All General aviation articles – Page 663

  • News

    NZ sidesteps ICAO rules in ATC strike

    1995-12-13T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CAIRNSDavid Learmount/LONDON NEW ZEALANDS privatised air-traffic-control (ATC) service sidestepped International Civil Aviation Authority (ICAO) procedures during a 4-6 December controller strike says, the international aviation organisation. The strike, which seriously disrupted domestic and international schedules, was due to be repeated on 12-15 December. The ...

  • News

    GA association boosts CRM training

    1995-12-13T00:00:00Z

    Forbes Mutch/LONDON THE UK GENERAL Aviation Manufacturers and Traders Association (GAMTA), has completed a benchmarking exercise into cockpit/crew-resource-management (CRM) training. The concluding report, published in association with Cranfield University, Bedfordshire, recommends the establishment of a central library of CRM training resources, including videos and other ...

  • News

    IPTN/Ericsson look at CN-235 variant

    1995-12-13T00:00:00Z

    INDUSTRI Pesawat Terbang Nusantara (IPTN) and Ericsson are studying development of a maritime-surveillance version of the CN-235 turboprop for the Indonesian air force. Ericsson has proposed fitting the Indonesian-built version of the CN-235 with a dorsal-mounted Erieye electronically scanned phased-array radar. The aircraft would be able to accommodate ...

  • News

    Taiwan 'ready to give support' to Jetcruzer

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    TAIWAN IS PREPARED to back a joint venture with Advanced Aerodynamics and Structures (AASI) to produce the Jetcruzer six-seat single-turboprop aircraft, according to local reports. Jack Tang, deputy director of the Taiwanese economics ministry's committee for aviation and space industry development, is quoted as saying that the venture ...

  • News

    Gulfstream flies first GV

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ATLANTA GULFSTREAM Aerospace flew the Gulfstream V long-range business jet for the first time on 28 November. The 1h flight of the first GV, from Gulfstream's Savannah, Georgia, base, also marked the first flight for BMW Rolls-Royce's BR710 turbofan. The flight marks the beginning of ...

  • News

    Kestrel enters general-aviation fray

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    A NEW US light-aircraft manufacturer has emerged with the 19 November first flight of the Kestrel KL-1A. Based in Norman, Oklahoma, Kestrel Aircraft was founded in 1991 by former Cessna international sales manager Dr Donald Stroud, to develop a line of four- and six-seat piston-single utility aircraft. The ...

  • News

    France and Russia start up scramjet collaboration

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/BOURGES AEROSPATIALE AND the Moscow Aviation Institute are building an experimental variable-thrust supersonic combustion ramjet (scramjet) engine, which will be ready for testing in two years' time. Integrated with a ramjet, the engine will be capable of being run at between Mach 2 and M12, ...

  • News

    New members join in-trail-climb club

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES NORTHWEST, AMERICAN and Singapore Airlines (SIA) are set to join Delta Air Lines and United Airlines in operational trials of in-trail-climb (ITC) procedures over the Pacific. The use of ITC is being examined as a way of preventing one aircraft becoming "trapped" beneath ...

  • News

    FlightSafety opens Coventry centre

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    FLIGHTSAFETY International (FSI) has opened a UK centre to allow US-trained UK students to complete their Civil Aviation Administration instrument-rating courses in the UK. The Coventry Airport centre has a Frasca simulator and a Piper Seneca III and is operated with a ground school provided by Aviation Training Associates. ...

  • News

    UK firm starts work on new low-cost amphibian

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    A LOW-COST TWIN-engined amphibian aircraft based on the Pilatus Britten-Norman (PBN) Islander is being developed by a new UK aircraft company. Ross Aircraft has already successfully tested a one-fifth-scale model in proof-of-concept trials on a Scottish lake and is in negotiations with potential backers in a bid to ...

  • News

    Canadian Airbus scandal deepens

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    THE FORMER CHAIRMAN of the company which brokered the sale of 34 Airbus A320s to Air Canada has said that he set up a Swiss bank account to funnel Airbus kickback money to former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Mulroney denies the bribery allegation and has filed a C$50 million ...

  • News

    Concorde wins race against US TCAS ban

    1995-12-06T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON BRITISH AIRWAYS and Air France have avoided the threat of a ban on their Aerospatiale/BAC Concorde operations to the USA, after Rockwell-Collins finally solved technical problems associated with the external antennae for the traffic-alert and collision-avoidance systems (TCAS) which it is supplying for the supersonic airliner. ...

  • News

    Aircraft news

    1995-12-01T10:53:00Z

    JAL has ordered five B777-300s to enter service in 1998. The carrier already has 10 B777-200s on order with options on a further 10. Uzbekistan Airways has ordered two B767-300ERs and one B757. The National Civil Aviation Authority of Turkmenistan has ordered two Rolls-Royce powered B757s. ...

  • News

    Thamnoon's high noon?

    1995-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Thamnoon Wanglee is fighting for survival as president of Thai Airways International amid investigations into allegations that he authorised the sale of a damaged Airbus A300B4 to Switzerland-based Sebina Trading for US$1.8 million, when it was said to be worth close to $12 million. Investigators are trying to ...

  • News

    Going to market

    1995-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Airport marketing is coming of age, as airports work harder to attract new airlines, new routes and new hub operations. Richard Whitaker reports from the recent route development conference in Cannes. Airports represent the last industry to discover marketing. So says Mike Howarth of Airport Strategy and Marketing which, along ...

  • News

    Yeltsin fears hit Russian recovery

    1995-12-01T00:00:00Z

    The serious health cloud over Russian president Boris Yeltsin could not be more untimely. Politically it means that Yeltsin, the champion of economic liberalisation, is not fit enough to campaign for reformist candidates in this month's (December) parliamentary elections. Moreover, after several years of economic decline and chaos, there ...

  • News

    'Economic' spying bugs Japanese

    1995-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Not many people were surprised to learn, in October, that the CIA undertook 'economic' spying on US trade rival Japan. The high-profile impetus for the intelligence gathering was the US-Japan automobile trade talks that were resolved in July after the two sides negotiated an eleventh-hour settlement under the spectre of ...

  • News

    Delta poised for antitrust

    1995-12-01T00:00:00Z

    A decision on the antitrust immunity application for Delta Air Lines, Swissair, Austrian and Sabena could be hampered by a similar request from American and Canadian Airlines International. The US Department of Justice finished its analysis of the Delta proposal in early November, and the application is now ...

  • News

    Abacus first in the frame

    1995-12-01T00:00:00Z

    Abacus has become the first CRS to win access to the vast Chinese market in a deal that should give the Singapore-based company a lead in developing a full-scale CRS for China. The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) awarded the contract in mid-October after a three year battle that ...

  • News

    US manufacturers stay on top of orders league

    1995-11-29T00:00:00Z

    In the third quarter of 1995, US aircraft manufacturers received net orders for 74 large commercial jet transports out of a total of 86 placed worldwide, according to the US Aerospace Industries Association (AIA). By comparison, US aircraft makers secured net orders for 79 aircraft out of a total of ...