All Networks articles – Page 1350

  • News

    United attacks 777 reliability

    1996-03-13T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES UNITED AIRLINES has unleashed a fierce attack on the reliability of its newly acquired Boeing 777s. A letter from a senior United executive to Boeing, dated 13 February, called the aircraft's reliability and performance a "major disappointment". Within 24h of ...

  • News

    Condor the favourite as launch customer for stretched 757

    1996-03-13T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELESKevin O'Toole/LONDON GERMAN CHARTER airline Condor is expected to sign up as the launch customer for Boeing's proposed 757-300X, the long-anticipated stretched version of the 200-seat twinjet. Boeing and Condor are in negotiations over the terms of the launch, which could come as early as ...

  • News

    Transaero on market for 737s and 767s

    1996-03-13T00:00:00Z

    TRANSAERO, THE Russian independent airline, has invited leasing companies to tender for the supply of "three or four" Boeing 767s plus additional Boeing 737s to operate on additional routes to be served by the airline. Arrangements to lease three McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30s have been completed with American Airlines ...

  • News

    JAL in the year 2000

    1996-03-13T00:00:00Z

    Japan Airlines is sharpening its act for the new century. Kevin O'Toole/TOKYO JAPAN AIRLINES (JAL) has no intention of seeing out the millennium quietly. Under its latest five-year plan, the group aims to emerge in the year 2000 having captured one-third of Japan's sizeable domestic ...

  • News

    Making waves

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Not only has Mexican carrier Aeromar survived the recession, but it has done so by expanding. Gilbert Sedbon/MEXICO CITY AFTER SURVIVING the Mexican economic crash of 1995, Transportes Aeromar, the country's newest domestic carrier, is back in a growth pattern aimed at breaking through the 1 million ...

  • News

    How open skies?

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    GERMANY HAS become the latest and largest catch in the US drive to sign up Europe to open skies. With this new bilateral safely initialed, the USA has now signed up 11 European nations to open skies, representing 40% of the region's air market. The deal marks ...

  • News

    Nepal looks to modernise fleet

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    NEPAL'S FLEDGLING airline industry is looking for more modern aircraft, in response to market deregulation, growing competition and new regulations forcing the retirement of older equipment. The number of fixed-wing Nepali carriers has grown to four since deregulation of the country's domestic services in 1992. State-run Royal Nepal ...

  • News

    North-east expansion

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Southwest Airlines is to extend its low-fare services into the north-east USA, launching flights to the Boston area as early as November, according to the Wall Street Journal. Southwest entered the Florida market in early 1996 and now serves all regions of the USA except the northeast.   ...

  • News

    Eva races to first profit

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    FAST-EXPANDING Eva Air has turned in profits a year ahead of schedule, only four years after its launch as Taiwan's first privately owned carrier. The airline has also announced it is to launch a new airline in Panama by the end of the year. The carrier, ...

  • News

    Examination of safety enhancement

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Sir - I refer to the letter from Jerry Wilmot, "The criteria for flight paths are incomplete", (Flight International, 14-20 February, P51. Wavionix recognises that en route flight paths are not included in document 8168 PANS-OPS. Because of the demand received from procedure specialists, the Wavionix ...

  • News

    Private Qantas delivers on performance promise

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    QANTAS IS HOLDING its own, despite competition in international and domestic markets, says chairman Gary Pemberton, revealing the group's first financial figures, since it completed privatisation in mid-1995. Pemberton reports that Qantas pushed up profits by more than 15%, to A$148 million ($110 million) in the first half ...

  • News

    Japan gears up for US bilateral battle

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/TOKYO BATTLE LINES are being drawn up in Japan and the USA as pressure mounts on both sides of the Pacific for a renegotiation of the controversial passenger bilateral between the two countries. Although talks are now under way over a revised cargo agreement, ...

  • News

    Sell-off costs push Aviall into losses

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/DALLAS AVIALL HAS reported a loss of $241 million for 1995, mainly because of a $212 million fourth-quarter charge to cover disposal of its airline engine-overhaul business. The Dallas, Texas-based company has agreed to sell the business to Miami-based Greenwich Air Services for $260-280 million (Flight International, ...

  • News

    ARIA prepares to expand Shannon hub

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Paul Duffy/SHANNON THE AEROFLOT Russian International Airlines (ARIA) hub, set up at Shannon in the west of Ireland in 1995 to transfer Russian and CIS airline passengers to transatlantic services to the USA, is to be expanded to take in more airlines and routes. Set up ...

  • News

    Lufthansa and United apply for anti-trust immunity in USA

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    LUFTHANSA AND United Airlines have applied for US anti-trust immunity to expand their strategic alliance. The move came just hours, after a new open-skies bilateral air accord was initialed, by US and German transport officials. Final signature on the bilateral is expected by the third quarter. German transport ...

  • News

    ANZ optimistic of Ansett deal

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON AIR NEW ZEALAND (ANZ) remains optimistic that it can go ahead with the proposed deal with TNT to acquire up to half of Ansett Australia. The agreement with TNT, which owns half of Ansett together with News Corporation, is still under negotiation, but ...

  • News

    Air Canada chairman Harris to step down

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    Hollis Harris, Air Canada's chairman and chief executive, will step down at the airline's next annual meeting on 14 May. His replacement is Lamar Durrett, a former Delta Airlines executive who came to Air Canada with Harris in 1992. Harris stays as executive chairman. Durrett worked at Delta ...

  • News

    Second Trent 777 returns to Seattle after testing

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    THE SECOND Rolls-Royce Trent 800-powered Boeing 777 was expected to return to Seattle on 1 March after undergoing 91 route sectors with Cathay Pacific Airways. Boeing is striving to achieve early extended-range twin-operations (ETOPS) clearance for the aircraft. By the end of February, the Trent 777 had undergone ...

  • News

    JAL takes keys of first 777

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    JAPAN AIRLINES WAS HANDED the keys to its first Boeing 777-200 at a ceremony in Seattle on 16 February. The aircraft, which has 389 mainly economy seats, will begin services between Tokyo's domestic hub at Haneda and Kagoshima on 26 April. The airline has ten 777-200s on order and another ...

  • News

    THE GE 747 testbed

    1996-03-06T00:00:00Z

    THE SHEER SIZE AND extra capacity of General Electric's Boeing 747 test-bed gives it an obvious advantage over its smaller predecessors. "It is five, or even ten times, as efficient as the 707," comments Phil Schultz, GE flight-test organisation (FTO) chief pilot. "We can run five or six objectives in ...