Networks – Page 1185

  • News

    Lone pilot objects to Australasian Singapore alliance

    1998-08-19T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CAIRNS An objection by New Zealand pilot Peter Wakeman to Australia's competition authorities was the only remaining obstacle last week to the implementation of the planned commercial alliance between Air New Zealand, Ansett and Singapore Airlines (SIA). The Australian Consumer Competition Commission (ACCC)released a final authorisation on ...

  • News

    FedEx prepares for Loadmaster training

    1998-08-19T00:00:00Z

    FedEx has selected Pan Am International Flight Academy to provide training for the Ayres LM200 Loadmaster. The Academy will build a training centre at FedEx's Memphis, Tennessee, hub to house a Level D full-flight simulator for the turboprop-powered feeder freighter. FedEx has 50 Loadmasters on order and 50 more ...

  • News

    India delays

    1998-08-12T12:33:00Z

    India reports that the first launch of the Geostationary Satellite Launch Vehicle is unlikely before late next year, while the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle flight carrying the Insat P4 remote sensing satellite will be pushed into the first quarter of 1999. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Perm agreement

    1998-08-12T11:19:00Z

    Perm Motors has resumed servicing the PS-90A engines which power Aeroflot's Ilyushin Il-96-300s after the Russian carrier paid around $4 million for previously provided services. Perm had halted its support on 24 June, claiming Aeroflot owed it about $8 million, but has now reversed its decision. Source: Flight International

  • News

    ANA considers World revival to reduce operating costs

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Mollett/TOKYO In an effort to reduce operating costs in the face of severe financial difficulties, All Nippon Airlines (ANA) is considering shifting part of its international route network on to its defunct subsidiary World Air Network (WAC). The plan involves resuscitating WAC, which was suspended in August ...

  • News

    Gemini to acquire four of BA's DC-10-30s for cargo role

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON Gemini Air Cargo is finalising a deal to acquire four of British Airways' eight McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30s, while the rest of the aircraft are expected to be placed with passenger airlines in the short term. BA's eight DC-10-30s are operated on its long-haul network from London Gatwick, but ...

  • News

    Design teams start work on 728JET engine development

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Design teams from Fairchild Aerospace, General Electric, Hurel Dubois and Aermacchi are expected to begin the first formal meetings on the design of the powerplant for the 728JET this week, following the selection on 3 August of the General Electric CF34-8D. Although the -8D has 100% commonality in terms of ...

  • News

    China Eastern plans to begin conversions after cargo go-ahead

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    China Eastern plans to begin converting its fleet of five Boeing MD-11 passenger trijets into freighters from September 1999, following Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) approval to establish a new subsidiary cargo operation. The carrier is understood to be in negotiations with Alenia-owned Aeronavali and the Boeing Aerospace ...

  • News

    FlightSafety Boeing picks London to be European training hub

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    FlightSafety Boeing Training International, a joint venture commercial training operation between FlightSafety Inter-national and Boeing Enterprises, will decide next month on the final location of a UK based $85 million European training hub. The greenfield site, located near either London Gatwick or Heathrow airports, will be the first of ...

  • News

    Advanced GE90 compressor gets over initial test hurdle

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES General Electric has successfully completed initial tests of an upgraded GE90 compressor which is expected to yield specific fuel consumption (SFC) and temperature margin improvements on the Boeing 777-200ER, as well as act as a potential platform for new thrust growth. Key to the improvement is the ...

  • News

    Marketplace

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    -Singapore Airlines has concluded a sixth sale and lease-back deal on a Boeing 747-400 for five years. The agreement with special purpose company Sansome Planes II was again brokered by San Francisco-based Babcock and Brown. -Shaanxi Aircraft has leased two Chinese licence-built Y-8 turboprop transports to Iran for an undisclosed ...

  • News

    Japanese airlines object to US slot allocation

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Japan's carriers have criticised the decision by the country's Ministry of Transport to allocate a further 74 slots to US carriers in its first slot expansion programme at Narita Airport in seven years. "This means that US carriers have almost as many slots at Narita as all the Japanese carriers ...

  • News

    Routes

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    -The US Department of Transportation plans to award Continental Airlines authority to begin a non-stop Cleveland-London Gatwick service on 19 February, 1999. The US carrier intends to operate the route on a daily basis from Cleveland's Hopkins International using Boeing 757s in a two-class configuration. -British Airways has started operating ...

  • News

    Uzbekistan Airways takes first production Il-114 turboprop

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Uzbekistan Airways has become the first airline to take delivery of an Ilyushin Il-114 turboprop, with the handover of a production aircraft from the Tashkent Aircraft Production factory (TAPO). The airline remains the only firm customer for the type, which first flew in March 1990, and received provisional certification in ...

  • News

    Cathay makes history with first loss as public company

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

     Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Cathay Pacific Airways has posted the first net loss in its history as a public company, as the airline struggled with tumbling Asian traffic and plumetting yields. The Hong-Kong carrier announced a net loss of HK$175 million ($23 million) for the first six months, in stark contrast to ...

  • News

    Cuban revolution

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/HAVANA The Franco-Italian regional aircraft consortium ATR scored a coup when it became the first manufacturer outside the ex-Communist Bloc to sell aircraft to Cuba since Fidel Castro's revolution in 1959. The sale is the start of a massive fleet renewal programme covering all of the Caribbean island's ...

  • News

    Parts partnerships

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Paul Seidenman/SAN FRANCISCO Fewer air carriers want to be in the business of stocking and maintaining huge inventories of parts, so they are looking to shift the burden to those companies which supply everything from bearings and seals to engines and airframes. "Until the early 1990s, the industry was more ...

  • News

    Boeing aims at TrunkLiner gap

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

      Guy Norris/SEATTLE Boeing is in talks with China over a wide range of potential ventures, including possible involvement in the 717-200, as the company seeks to fill the void left by China's recent decision to scrap the MD-90 TrunkLiner effort. Boeing Commercial Airplane Group president Ron Woodard says: ...

  • News

    China Airlines aligns with SIA as it ponders 777 acquisitions

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

     Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE China Airlines (CAL) has reached an internal decision to order a fleet of Boeing 777s, but final board approval remains pending as it weighs the full scope of potential co-operation with newly announced strategic partner Singapore Airlines (SIA). The Taiwanese carrier has in principle selected the 777-200 as ...

  • News

    UK welcomes EC alliance proposals despite misgivings

    1998-08-12T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON The European Commission's (EC) alliance proposals have been given a broad welcome by the UK, despite concern over some "significant" gaps, but they have met fierce criticism in Germany, where the conditions have been dismissed as "unacceptable". John Bridgeman, director of the UK's the Office of ...