MRO – Page 597

  • News

    Financial results

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Air Canada cut its operating loss from C$12m to C$7m. Passengers and yields both rose 6%. There were C$40m of non-operating gains in 1994. Operating income trebled to US$162.2m, moving ANA into the black. Boosted by the Kobe earthquake and the strong yen, traffic rose 6.1%. ...

  • News

    SAA boosted by Lufthansa

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The cooperation agreement between South African Airways and Lufthansa is a major boost for the African carrier, while the pact nearly completes the German flag's global net of alliances. SAA has sought a European partner for more than two years and senior general manager John Hare says few ...

  • News

    USAir boost: BA doubts

    1995-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The winding down of Continental Lite has helped USAir increase yields and bounce back into profitability, and the airline now has agreements with three out of its four unions. However, the proposed employee board representation has thrown up a potential conflict with partner British Airways. Investors in USAir, ...

  • News

    Finnair leases DC-10s to Air Liberte

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    FINNAIR IS TO LEASE its entire McDonnell Douglas DC-10 fleet to French airline Air Liberte. The agreement covers four aircraft on a five-year lease. The deal will net Finnair revenues of around FM140 million ($32 million) a year. Air Liberte has been leasing one of the four DC-10s ...

  • News

    Europe on course for TCAS by year 2000

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC EUROCONTROL IS TO recommend mandatory introduction to Europe of an aircraft collision-avoidance system from the 2000, after a 26 June meeting of its committee of management. The move had been expected, and is supported by the European Joint Airworthiness ...

  • News

    EC moves nearer to open skies

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS EUROPEAN TRANSPORT ministers meeting in Luxembourg have signaled their tentative support to giving the European Union (EU) the power to negotiate open-skies deals on behalf of its members. The 15 EU states have asked the European Commission (EC) to fine-tune its preliminary open-skies ...

  • News

    Arianespace signs four new contracts

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    ARIANESPACE HAS signed four new launch contracts, bringing to 40 the number of satellites booked to be launched, with a total value of $2 billion. The new payloads are Malaysia's Measat 2; Thailand's Thaicom 3; Indonesia's Indostar 1; and Europe's Helios 1B reconnaissance satellite. Ariane Flight V74, carrying ...

  • News

    PAMA

    1995-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Stan Mackiewicz has been appointed executive director of the US Professional Aviation Maintenance Association (PAMA) of Chesterfield, Missouri. Mackiewicz, most recently programme director for UNC Airwork, will be based in Washington DC.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    Intertechnique targets USA for expansion plans

    1995-06-21T00:00:00Z

    Gilbert Sedbon/PARIS FRENCH EQUIPMENT manufacturer Intertechnique believes that it is back on course for expansion and is targeting the US market with two small acquisitions already in prospect. The company, which is known for its oxygen masks and its fuel-management and environmental-control systems, emerged from ...

  • News

    Livermore tests corrosion device

    1995-06-21T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/SEATTLE A DUAL-BAND infra-red (IR) corrosion-detection system is being tested on aircraft skins by scientists from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California in the hope of developing a non-destructive commercial system. The IR system uses flash lamps to heat the metal skin with uniform ...

  • News

    Bright light

    1995-06-21T00:00:00Z

    A NASA-led initiative may help GA emerge from the doldrums - almost Karen Walker/ATLANTA Once upon a time there was a thriving general-aviation (GA) industry in North America - and you do not have to be especially well informed to know that this story may not end ...

  • News

    AlliedSignal cuts down on BAe 146 engine-maintenance costs

    1995-06-21T00:00:00Z

    ALLIEDSIGNAL HAS pledged to cut LF502 engine maintenance costs for British Aerospace 146 operators to below $40/h over the next five years. The programme is a joint initiative with BAe's Asset Management Organisation (AMO), which handles the manufacturer's 100-strong fleet of leased 146s. AMO managing director Robin Southwell ...

  • News

    Prospects look modest for new freighters

    1995-06-21T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES NEW FREIGHTER deliveries will remain sluggish over the next ten years as used-aircraft conversions and belly-hold capacity absorb the bulk of cargo traffic growth, according to latest predictions from McDonnell Douglas (MDC) and Boeing. MDC predicts that cargo traffic will continue to average ...

  • News

    Honeywell co-operates with Trimble for GPS retrofit market

    1995-06-21T00:00:00Z

    HONEYWELL HAS teamed with Trimble Navigation to develop and market global-positioning-system (GPS) products for the air-transport retrofit market. The agreement, signed on the eve of the Paris air show, does not affect Honeywell's alliance with Canadian Marconi, which supplies the sensor for the US manufacturer's new-airliner GPS products. ...

  • News

    Indian Maintenance

    1995-06-21T00:00:00Z

    Aviall Caledonian Engine Services has signed a three-year agreement with Jet Airways of Bombay, India, to maintain the CFM International CFM56-3 engines which power the airline's fleet of Boeing 737-400s. Jet Airways, which began operating scheduled services in May 1993, operates four 737-300s and two -400s, and is due to ...

  • News

    AAR Unites Operations

    1995-06-14T00:00:00Z

    AAR has combined its two Singapore-based aircraft support operations into to a single expanded unit near Changi International Airport. The new factory houses the sales offices for the company's US-based inventory services and the local maintenance base. Source: Flight International

  • News

    IAE works on variable-area nozzle

    1995-06-14T00:00:00Z

    INTERNATIONAL AERO Engines (IAE) and Calcor Aero Systems are to develop the world's first variable-area exhaust nozzle for a civil aero-engine. IAE, a joint venture between Pratt & Whitney, Rolls-Royce, MTU, FiatAvio and Japanese Aero Engines, will work with California-based Calcor to produce a technology demonstrator for IAE's ...

  • News

    Honeywell clinches TracLink GPS deal at Minneapolis

    1995-06-14T00:00:00Z

    HONEYWELL HAS BEEN selected by the Minneapolis/St Paul Metropolitan Airports Commission (MAC), Minnesota, to install a Honeywell/Pelorus SLS-2000 satellite-landing system and the company's recently developed vehicle-tracking system, the TracLink. Both systems are based on the global-positioning system (GPS) and will use correctional positioning information from a local-area GPS ...

  • News

    Building Starts

    1995-06-14T00:00:00Z

    CFM International and the Civil Aviation Administration of China have begun construction of a new joint venture, engine maintenance training centre, in Chengdu. The school, due to open in 1997, is modeled on General Electric and CFMI training sites in the USA and France. A temporary centre, in ...

  • News

    Safety concerns hit Express One

    1995-06-14T00:00:00Z

    EXPRESS ONE International, the Dallas, Texas-based cargo and charter carrier, has grounded its 39-aircraft fleet voluntarily after a US Federal Aviation Administration audit discovered serious safety concerns. The FAA says that Express One International, which operates Boeing 727s and McDonnell Douglas DC-9s, failed to produce documentation on compulsory ...