All General aviation articles – Page 626

  • News

    GAMA disputes proposed ETOPS limit

    1997-04-16T00:00:00Z

    THE US general-aviation industry has warned the European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) that a proposal to impose a 120min extended-range-twin-engine-operation (ETOPS) limit on corporate aircraft would cost business-jet manufacturers over $200 million while not actually increasing safety margins. Criticism of the proposal, which could take effect in a ...

  • News

    Two weeks of RVSM confirms pilot fears over TCAS alerts

    1997-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Airline pilots have reported frequent, long-duration, "nuisance" traffic advisories (TAs) from their traffic-alert and collision-avoidance (TCAS) systems in North Atlantic air space during the two weeks since the implementation of reduced vertical-separation minima (RVSM) in the area. RVSM is a procedure for operating with vertical separations of 1,000ft ...

  • News

    Russia approves guarantees for Moscow Aviation Tu-204s

    1997-04-16T00:00:00Z

    The Russian Government has authorised guarantees of $150 million for the manufacture of 20 Tupolev Tu-204s with Perm/Aviadvigatel PS-90A engines for Moscow Aviation International Leasing (MAIL). MAIL is an associate company of the consultancy headed by chess world master and entrepreneur Gary Kasparov. The consultancy's chief executive Peter ...

  • News

    Painting by numbers

    1997-04-09T00:00:00Z

    BUILDING L-64 AT Marietta is not a paint shop, although it is here that F-22s will be finished before being towed across the road for radar cross-section verification ready for first flight. Each F-22 is expected to spend about 20 days in this building, where the elaborate, ...

  • News

    Most regionals meet FAA safety...

    1997-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Almost all US regional airlines have met the US Federal Aviation Administration's 20 March deadline for tougher safety rules, with only six out of the 39 affected carriers failing to do so. The new regulations require regional operators to meet the same standards as those operating large jet-powered ...

  • News

    Cirrus design

    1997-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Cirrus Design, of Duluth, Minnesota, has named Cecil Miller vice-president of manufacturing. He will take charge of developing Cirrus CR20 production. He comes from Raytheon Aircraft, where he was vice-president of operations. Source: Flight International

  • News

    FAA will charge user fees for overflights

    1997-04-09T00:00:00Z

    ALL AIRCRAFT operators flying in US airspace after 19 May must pay a user fee for aviation services, regardless of whether they take off or land in the USA. The fees, to be assessed against commercial and general-aviation aircraft, were authorised by the US Congress in 1996. The ...

  • News

    Garrett Aviation teams up to offer RVSM approval project

    1997-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Garrett Aviation Services of Arizona has teamed up with Atlanta-based Aviation Services Group to develop an operator RVSM (reduced vertical-separation-minima) approval programme, which will allow business-aircraft users a "quick and effortless" way to obtain approval to fly in RVSM airspace. Garrett says that the programme, which is specifically ...

  • News

    Egypt's AMC orders launch MD-90-30ER

    1997-04-09T00:00:00Z

    AMC Aviation of Egypt has placed the launch order for the McDonnell Douglas MD-90-30ER (extended range), with a contract for two aircraft. The MD-90ER features increased maximum take-off weight (MTOW) and additional fuel tanks, to boost range to over 4,000km (2,200nm). Compared to the standard MD-90, ...

  • News

    Fokker Aviation selects R-R Tay 620 for re-engined F28

    1997-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Fokker Aviation has selected the Rolls-Royce Tay 620 engine for its proposed F28RE re-engineing programme, and is now entering final negotiations with the engine manufacturer. The engine, which has been chosen over the BMW Rolls-Royce BR710 and General Electric CF34-8C, already powers the F28's successors, the Fokker 70 ...

  • News

    Piper's two tunes

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

    New Piper aircraft has hit its mark, it seems, with its first new model since emerging from bankruptcy nearly three years ago. Its Seneca V is a high-flying, fast, efficient aircraft which delivers equally in both aviation benefits and office ac- coutrements. With its blend of near-turboprop speed, high-altitude cruising ...

  • News

    Insurers seek increase

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

    Aviation insurers are seeking increases of up to 25% in premiums to cover the likely cost of ending limits on passenger-liability claims under the new International Air Transport Association (IATA) regime, which is now being put into effect by airlines around the world. Limits set under the longstanding ...

  • News

    PIA hunts for strategic investor

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

    Pakistan has kicked off the search for a strategic airline-investor in Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) as the first move towards a re-capitalisation and further privatisation of the state-controlled carrier over the next 12 months. In mid-March, Pakistan's Privatisation Commission issued a tender, asking for bids from financial advisory ...

  • News

    Racal develops hand-held IFF

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

    With an eye to Europe's developing "open-skies" approach to civil-aircraft routing, Racal Wells has launched a private-venture programme to develop a hand-held identification friend-or-foe (IFF) transponder for use aboard balloons, gliders, para and hang gliders, microlights and light aircraft. Work on the design is based on a study ...

  • News

    RVSIice detector takes to the...

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

      ROBOTIC VISION Systems (RVSI) is to develop an on-aircraft wide-area ice-detection system for flight testing by the US Federal Aviation Administration. The system will be based on RVSI's hand-held ice detector, now in use with Delta Air Lines' Boston-New York-Washington shuttle service. The hand-held ID-1H is ...

  • News

    EC compliance could delay JAR-OPS

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

    The introduction of the first (air-transport) element of the Joint Airworthiness Authorities' (JAA) JAR-OPS 1 regulations may be delayed significantly beyond the 1 April deadline by the need to comply with European Commission's (EC's) own air-transport legislation. In a move which has taken the JAA by surprise, EC ...

  • News

    North Korea to stay off-limits for US carriers

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

    US airlines will be banned from North Korean national airspace even when an International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) agreement has opened the Pyongyang Flight Information Region (FIR) to international traffic, the US Federal Aviation Administration says. The FAA ruling (Special Federal Aviation Regulation No.79) clarifies US policy during ...

  • News

    BA plans for 'shell company'face opposition from USA

    1997-04-02T00:00:00Z

    PLANS BY British Airways to use Airline Management (AML), a start-up company, to take on tourist routes from London Gatwick to San Juan, Puerto Rico and Tampa, Florida, have run into opposition in the USA, with claims that AML is being set up as a "shell" company without its own ...

  • News

    Supporting roles

    1997-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The maintenance market is evolving rapidly to meet airlines' needs for lower costs and higher efficiency. By George H Ebbs After decades out of the limelight, MRO - the business of maintaining, repairing, and overhauling commercial aircraft - is finally receiving attention, and with good reason. Annual MRO expenditures ...

  • News

    Seven Sisters are no poor relations

    1997-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The Seven Sisters, as Washington now refers to the US major carriers which are united in their determination to rid themselves of the ticket tax, have lost their cause. The 10 per cent flat-rate tax lives again, giving a reprieve to the low-cost, low-fare airlines - at least until 30 ...