All Systems & Interiors news – Page 923

  • News

    1,000-seat design winner

    1995-03-22T00:00:00Z

    The 1,000-seat airliner might still be just the stuff of a feasibility study, but students at the Coventry University School of Art & Design in the UK have been visualising what its cabin interior may look like. The winner of a recent design competition for the students, sponsored by Ogle ...

  • News

    EU ministers pave way for Swissair

    1995-03-22T00:00:00Z

    THE 15 EUROPEAN Union (EU) ministers of transport have ruled that Sabena will remain an EU airline, even if Swissair takes a majority share in Belgium's national airline. The ministers concluded at a 14 March meeting that the deal would come under an EU law saying that an ...

  • News

    Lifting the gloom

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    The mood at GAMTA's annual conference in London was very different to that in 1994. Kieran Daly/LONDON The second half of the 1990s will test Europe's general aviation (GA) operators beyond precedent, but it may also reward them, as never before. What is beyond doubt is that ...

  • News

    Diamond ships its first Katana to Missouri

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    DIAMOND AIRCRAFT has delivered its first DA20 Katana trainer to Central Missouri State University. The London, Ontario-based manufacturer says that it has firm orders for 121 of the all-composite two-seaters, the majority from US flight schools. Diamond has so far delivered 11 Canadian-built DA20s and operates a demonstrator ...

  • News

    Starkraft ditches kitplane plans

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    STARKRAFT HAS dropped plans to market its Model 700 piston-twin as a kitplane and is arranging financing to certificate the eight-place, all-composite aircraft. A prototype was flown for the first time in December 1994, powered by two 260kW (350hp), liquid-cooled Teledyne Continental TSIOL-550s mounted in the nose and ...

  • News

    EC tries to close ranks over US open-skies deals

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS EUROPEAN TRANSPORT ministers will be asked to toe the line on a common "open-skies" policy for the European Union in a crucial meeting to be held in Brussels on 13-14 March. The matter has moved to the top of the agenda as the ...

  • News

    BA considers A330 for medium-haul fleet update

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON BRITISH AIRWAYS plans to make a decision on updating its medium-haul fleet within the next 12 months, with the Airbus A330 among the contenders. The airline says that in a year's time it will be in a position to begin "seriously considering" acquisition ...

  • News

    French Land Contract

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    French landing-gear manufacturer and maintenance company Messier-Bugatti has won a contract from Korean Airlines for the general overhaul of landing gear on five Airbus Industrie A300-600 aircraft, representing work on 15 landing-gear legs. The work will be carried out at Messier-Bugatti's Molsheim plant in eastern France, and is expected to ...

  • News

    Tuning Up With Aircom

    1995-03-15T00:00:00Z

    Swissair has chosen the SITA/France Telecom/Teleglobe Canada/Telestra Satellite Aircom in-flight entertainment communications system for its medium-haul fleet of Airbus A319, A320 and A321 narrow-bodies. The airline has already retrofitted its McDonnell Douglas MD-11s and is about to begin equipping its Boeing 747-300s. Scandinavian Airline System has also selected the product ...

  • News

    Frustration of seeking a job

    1995-03-08T16:36:00Z

    Sir - I am a pilot with a UK regional airline seeking employment with some of the major scheduled and charter carriers, to further my career. It is frustrating to be told by some airlines that they are not recruiting, and do not foresee doing so, only to ...

  • News

    Providing the answers

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    The causes of accidents are often not found because of inadequate flight-data recorders. Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES   The United Airlines Boeing 737-200 which rolled on its back and crashed for no apparent reason on the approach to Colorado Springs in March 1991 carried a six-parameter ...

  • News

    Aeroflot looks West for its fleet renewal

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Paul Duffy/MOSCOW AEROFLOT-RUSSIAN International Airlines (ARIA) has confirmed plans to lease further Western aircraft until upgraded Russian aircraft become available. Replacement of ARIA's 116-strong fleet of ageing and fuel-inefficient aircraft is a priority, acknowledges airline chief executive Vladimir Tikhonov, giving his report on the airline's performance ...

  • News

    Airline seats get off the ground

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    SIMULA SUBSIDIARY Airline Interiors has secured a launch customer for its 16G airline seats. California-based start-up carrier Trans-Orient Express has signed a letter of intent to install the seats in Boeing 747-200s to be used on services between Los Angeles and Vietnam, beginning in late 1995. Initial deliveries are worth ...

  • News

    GE90-powered 777 reaches Mach 0.96 in dive

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    THE GENERAL ELECTRIC GE90-powered Boeing 777 reached Mach 0.96 during a high-speed dive in February, as part of a faster-than-expected expansion of the aircraft/engine flight envelope. "We are well into the test schedule. In fact we're already at the point that we'd normally be at six weeks into ...

  • News

    Smiths secures place on new 737 programme

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    SMITHS INDUSTRIES estimates that it has secured around $350 million of business on the next generation of Boeing 737, after being selected to supply the aircraft's flight-management computer (FMC) system. Smiths supplies a range of avionics equipment for the existing 737 programme, including the FMC, but faced a ...

  • News

    FAA adopts GPS plan for Olympic helicopters

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    THE US FEDERAL Aviation Administration has adopted as a major project plans to develop a low-level airspace system for Atlanta, Georgia, to enable helicopters to be used to overcome traffic congestion expected during the 1996 Olympic Games. The joint government-industry project will develop a network of helicopter routes ...

  • News

    Canada will introduce charges for overflights

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    THE CANADIAN Government is to introduce overflight charges to airlines using its airspace, as part of a restructuring in advance of the privatisation of its Air Navigation System (ANS). The Government confirms that it will privatise its C$800 million ($575 million)-a-year ANS when it releases its plans for ...

  • News

    Swissair in regional/charter shake-up

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH SWISSAIR HAS HANDED over its regional-jet operations to its Crossair subsidiary. In a second strategic move, Swissair and Crossair will absorb the loss-making charter flights of Balair/CTA - effectively ending the latter's operations. Both moves are aimed at cutting costs and restoring group profitability. By the ...

  • News

    Boeing seeks waiver over head-impact rules

    1995-03-08T00:00:00Z

    BOEING HAS requested a temporary exemption from US Federal Aviation Administration head-injury criteria (HIC) certification rules for some economy-class seats on the 777 until May 1996. The company, like others, has been struggling for some four years to find ways of meeting the HIC requirements and has experimented ...

  • News

    Sizing up all the options

    1995-03-01T14:50:00Z

    I agree with the basic message of 'Stop Downsizing' by Scott Brandt (Airline Business, October 1995). No significant improvement in the maintenance cost structure has been accomplished - not only over the last five years but in the last 25 years!Bearing in mind that the major ...