All Safety News – Page 1349

  • News

    Boeing accelerates 747 growth project again

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    Boeing is stepping up work on its revamped 747-400IGW (increased gross weight) and IGW Stretch plan, and is pushing Rolls-Royce and the General Electric /Pratt & Whitney Engine Alliance to firm up plans for new 289kN (65,000lb)-thrust engines to make the proposed aircraft more attractive to airlines. "You'll ...

  • News

    Consortium bids to link Schiphol with Belgian airports

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    An Irish-Dutch consortium has offered to form an alliance with the Belgian Government to operate the airports of Amsterdam, Brussels and Charleroi as a single entity. The consortium involves Amsterdam Schiphol of the Netherlands and Aer Rianta of Ireland - each with a 50% share. The ...

  • News

    Kai Tak engine strike

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    A Nippon Cargo Airlines Boeing 747-200 was damaged when its No 1 engine hit the ground during a 17 May attempted landing at Hong Kong's Kai Tak Airport. After the captain had elected to go-around, the aircraft returned for a safe landing 17min later, according to Kai Tak air traffic ...

  • News

    ICAO pushes for new enforcement powers

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    THE INTERNATIONAL Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) is to push for powers to enforce safety and security standards for its 185 member states. President Assad Kotaite will ask the ICAO Council in June for powers to conduct compulsory safety and security audits and enforce implementation of standards. The ICAO ...

  • News

    Delta opts for fire-protection

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    Delta Air Lines has decided to fit its entire narrowbody fleet with cargo-bay fire-protection systems well ahead of an expected US Federal Aviation Administration airworthiness directive. Walter Kidde Aerospace, a division of Kidde Technologies, is Delta's chosen supplier of cargo-hold smoke-detectors which, together with Kidde's central cargo electronic-monitoring unit and ...

  • News

    BFGoodrich plans to expand Skywatch

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    BFGOODRICH PLANS to begin shipping its Skywatch traffic-advisory system in June, following USFederal Aviation Administration approval of the system. The company says that it has taken 65 orders since launching the Skywatch, which is aimed at the general-aviation market, at the beginning of April. Flight International was given ...

  • News

    The aircraft after the explosions

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    Container No 1 is the US Federal Aviation Administration-manufactured "hardened" container, which was placed close to the cargo-hold wall where the fuselage is externally marked with the black grid lines. In each container, a "bomb" was placed against an outboard-facing wall to test for "worst-case" results. Immediate external visual inspection ...

  • News

    FAA warns on joint Russian certification

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration has warned that progress towards a US-Russian bilateral on aircraft certification has been halted by confusion over which bodies will be responsible for airworthiness under the new Russian Air Code, and continuing problems with quality control at production plants. "The FAA has been ...

  • News

    ANZ drops Rolls for GE on next 747-400

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    AIR NEW ZEALAND (ANZ) has switched its allegiance from Rolls-Royce to General Electric for its next Boeing 747-400, due for delivery in 1998. The flag carrier opted for GE's CF6-80C2 over R-R's proposed RB.211-524G/H-T improved turbofan. The decision is a setback for the UK manufacturer's effort to sell ...

  • News

    US Federal Aviation Administration demands EMB-120 ice-detection

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration has proposed an airworthiness directive (AD) calling for the installation of ice-detection systems on the Embraer EMB-120 regional turboprop. The AD follows the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) report into the crash of a Comair EMB-120RT in Michigan on 9 January, which ...

  • News

    Affordable start

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    Remarkably, Skyfox has been awarded the first certification for not one, but two aircraft under European/ Australian joint airworthiness regulations for very light aircraft (JAR/VLA). As a result of the certification of the tailwheel CA25 Impala, and its newer derivative, the nosewheel-equipped Skyfox Gazelle, the Queensland-based manufacturer is now promoting ...

  • News

    Jakarta ATC System

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    Hughes Aircraft International Airspace Management Systems has successfully completed factory and site-acceptance testing of the FAT 50 Jakarta automated air-traffic-control (ATC) system now being installed at Sokarno-Hatta International Airport. Successful integration and testing of the US contractors Guardian flight and radar-data processing system and advanced colour controller workstations leaves only ...

  • News

    Bouw goes as profits fall at KLM prompts cost cutting

    1997-05-28T00:00:00Z

    KLM has launched a cost-reduction plan aimed at saving Dfl1 billion ($528 million) over the next three years. The move comes in the face of the Dutch airline announcing a 57% fall in net profits for 1996 and the resignation of chairman Pieter Bouw. In contrast, European rivals British Airways ...

  • News

    Pieces of paper versus experience

    1997-05-27T17:59:00Z

    Sir - The adverse comment by Thomas Dallas on Capt Raby's concern over the call for increased academic standards among pilots (Letters, Flight International, 7-13 May, P52) misses the point. It still remains true that exposure to the practical is the essence of the competent pilot. It may not be ...

  • News

    RVSM modifications

    1997-05-21T16:43:00Z

    Lynton Aircraft Sales, based at Kidlington in Oxford, is claiming to be the first UK operator to have certificated modifications to one of its aircraft in line with new reduced vertical-separation minima (RVSM) regulations imposed by the US Federal Aviation Administration and adopted on trial by the UK on 27 ...

  • News

    RVSM: cost must be allowed for

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Sir - The extreme enthusiasm for reduced vertical separation minima (RVSM) demonstrated by United Airlines' Mark Hurston (Letters, Flight International 16-22 April, P40) is by no means universal. Has the cost of qualifying certain aircraft types for RVSM been included in his, or anyone else's, projections? Just before ...

  • News

    AlliedSignal begins reliability upgrades

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    AlliedSignal's $30 million enhancement programme for the ALF502R and LF507 engines, dubbed the XRP (extended-reliability package) has gone into top gear with the release of the first group of improvements. Major items of the "Group 1" XRP include new number two, four and five bearing packages, new number ...

  • News

    SEOS to supply HiView display for MiG-29 simulator

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    SEOS DISPLAYS of the UK is to supply the visual-display system for a MAPO MiG-29 full-mission simulator built by Slovakia's Virtual Reality Media (VRM). The company has selected a six-channel Prodas HiView projected display from SEOS for its FSM-29 simulator. The display provides a 180í horizontal by 90í ...

  • News

    Boeing considers extending 777 fatigue testing

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Boeing will decide in the next few weeks whether further fatigue testing of its 777 is required, before "tearing down" the full-scale fatigue specimen for analysis, but it is already applying test results to aircraft manufacture. Planned tests simulating 120,000 flight cycles ended in March. Boeing says that ...

  • News

    Embraer introduces long-range EMB-145

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    EMBRAER has launched development of a long-range version of the EMB-145 regional jet. The 50-seat aircraft will have a range of 3,000km (1,600nm), compared with 2,400km for the current EMB-145, and is to become available in April 1998. The Brazilian manufacturer says that it has no customers yet ...