All Safety News – Page 1451

  • News

    UK turns up heat on engine-control study

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON AN ADVANCED electronic engine-control (EEC) system, capable of operation in the high-temperature core of a jet engine, rather than being mounted on the fan casing, is under development by a UK consortium. The project could lead to production of more-responsive and reliable EECs ...

  • News

    AeroMexico on firmer footing

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    AEROMEXICO HAS emerged from a critical year with its financial restructuring safely in place and its losses apparently under control. The Mexican carrier, which came close to collapse during 1995, reports that net losses ended the year at 173 million pesos ($23 million). That compares to more than ...

  • News

    Lessons to learn from Concorde

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Sir - In "Twenty years young" (Flight International, 7-13 February, P41) you comment that "...in terms of flight cycles and hours, the aircraft [Concordes] are remarkably young, despite the physical age of the fleet". British Airways, you report, operates each Concorde for 900-1,100h a year - one-quarter (or less) of ...

  • News

    Saf-T-Glo hopes Pathfinder lighting will shine in USA

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    AN EMERGENCY FLOOR-path-lighting system, which requires no electrical power and has no batteries, bulbs or wiring to install and maintain, has been certificated in the USA by Diversified Aviation Services (DAS). The Pathfinder photo-luminescent lighting system, manufactured by UK company Saf-T-Glo, has been approved and installed by airlines, in France ...

  • News

    USA told: 'offer more' to beat bilateral block

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC LACK OF LEVERAGE ON the part of US negotiators has led to the current impasse in bilateral aviation talks with the UK, according to the US General Accounting Office (GAO). As the GAO issued its report, British Airways chairman Sir Colin Marshall, visiting Washington, was ...

  • News

    CVR data indicate chaos in 757 crash

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/LONDON THE COCKPIT-VOICE recorder (CVR) of the Birgenair Boeing 757-200 which crashed in February reveals a picture of pilots who, faced with minor problems, became confused and lost control of a flyable aircraft, according to an interim report by the Dominican Republic's accident-investigation commission. ...

  • News

    FAA warns Wilcox on WAAS

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC WILCOX ELECTRIC IS in danger of losing its $475 million contract to develop and produce the global-positioning-system (GPS) wide-area augmentation system (WAAS) for the US Federal Aviation Administration. On 18 March, the aviation agency advised the US-based subsidiary of Thomson-CSF that the WAAS ...

  • News

    The difficulties of MDA level flight

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Sir - David Learmount's article "Research pinpoints non-precision risks" (Flight International, 6-12 March, P5) on research by the Netherlands National Aerospace Laboratory into non-precision approach and landing procedures puts figures to what has been articulated by air industry for many years. One aspect of the non-precision approach should ...

  • News

    Catering for tropical needs

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Sir - In your editorial "Filling the gap" (Flight International, 10-16 January) you place great emphasis on the ability of Airbus Industrie to "...create a world-bearing product-line, with world-beating technology". While it may be able to create advanced airliners, Airbus appears to have little or no consideration for ...

  • News

    Air France wins pilot fight

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Gilbert Sedbon/PARIS AIR FRANCE CHAIRMAN Christian Blanc has won a major round in his battle to cut costs, with the company's two main pilots' unions settling a drawn-out dispute over working conditions. The deal could boost pilot productivity by 30% and bring to an end a series of ...

  • News

    Meeting the challenge

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    The effects of the recession may be subsiding, but the general-aviation community continues to face some tough problems, as delegates attending the UK General Aviation Manufacturers and Traders Association (GAMTA) annual conference at the Forum Hotel in London on 7-8 March, heard. Andrew Doyle, David Learmount and Forbes Mutch report. ...

  • News

    Airbus partners scale up combined R&D for A3XX

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON AIRBUS INDUSTRIE IS pushing for an unprecedented level of co-operation between its partners and suppliers during the research-and-development (R&D) phase of the proposed A3XX ultra-high-capacity airliner. The new approach, under the so-called "3E Plan", is seen as crucial to the consortium's efforts to keep the aircraft's ...

  • News

    Former managers return after Alitalia's boardroom coup

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON IN A COMPLEX SAGA, worthy of the politics of ancient Rome, yet another management team has been swept from power at Alitalia. This time, former managers have returned to take control of the airline. The final act came, as chairman Roberto Riverso, handed ...

  • News

    Airports grow again

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Airports report continued strong passenger growth for 1995. Kevin O'Toole/LONDON THE WORLD'S MAJOR airports have reported a fourth successive year of strong passenger growth for 1995, although the rate of expansion now appears to be slowing. Preliminary figures from the Airports Council International ...

  • News

    UK set to re-examine foreign pilot-training policy

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    UK CIVIL AVIATION Authority chief Sir Christopher Chataway has told the UK General Aviation Manufacturers and Traders Association (GAMTA) that he will "look again" at the policy of allowing CAA-approved foreign flying-training schools to issue UK commercial pilot licences. GAMTA chief executive Graham Forbes says that UK flying-training-school ...

  • News

    Costly corporate updates on the way

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    THE COST OF additional or replacement equipment for business aircraft to meet impending regulations could cost almost $1 million for older aeroplanes, warns fixed-base operator Magec Aviation of Luton, UK. Some equipment has yet to be specified and its' cost to be defined. Magec flight-operations director ...

  • News

    BA puts commercial case for Terminal 5

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    BRITISH AIRWAYS HAS painted a bleak picture for its' own and the UK's future if London Heathrow's fifth terminal is not built. In its closing submission to the first phase of a public inquiry on the subject, BA estimates that up to 26 million passengers could be lost to London's ...

  • News

    Korean Air wins from won's appreciation

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    KOREAN AIR (KAL) came close to tripling its profits in 1995, although much of the improvement came as a windfall from the appreciation of the South Korean won against the US dollar, in which the airline holds most of its debt. KAL's net profit soared over the year, ...

  • News

    Cathay profits leap

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE CATHAY PACIFIC Airways beat market expectations with a 25% leap in profits for 1995, boosted by higher revenue and improved cost efficiency, but also helped by an accounting change. The Hong Kong carrier turned in a net profit of just under HK$3 billion ...

  • News

    Ansett prepares for ANZ with executive shake-up

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CAIRNS ANSETT HAS CLEARED the decks for the imminent Air New Zealand (ANZ) buy-in, with managing director Graeme McMahon and two of his senior managers departing in favour of a new ten-member executive structure at the Australian airline. News Limited chief and executive chairman of Ansett Holdings, Ken Cowley, ...