All Safety News – Page 1407

  • News

    Light moves

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    Time did not stand still for the big light-aircraft manufacturers while they sought and gained product-liability reform. This ultimately allowed them to re-enter their former markets, but by that time, US production had dropped from its early-1980s peak of about 70 light single- and twin-engined aircraft a day, to a ...

  • News

    DASA/DLR move towards ENSS

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    Daimler-Benz Aerospace (DASA) and the German Aerospace Research Establishment (DLR) are embarking on a programme to develop key components of a future European Navigation Satellite System (ENSS). The ENSS has now been adopted as one of DASA's lead research projects. Over the next two to three years, the ...

  • News

    Australia considers making GPWS compulsory

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    Australia's Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) has begun industry consultation on proposed new standards for the installation of ground-proximity-warning systems (GPWS) on Australian commercial aircraft. The move to adopt the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) approved standards follows a coroner's re- commendation after the crash of a third-level ...

  • News

    Crash data help

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    Indian accident investigators have decided to send abroad the flight-data and cockpit- voice recorders (FDR/CVR) from the two aircraft involved in the mid-air collision near New Delhi on 12 November 1996. The CVR and FDR from the Saudi Arabian Airlines Boeing 747-100B are to go to London, UK, to be ...

  • News

    Comparison system detects database differences

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    XIONIX SIMULATION has delivered a navigation-database comparison system to British Airways. The system allows BA to compare navigation databases to identify differences and isolate errors. It is in use at the carrier's operations centre at Heathrow. BA is using the comparison system to increase the integrity of navigation ...

  • News

    Deja vu with age-60-years ruling

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    Sir - A US Federal Appeals Court panel will rule shortly on whether the US Federal Aviation Administration can continue to bar pilots of 60 years old from commanding US passenger aircraft. The general consensus seems to be that the "Age 60" rule is not based so much on medical ...

  • News

    Airbus Industrie and Wicat join in A310/A300-600 training upgrade

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    AIRBUS INDUSTRIE IS improving pilot training for the A300-600 and A310-300, with the help of Wicat Systems, to match that available for the A320, A330 and A340. Wicat is supplying new computer-based training (CBT) courseware and is developing a "free-play" trainer for the A310/A300-600 flight-management and -guidance system (FMGS), similar ...

  • News

    TTS unveils new-design simulator

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    THOMSON TRAINING &Simulation (TTS) has delivered the first of its new-design full-flight simulators to the ATR Training Centre (ATC) in Toulouse, France. The new design was evolved following TTS' acquisition of Rediffusion and includes features from the UK company's Concept 90 simulator. The first new-design machine to enter ...

  • News

    Why was this aircraft allowed to land at Heathrow?

    1997-01-08T00:00:00Z

    Sir - On 8 December, 1996, I was awaiting clearance at Heathrow when a Fokker 50 (with a known undercarriage problem) approached runway 09R (Flight International, 18-31 December, 1996, P10). The expected happened, and the left main gear collapsed. What I would like to know is: why was ...

  • News

    Other mid-air collisions

    1997-01-01T16:07:00Z

    Sir - In the article "Collision raises doubts on ATC routeings" (Flight International, 20-26 November, P8), you say: "The last time a mid-air collision between commercial airliners occurred was 11 August, 1979." I would point out that, in April 1984, a mid-air collision occurred between two Votec Embraer ...

  • News

    TI tilt rotor deals

    1997-01-01T15:23:00Z

    The TI Group has secured two separate deals to provide the landing gear and flight controls for the new Bell Boeing 609 corporate tilt-rotor. Dowty Aerospace Wolverhampton is to design and develop a complete suite of fly-by-wire control actuators in a deal reckoned to be worth in excess of $100 ...

  • News

    KLM raises fares

    1997-01-01T15:07:00Z

    KLM, which was among the first of the carriers to add a ticket surcharge to cover soaring fuel costs, has now officially raised fares by up to 5% on a range of international markets. Alliance partner Northwest Airlines will also raise the price of tickets in the Netherlands market. The ...

  • News

    USA exercises judgement

    1997-01-01T14:43:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration has given Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey passing marks for monitoring aviation safety, but Cote d'Ivoire and Thailand earned conditional ratings, given after a nation's civil-aviation authority fails an FAA-conducted audit of its safety-oversight organisation and practices. Under these circumstances, only limited operations to the USA ...

  • News

    Fuel fare ticket

    1997-01-01T11:20:00Z

    The jump in fuel prices has pushed Iata member airlines to seek a 3 per cent increase in international fares. At presstime Iata was hoping the hike would take effect from mid-December 1996.   Source: Airline Business

  • News

    Stalemate in London talks

    1997-01-01T00:00:00Z

    UK and US negotiators kept to uncontentious issues such as ground handling and customs procedures during the latest round of bilateral talks in London in December 1996. Any breakthrough seems unlikely before the UK Office of Fair Trading and US Department of Justice rule on the proposed British Airways-American Airlines ...

  • News

    Struggle from the rubble

    1997-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Kuwait Airways is banking on a successful programme of alliances and regional cooperation to reverse recent heavy losses. Doug Cameron reports from Kuwait City. Almost seven years after its liberation, Kuwait City retains an almost haunted look despite its renovation and its return as one of the major commercial centres ...

  • News

    Toughing out the boom

    1997-01-01T00:00:00Z

    In 1997, can the major airlines improve on their performance in the boom year of 1996? Airline Business previews the main issues which will dominate airline executives' thinking in 1997. These are the good times, but life for the average airline manager does not appear to be getting any easier. ...

  • News

    Bigger floats sink Sempati

    1997-01-01T00:00:00Z

    The size of Indonesia's privatisation programme has delayed plans for public offerings at both Sempati Air and flag carrier Garuda. Privately owned Sempati, Indonesia's second largest carrier, has postponed an initial public offering scheduled for late 1996. According to Dedet Suardhyka, the airline's corporate secretary, local investor interest ...

  • News

    Asia rife with labour strife

    1997-01-01T00:00:00Z

    Industrial unrest is spreading across Asia-Pacific as the region's carriers react to a worrying economic slowdown and stiff competition, compounded by the global hike in fuel costs. At presstime, All Nippon Airways was at loggerheads with its cabin crew unions after wage negotiations broke down: a 24-hour strike ...

  • News

    Polls leave Thai with Bill

    1997-01-01T00:00:00Z

    A change of government has rubbed salt into Thai Airways International's wounds. Lack of political clearance forced the carrier to postpone its US$4.7 billion fleet revamp and accept penalties of some $40 million. The latest setback for the mostly state-owned carrier comes on top of disastrous fourth quarter results which ...