All Safety News – Page 1411

  • News

    Unions get extension for rescue

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Canadian Airlines president Kevin Benson has given unions further time to back a financial rescue package rather than risk the ailing carrier entering bankruptcy. Benson had set a 27 November deadline for the unions to accept a 10% wage cut as part of an austerity package aimed ...

  • News

    Ethiopian hijacking results in worst-ever fatalities

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    A record number of people were killed on a single hijacked airliner when an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767-200ER ran out of fuel and ditched just off the Comoros Islands, near Mozambique on 23 November, killing eight crew and 115 passengers. The three hijackers, whose motives never became clear, ...

  • News

    Fokker reversers need checks

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/LONDON Fokker has warned airline operators of a potential fault in the engine thrust-reverser systems on its Fokker 70 and 100 regional jets. This may have been a factor in the fatal TAM Brazilian Fokker 100 crash at Sao Paulo (Flight International, 6-12 November, P6). ...

  • News

    UK NATS trials raise fears over GPS reliability

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Data from global-positioning-system (GPS) receivers are too unreliable to be used for sole-means navigation by aircraft, according to a study undertaken by the UK Civil Aviation Authority's National Air Traffic Services (NATS). NATS made the claim after its own trials revealed problems with GPS "outages", availability and integrity, ...

  • News

    Foam arresters

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    A new aviation-safety device, designed to terminate runway overruns, has been installed at New York's JFK International Airport. The arrester system, located at the end of Runway 4R-22L, uses as many as 2,000 2.4 x 1.2m foam blocks of aerated, cellular cement to stop a wide body aircraft. JFK is ...

  • News

    CAAC refusal on Airbus forces Xinjiang to turn to Boeing fleet

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/BEIJING China's Xinjiang Airlines is waiting for central Government approval to order up to 15 new Boeing 737s and 757s after being refused permission to purchase Airbus A320/A321s. The Urumqi-based carrier urgently needs new aircraft to revamp its fleet and to phase out older Russian-built ...

  • News

    September profit as Lufthansa ends poor year

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Lufthansa recovered some of its poise in the September quarter with a steady profits performance, but doubts that its full-year results will be able to match the record earnings of 1995. The group suffered an unexpected tumble in profits during the first half of 1996 as the anticipated ...

  • News

    Meridiana fights for profit with cost cutting and employee share scheme

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Meridiana Is Cutting Its DC-9 Fleet But Adding MD-82 Italy's second-largest airline, Meridiana, is fighting to stay in profit as high operating costs and declining domestic traffic threaten major losses in 1997. The carrier made a L25 billion ($16.5 million) pre-tax profit in 1995, but expects ...

  • News

    Sextant Avionique pins hopes on its ATM business

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/Paris Sextant Avionique expects its fast-growing air-traffic-management (ATM)-systems business to net more than a one-third share of the market and add nearly Fr500 million ($100 million) in sales by the end of the century. Sextant and its parent, Thomson-CSF, launched a major initiative at ...

  • News

    Bayern-Chemie studies double-pulse rocket motor

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Rocket motor specialist Bayern-Chemie, a joint venture of Daimler-Benz Aerospace (DASA) and Thomson-CSF, is investigating a double-pulse rocket motor for the German HFK hypersonic missile programme. HFK, led jointly by DASA and Bodenseewerk Gerätetechnik (BGT), aims to create a weapons system which has the firepower of a main ...

  • News

    Shanghai Aviation Industrial (SAIC)

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    SAIC is the prime Chinese contractor for the TrunkLiner co-production programme with McDonnell Douglas, under which it is assembling 20 MD-90-30s for the Chinese market at its plant in Shanghai. Chinese industrial participation in the SAIC MD-90 programme involves three Chinese companies producing sub-assemblies - Xian Aircraft: wing ...

  • News

    SATIC Special Aircraft Transport International

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    SATICA300-600ST "Beluga" Super Transporter Development of an outsized version of the Airbus A300-600R to carry large aircraft-subassemblies was initiated by Airbus Industrie, which needed a replacement for the aging fleet of four Aero Spacelines Super Guppy turboprops employed to ferry sub-assemblies between the Airbus partner plants. ...

  • News

    Aero International (Regional) (AI(R))

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Avro RJ70/85/100/115 Avro International Aerospace's family of regional jets is marketed under the umbrella of Aero International (Regional), which combines the regional-aircraft activities of British Aerospace, Aerospatiale and Alenia. The RJ70, RJ85 and RJ100 were introduced to supersede the BAe 146-100, -200 and -300 respectively. ...

  • News

    Airbus Industrie

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    A300 Launched in May 1969, the 250-seat A300 was Airbus Industrie's first product, and the first example was flown from Toulouse, France, in October 1972. The first production A300 variant, the -B2, entered service in May 1974. The -B4 growth-weight version followed, while several F4 and C4 versions ...

  • News

    Boeing Commercial Airplane Group

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    First next-generation 737, a -700, is in final assembly at Renton, Washington British Airways has taken new Boeing 747s, 767s and 777s this year Boeing built 45 of the short-fuselage 747SP The 747 family is set to grow with two new variants, the 462-seat ...

  • News

    Fokker Aircraft

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    F28 Fokker Aviation is studying a possible re-engineing programme for ageing F28s, replacing the type's existing Rolls-Royce Speys with General Electric CF34s or with R-R Tays. More than 200 F28s are still flying and at least one operator, Scandinavia's SAS, has already invested in Fokker 70-style cabin upgrades ...

  • News

    Hopes fade for Fokker rescue

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    The wings have fallen off the Fokker/Samsung deal Kevin O'Toole/LONDON Fokker's administrators have called a halt to the Samsung rescue plan and admit that the chances of saving the bankrupt Dutch manufacturer are now "extremely small". The decision was taken after the South Korean ...

  • News

    R-R offers Trent/-524 hybrid retrofit option

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Rolls-Royce has offered operators of RB.211-524G/ H-powered Boeing 747-400s and 767s the option to retrofit their engines with the core of the Trent 700, in an effort to offset higher-than-expected fuel-consumption degradation and reliability problems in the existing power plants. R-R recently accelerated development work on the so-called ...

  • News

    BFG tests SMART de-icing boot

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ATLANTA BF Goodrich (BFG) is to conduct certification flight-testing of its SMART boot pneumatic de-icer, with an integrated wide-area ice-detection sensor, on New Piper Aircraft's Malibu Mirage high-performance piston single. The company says that the system "-removes the guesswork from pneumatic de-icer operation". The ...

  • News

    Flight plan change is over the top

    1996-12-04T00:00:00Z

    Sir - For the Dutch and Belgian Governments to ask the International Civil Aviation Organisation for changes in flight plan-transmitted data seems a bit over the top (News in Brief, "C-130 crash", Flight International, 30 October-5 November, P18). Assuming that air-traffic control was talking to the Lockheed Martin ...