All Systems & Interiors news – Page 837

  • News

    Thailand's PB Air is ready for 1998 launch date

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    Thai start-up operator PB Air is planning to launch its first charter/scheduled domestic service in 1998, initially using a recently acquired Fairchild Dornier 328 30-seat turboprop. The 12-month-old carrier hopes to fly daily from Bangkok to Hattyai via Chumporn Airport in southern Thailand, says PB Air chief pilot ...

  • News

    Discount airlines gain access to congested US airports

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    Five US low-fare airlines have been given permission to begin serving slot-controlled Chicago O'Hare International Airport and New York's La Guardia Airport, marking a first victory for the sector in its battle against the major network carriers. The permissions, granted by the US Department of Transportation (DoT), are ...

  • News

    Sabena springs surprise by taking City Bird stake

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    Sabena has taken a stake in Belgium start-up City Bird, adding a surprise twist to the low-cost carrier's flotation, and the airlines have unveiled a co-operation deal to cover new long-haul services. The listing had been delayed as news of the deal was released, but went ahead on 30 October, ...

  • News

    Too big a crowd

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    The withdrawal of first British Aerospace and then Saab from regional-turboprop manufacture does not signal the collapse of the sub-40-seater market so much as confirm that this market is changing rapidly into one for small jet airliners. It is also a market in which, no matter how buoyant the passenger ...

  • News

    Boeing pushes ultra-long range 747 derivative

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    Boeing could obtain board approval to offer airlines a new ultra-long-range - more than 14,800km (8,000nm) - derivative of the 747 as early as May 1998, if it can attract sufficient market interest, particularly from key Asia-Pacific airlines including Cathay Pacific Airways, EVA Airways of Taiwan and Qantas. ...

  • News

    Windows added to cockpit choices

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    US company Avidyne claims to be the first to certificate an avionics system which uses Microsoft's Windows NT software. The firm has begun shipping its 130mm multi-function displays after hardware supplier Electronic Designs received approval from the US Federal Aviation Administration. Avidyne had earlier gained Level-D "advisory-only" certification ...

  • News

    American Airlines visuals order boosts market leadership

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    American Airlines has selected Evans & Sutherland (E&S) to supply visual systems for five full-flight simulators recently ordered from CAE Electronics. The deal follows the announcement at the end of September that E&S had won a United Airlines contract for six systems. The two large orders boost E&S' ...

  • News

    Timeout in Asia

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    The AE31X programme is beginning to face its first real challenges, six months after China, Europe and Singapore inked a framework agreement to co-develop a new 100-seater family of jet airliners. Negotiators at the tripartite talks are wrestling with a series of critical issues which must be resolved shortly for ...

  • News

    Lufthansa CityLine/Bombardier negotiate for CRJ-700 purchase

    1997-11-05T00:00:00Z

    Lufthansa CityLine is in negotiations with Bombardier over a "double-digit" order for the 70-seat Canadair Regional Jet (CRJ) Series 700, but Fairchild Dornier is targeting the airline as a potential launch customer for its proposed rival regional jet. CityLine has just taken delivery of its 31st 50-seat CRJ ...

  • News

    Asia links the American way

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    American Airlines is blanketing Asia-Pacific with codeshare agreements, even though the US and Japan are discussing a new bilateral which is likely to allow it to codeshare with Japan Airlines to many of the same points via Japan. Asiana Airlines is American's latest codeshare partner in a blanket ...

  • News

    US targets predators

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    It has been a long time coming - some think too long - but the US Department of Transportation is promising to open up some of the key US hub airports and to get tough on carriers that behave anticompetitively. Predictably, the low-cost airlines applaud the move while the majors ...

  • News

    The Asian miracle turns to a malaise

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    For many years, the traditional lore in the airline business has been that Asia-Pacific represents the most vibrant, fastest growing, most profitable element of the industry, with the brightest prospects and the greatest resilience to factors like wars and recession to which most other carriers are vulnerable. As ...

  • News

    Europe joins the hunt

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The European Commission plans to launch a major crackdown on anti-competitive practices in the EU. The move represents a tacit admission that four years of liberalisation have failed to remove a number of barriers to entry in the European market. KLM may be the first to feel the ...

  • News

    Swiss offer Geneva hope

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Swissair may still come to regret its decision to drop intercontinental flights from Geneva after the Swiss parliament mandated limited special treatment for regional airports in new bilateral agreements. But critics say the measures don't go far enough. The parliament bowed to pressure from the western cantons by ...

  • News

    A breath of fresh air

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    US-Canada open skies, tentatively begun just over two and a half years ago, has been a resounding success for all concerned. Report by Karen Walker. The doom and gloom experts had better find another target. Despite concerns by some that the US-Canada open skies agreement, forged over three years ago, ...

  • News

    German FFP spoils shared

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Lufthansa's links with the public sector appear alive and well despite the sale of the German government's remaining 37.5 per cent stake in the carrier in October. Two rivals claim the German flag carrier had prior knowledge of decisions by federal authorities affecting their businesses and cite a ...

  • News

    Reid all about it

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Interview Lufthansa may have entered a new era as a fully private enterprise, but the challenges remain the same. Frederick Reid, president and chief operating officer of the passenger airline, talks to Mark Odell about cost cutting, the domestic market and the prospects for the Star Alliance. Unlike the other ...

  • News

    Second to none ?

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Following its relaunch this year, Qatar Airways is ahead of its forecasts and plans to assume a major role in the region over the next few years. Richard Whitaker reports from Doha. When it comes to service standards, Akbar Al Baker is not easily satisfied. The chief executive of ...

  • News

    Airtran does the business

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    ValuJet is giving up more than its name in the planned merger with fellow Atlanta startup AirTran Airways. The no-frills, single-class, open-seating service is going as well in a quest to attract the business traveller. From November the new ValuJet, renamed AirTran Airlines, will no longer focus purely ...

  • News

    Global travel

    1997-11-01T00:00:00Z

    Sabre has extended its Travelocity Internet travel booking system to cover 70 countries. Customers can now obtain fare and tax quotes in their local currency and have tickets issued through a local travel agency. Travelocity has 1.5 million members and took $95 million in bookings last year.   ...