All Systems & Interiors news – Page 803

  • News

    Identity crisis

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Europe's regional airline executives could be excused for feeling pleased with themselves as they gathered in Hanover for the annual meeting of the European Regions Airline Association (ERA). The industry is again heading for double digit growth this year, expanding at around twice the speed of the majors. Load ...

  • News

    ON-LINE A new web challenger

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Ticket auctions on the Internet may not be new, but the latest web offering is stirring up more than a little controversy within the US airline industry. The problem centres not so much on what is being offered - basically an Internet service that allows the public to bid for ...

  • News

    Gaining an edge

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Managers may dream of introducing the ground-breaking innovation that reshapes the industry. Or of the revolution that launches their airline to new heights of sustained performance. But in today's real world of increasingly competitive marketplace, victories tend to be smaller, more fleeting and harder to win. Welcome to the age ...

  • News

    Virgin stirs US cabotage debate

    1998-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Virgin Atlantic Airways chairman Richard Branson has touched a nerve in the USA by calling for seventh freedom rights so that he can start a low-fares, low-cost, airline. His calls for cabotage came in the same month that a senior US Department of Transportation (DoT) official questioned whether current aviation ...

  • News

    African safety improves in 1998, despite growth

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Lois Jones/DAKAR Air accidents in Africa are reducing, says ASECNA, the air navigation agency for Francophone Africa. The number of reported accidents stand at 14 in 1998, compared with last year's tally of 30. Reported near misses stand at 17 this year, compared to 26 in 1997, says ...

  • News

    IATA warns of longer European air traffic control delays

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    The International Air Transport Association (IATA) says that it is concerned at the rise in air traffic control (ATC) delays in Europe. Statistics just released reveal that, over the 1998 summer period, 22% of all flights were delayed by an average of 24min, with total ATC delays 39%higher than ...

  • News

    Asian woes force Cathay to withdraw 747 Classic fleet

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Cathay Pacific Airways is to begin phasing out of service all six of its Boeing 747-300s within 12 months and is close to finalising a deal to dispose of a further two 747-200s, as the Hong Kong carrier continues to cut capacity in the face of a ...

  • News

    Kendell picks Canadair Regional Jet to take over Ansett routes

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CAIRNS Australian regional airline Kendell has selected the Bombardier Canadair Regional Jet (CRJ) over Embraer's RJ-145 and placed an order for up to 24 aircraft. Meanwhile, Adelaide-based National Jet Systems (NJS) is about to introduce the first of up to four ERJ-145s. The Ansett-owned regional has placed firm orders ...

  • News

    US Army plans UH-60Q Dustoff

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    The US Army has successfully completed operational testing of the Sikorsky Aircraft UH-60Q medical evacuation (medevac) helicopter and will modify 357 in-service UH-60As to the new standard from 2002. Sikorsky reconfigured four UH-60A Black Hawk utility helicopters to the UH-60Q "Dustoff" standard for integration of new mission equipment, including ...

  • News

    Transition Planning

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC The US Federal Aviation Administration has produced a new blueprint for modernisation of the country's airspace system, but industry remains far from convinced that the document represents a firm timetable for the introduction of new technologies. Manufacturers have been researching the new communications, navigation, surveillance and air ...

  • News

    Big ideas

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/NOORDWIJKERHOUT To a travelling public that sees the occasionally horrific television images of the aftermath of a major air disaster, the idea that they might one day fly on an aircraft capable of carrying up to 1,000 passengers is likely to bring the inevitable thought - what if it ...

  • News

    Galaxy keeps performance but puts on weight

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    The Galaxy will meet, and even exceed, its performance specification, despite growing in weight and encountering several handling problems, says Galaxy Aerospace. The aircraft, which had its US premiere at the show, has gained more than 320kg (700lb) as a result of greater allowance for the interior and "more ...

  • News

    Endeavour Space Station Shuttle flight faces delay

    1998-10-28T00:00:00Z

    The Space Shuttle Endeavour STS88 mission to attach the Unity 1 node to the Russian Zarya control module of the International Space Station has been threatened with being delayed from 3 December to later in the month because of potential computer problems. Zarya is due to be launched on a ...

  • News

    P@ssport to success

    1998-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada will install Sony Trans Com's P@ssport interactive in-flight entertainment system on its new Airbus A330/A340 fleet, due for delivery from May 1999, it was confirmed at the World Airline Entertainment Association show in Durban, South Africa on 13-16 October. P@ssport will be installed initially in the Executive First ...

  • News

    Pilots' share deal paves way for the privatisation of Air France

    1998-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS Air France's management and pilot unions have finally struck a deal which should end years of dispute and allow the airline to proceed to partial privatisation next year. The agreement, a refined version of the one that ended the crippling pilots' strike in June, is regarded ...

  • News

    JARs could scupper 'virtual airlines' in Europe

    1998-10-21T00:00:00Z

    British Airways' "virtual airline" arm Airline Management (AML) has been advised by the UK Civil Aviation Authority to make its management structure more accountable. If it cannot do this it will fail to meet European Joint Aviation Requirements-Operations (JARs) Rules when they take effect on 1 April, 1999. The ...

  • News

    South Korean trio start single-entity talks

    1998-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Three of South Korea's leading aerospace manufacturers have established a joint working committee and appointed teams of consultants to produce a business plan for the proposed new single corporate entity, which is tentatively named Korea Aerospace Industries. The three corporations concerned, Daewoo Heavy Industries, Hyundai Space ...

  • News

    Mooney Eagle programme advances towards its target

    1998-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Mooney Aircraft's worst fears for development of its new M20S Eagle piston single have failed to materialise, and it is on schedule to begin delivering the entry-level aircraft in January, after US approval around 1 December. Soon after Mooney launched the Eagle early this year, company sources confided that ...

  • News

    Airbus stands by safety regulations

    1998-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Airbus has insisted that existing safety regulations are adequate for large aircraft such as the 480/660-seat A3XX now on the drawing board. Speaking at the Very Large Transport Aeroplane (VLTA) conference at Noordwijkerhout, the Netherlands, on 13-16 October, Wolfgang Didszuhn, vice-president for product integrity at Airbus, said: "There is ...

  • News

    European/US navigation systems tested together

    1998-10-21T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/KEFLAVIK Tests using a US Federal Aviation Administration Boeing 727 have proved for the first time that European and US satellite navigation augmentation systems can work together. The 727 carried out successful Category I precision approaches to Keflavik Airport, Iceland, on 15 October using global positioning system ...