like Cathay ...

  • News

    Canadair racks up six more RJ orders

    1998-02-26T00:00:00Z

    Alan Dron Bombardier yesterday received orders for six Canadair Regional Jets - five from Montpellier, France-based Air Littoral, and one from Air Adria, of Ljubljana, Slovenia. The French order, for five Series 100 machines, will take the airline's fleet of the 50-seat aircraft to 19. Deliveries of its ...

  • News

    Never a dull moment with Pierson at the podium

    1998-02-26T00:00:00Z

    Mike Martin Jean Pierson's last air show appearance as chief executive of Airbus Industrie was vintage stuff. Some 13 years ago, when he joined the company, he told his team to "-fasten their seat belts: I promise we will cause some turbulence". Staff reaction went unrecorded, but the indomitable ...

  • News

    Lido offers integrated flight planning system

    1998-02-26T00:00:00Z

    Lufthansa's former flight preparation procedures department, now an independent company in the Lufthansa group, is set to expand its international customer base by up to 50%. Kai Kosicki, director marketing and sales of Lufthansa Aeronautical Services - Lido Gmbh - says the requirements of airlines in this region parallel those ...

  • News

    737-700 receives JAA approval after stall warning changes

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Boeing's 737-700 obtained European Joint Aviation Authorities certification on 18 February after changes were made to increase stall warning. The modifications meet the JAA's insistence that the pilot be able to identify clearly the occurrence of a stall, even after the activation of the stick shaker. The ...

  • News

    A330/340 pump fire danger doused

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Fire danger from faulty Airbus Industrie A330/A340 auxiliary hydraulic pumps has been addressed in a US Federal Aviation Administration airworthiness directive (AD), issued on 17 February, requiring their complete removal. Airbus, however, points out that all necessary corrective actions have already been taken, explaining that the electrically driven pumps (EHPs) ...

  • News

    IATA tackles African safety

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/GENEVA Efforts to improve the standard of air safety in Africa are moving forward after the first meeting of key groups from the region arranged by the International Air Transport Association (IATA). The initial meeting of the IATA/AFI (Africa & Indian Ocean) air traffic control incident analysis ...

  • News

    KLM may rationalise long haul fleet

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON Airbus Industrie and Boeing are vying to provide KLM with up to 30 long haul aircraft to enable the Netherlands flag carrier to standardise its widebodied fleet and to reduce the number of types in operation. Any deal could also involve aircraft for its strategic partner, Alitalia. Although ...

  • News

    Lufthansa confirms low cost short haul carrier concept

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH A Lufthansa study has confirmed the feasibility of forming a new low cost, short haul airline in the Lufthansa group, says the German carrier. The concept, known informally as "Lufthansa Light", envisages an autonomous carrier serving short haul second city pairs in Germany and other parts ...

  • News

    Routes

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    -US carrier Midwest Express has signed a codesharing agreement with regional airline American Eagle providing connecting service at Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas, and Los Angeles, California. Midwest, meanwhile, will add five McDonnell Douglas DC-9s to its fleet this year, bringing the total to 29. -Trans World Airlines will feed Delta Air ...

  • News

    Belgium's VLM gears up to enter millennium with Fokker 70 fleet

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Herman De Wulf/ANTWERPIN a bid to boost services and spread its business, Belgian regional airline VLM, of Antwerp is seeking to move up to a jet-powered fleet with the acquisition of Fokker 70s by 2000. The carrier has a fleet of four Fokker 50 turboprops, and new managing director Christian ...

  • News

    Australasian airline results suffer as Asian crisis bites

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CAIRNS A relatively buoyant round of first half financial results from Air New Zealand(ANZ), Ansett Australia and Qantas has been overshadowed by warnings over Asia-Pacific's economic crisis. All three carriers announced plans to redeploy capacity elsewhere on their international networks as Asian markets continue to shrink, raising ...

  • News

    Pan Am runs short of cash but Frontier hopes for better times

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC Financial problems continue to mount for the US low fares airlines, with the new Pan American World Airways warning that it is short on cash and could face bankruptcy. Frontier Airlines also reported big losses in the third quarter, but faces improving prospects with the demise of ...

  • News

    Swissair keeps appetite to take Sabena majority

    1998-02-25T00:00:00Z

    Sabena president Paul Reutlinger has again confirmed that Swissair is ready to take a 67% majority share in its Belgian partner, provided that Switzerland is able to join the European Union (EU) single skies agreement. The Belgian Government sold Swissair a 49.5% stake in its national carrier in mid-1995, ...