All Systems & Interiors news – Page 894

  • News

    Flying colours

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Errol Cossey, founder of Air Europe and Air 2000, has been appointed group chief executive and chairman, of Manchester UK based holiday company, Flying colours. Terry Soult, a former Air 2000 board member, becomes managing director. Geoffrey Dobson joins the company as finance director and Carolyn Quintaba becomes director of ...

  • News

    Jobs on offer

    1996-03-01T15:40:00Z

    For once job creation is on the agenda. British Airways is taking on 1,000 new employees to continue the build-up of the London/Gatwick hub, which includes the transfer of most of its African network from Heathrow. KLM will add 2,500 cabin crew over the next three years to cover its ...

  • News

    Korea expresses Asian jet doubts

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The purported partnership between China and South Korea to design and build a 100-seat jet dubbed the Asian Express AE-100 may be close to dissolving, as Singapore Technologies allies with China and the potential western players await the choice of a technology partner. Moo-Sung Yu, president of Samsung Aerospace, confirms ...

  • News

    Airline speak: a beginner's guide

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    In this industry people rarely mean what they say. Here's what they really mean.As airline startups multiply and established carriers recruit new management teams, there is a steady influx of new blood into this industry. Newcomers listening to the old hands talking might make the cardinal error of assuming that ...

  • News

    EBA: the new Euro Virgin?

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Virgin Atlantic is concerned that its carefully crafted brand image could suffer from the planned foray into low-frills, low-cost operations in Europe by chairman Richard Branson. Virgin Europe, headed by ex-Continental Express boss Jonathan Ornstein, declared an interest in mid-February in buying 80 per cent of Brussels-based EuroBelgian ...

  • News

    Strike threat looms in US

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    A surprise deal between United Airlines and its flight attendants contrasts sharply with pilot-management talks at Delta Air Lines and American Airlines. As of mid-February, those two carriers were locked in federally mediated negotiations as pilots turned up the heat with strike preparations. The most notable points that ...

  • News

    Agents for change

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    All the major computer reservations systems recently signed distribution agreements in China. Elaine White outlines the Chinese travel agent scene and looks at the potential for automating what will become the world's largest travel market.China's travel and tourism industry may be relatively new, but it is already one of the ...

  • News

    A weighty premium

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    No one seems sure how much the interbank premium, which has been imposed on Japanese banks, accounts for their pull-back from aircraft finance, but it seems to be a likely cause. David Knibb reports.Financiers disagree over how much of Japan's fading dominance in aircraft finance is due to its banking ...

  • News

    A personal approach

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Straight corporate branding could soon be banished to the past as experience in other sectors demonstrates that a personalised approach is far more effective. By David Fraser. There was a time when manufacturers, introducing industrialised technology, created products that were targeted simply at a wide and somewhat ubiquitous audience. Take ...

  • News

    Good times, bad times

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Northwest Airlines is no longer the highly leveraged, unprofitable carrier of a few years ago, but the carrier faces some tough hurdles in 1996. Jane Levere reports.The scourge of the investment community less than three years ago, Northwest Airlines is now the darling of Wall Street, having streamlined its operations ...

  • News

    Never green enough

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Airlines may have escaped a global increase in noise and possibly on emission stringencies, but does this open the door for individual airports to impose surcharges at will? Sara Guild reports on the ongoing debate on the environment.Aeroengine emissions and noise have been the subject of countless meetings and reviews ...

  • News

    Airline news

    1996-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Virgin Atlantic will start thrice weekly services from London/ Heathrow to Johannesburg from October. British Airways is to ban smoking on all flights to US and Caribbean destinations, except where more than one daily flight is available. South African Airways has resumed service to Buenos Aires ...

  • News

    Bombardier plans improved CL-415

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    BOMBARDIER PLANS a six-point product-improvement package to diversify the capabilities of the Canadair CL-415 water-scooping amphibious fire bomber. A finite fire-fighting market and interest from Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand (for additional aircraft) and Turkey in "missionised" derivatives has prompted the manufacturer to consider ...

  • News

    Extra EA400 tourer nears maiden flight

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH GERMAN AIRCRAFT manufacturer Extra-Flugzeugbau expects to conduct the maiden flight of its Extra EA400 touring aircraft by mid-March. The company says that the aircraft is in a final round of ground tests leading up to its aerial debut. The exact date of the ...

  • News

    DGPS approaches

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    Airport interest in satellite-based precision approaches is growing, as the potential benefits become evident. Graham Warwick/ATLANTA IN 1995, THE INTERNATIONAL aviation community, granted a stay of execution, to the venerable instrument-landing-system (ILS), while paving the way for its eventual replacement, by the global-positioning system (GPS). ...

  • News

    Hughes deals change shape of commercial simulator fleet

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    HUGHES FLIGHT Training in the UK has announced a series of deals, which will result in a reshaping of its commercial flight-simulator fleet. The London Gatwick-based independent training centre, formerly British Caledonian Flight Training has repositioned a Boeing 737-300/400 simulator, from Gatwick to Alaska Airlines' training centre in ...

  • News

    Xionix wins United upgrade

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    XIONIX SIMULATION HAS won a United Airlines contract to upgrade Boeing 747 and 757 auto-flight-systems trainers previously supplied to the carrier. The upgrade will include Xionix' FMC Emulator, which uses actual aircraft flight-management-computer (FMC) software. The personal-computer-based FMC Emulator has been developed jointly with FMC supplier Honeywell and ...

  • News

    Virgin European plans June start-up

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON VIRGIN EUROPEAN Airways could begin operations in June if it goes ahead with plans to acquire a controlling stake in EuroBelgian Airlines (EBA). The UK airline has confirmed that it has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to acquire an 80% stake in ...

  • News

    US airlines back in profit - for now

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    US airlines are back in profit, but the lessons of recession linger on. Kevin O'Toole/LONDON THE NOTORIOUS business cycles of the airline industry have at last come full circle for the US carriers. Just two years ago, three of the majors were fighting their way out of ...

  • News

    Bell and Samsung to launch twin

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    BELL HELICOPTER Textron and South Korea's Samsung Aerospace are planning joint development of a new light twin-turbine helicopter, tentatively designated the Model 427. Certification is scheduled for late 1998. The 427 is intended to be a rival for the Eurocopter EC 135 and McDonnell Douglas MD Explorer, says Bell chairman ...