Networks – Page 1313

  • News

    WestPac agrees big 328 deal

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH DORNIER LUFTFAHRT has secured the first new orders for the Dornier 328 turboprop since a majority of the company was sold to Fairchild in June. Western Pacific Airlines ("WestPac") has placed an order for up to 24 328s, which it selected over the Aero International (Regional) ...

  • News

    Test of faith

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    NO-ONE BENEFITS when accident-investigation agencies clash over the cause of an air crash. The arguments may be based on genuine grievances, but they only serve to deflect attention from the wider issues at stake. It has happened this week because the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has ...

  • News

    Hub crack is blamed for MD-88 fan failure

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    A FATIGUE crack in the fan hub is the likely cause of the uncontained failure of a Pratt & Whitney JT8D-219 powering a Delta McDonnell Douglas MD-88. Two passengers were killed and four injured when the left-engine fan disintegrated, sending debris into the cabin during the take-off run of Flight ...

  • News

    ValuJet bids to resume flying with smaller fleet

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    VALUJET AIRLINES hopes to win the US Federal Aviation Administration's approval to resume service as early as the first week of August. It has submitted a plan to the FAA's Atlanta, Georgia, regional office describing how the grounded low-fare carrier would resume flights with about 15 aircraft. More ...

  • News

    First New Zealand Airbus goes to Kiwi International

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Kiwi International Airlines has become the first New Zealand airline to operate an Airbus type, with the acquistion of an A320 on lease from Orix. It will be used for flights to Australia, serving Sydney and Brisbane, and to extend the airline's network to include Melbourne and Perth. ...

  • News

    Leading the way to extinction?

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Sir - A petulant strike by pilots of the world's most successful airline would be a double betrayal of the piloting profession. Besides bringing it into disrepute, it could contribute to its ultimate extinction with the advent of the unmanned airliner. The prestige and salaries enjoyed by British ...

  • News

    Market change

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    ARIANESPACE HAS analysed three major factors for the reduction of GEO civil-communications satellites. The globalisation (or regionalisation) of space projects has caused a significant change in the telecommunications market. National projects are tending to disappear, replaced by projects "without borders". The monopolies held by organisations such as Intelsat are at ...

  • News

    The cabin challenge

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Perceptions of new cabin dangers are emerging as old problems resurface. Paul Phelan/CAIRNS David Learmount/LONDON AIRLINE PASSENGERS ignore safety briefings because they believe that it is the cabin crew's responsibility to protect them, according to recent research. Professor Helen Muir, of Cranfield University in the UK, ...

  • News

    Colombian threat

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    The USA is threatening to suspend daily Avianca flights between Bogota and Miami or New York in retaliation for the Colombian Government's refusal to permit American Airlines to operate daily flights between New York and Bogota. The flight is allowed by the bilateral agreement between the two nations, says Washington. ...

  • News

    Germany will close three radar centres by 2000

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/FRANKFURT T HE GERMAN AIR-traffic- services agency Deutsche Flugsicherung (DFS) is to close down three of its six radar centres by the year 2000 as part of the agency's efficiency drive. No decision has yet been made about which centres are to go, says DFS ...

  • News

    Jet finalises regional-fleet plan

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON JET AIRWAYS IS finalising plans for the acquisition of a fleet of regional aircraft to operate on services in north-eastern India. ,Jet Airways' chairman Naresh Goyal says that the airline is committed to initiating regional services: "We are vigorously pursuing plans to induct smaller ...

  • News

    It's the passengers who matter

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Sir - The argument that "-the airline industry needs to bring public perceptions and expectations in line with reality" in your Comment, "Means to and end" (Flight International, 3-9 July), surely needs to be turned on its head. The airlines need to listen to what the customer wants and expects, ...

  • News

    Safety review

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Controversy about airline safety has been rife in the first six months of 1996. David Learmount/LONDON THERE WERE 609 DEATHS in world airline accidents during the first six months of 1996, which compares with only 206 for the same period the previous year. The figures for 1995, however, ...

  • News

    Flying into the future

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Communications, navigation and surveillance in European airspace will be substantially different in the next decade - but how different? Kieran Daly/LONDON AROUND THE WORLD, air-traffic-services (ATS) providers are coming to terms with how the advent of the future air-navigation system will affect their airspace. For dozens of nations, ...

  • News

    Lufthansa Cargo cuts costs and capacity

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON LUFTHANSA CARGO IS clamping down on costs and capacity, as the world's largest international freight carrier steels itself for another couple of tough years in the heavily oversubscribed international freight market. The operation ended its first year of independence in 1995, showing a DM20 ...

  • News

    Gavilan flight-testing resumes

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    COLOMBIAN manufacturer El Gavilan has begun flight-testing the Gavilan 358 single-engined utility aircraft. The second prototype - the first crashed in 1993 after engine failure - is being flight-tested at Lock Haven, Pennsylvania, and US certification is planned for later this year. Designed and built at Lock Haven ...

  • News

    Kenya soars despite pilots pay award

    1996-07-17T00:00:00Z

    PROFITS CONTINUE TO soar at Kenya Airways, but the newly privatised carrier has outlined a major round of cost cuts following the court award of a massive pay hike to pilots. The pay award, which virtually doubles salaries, came after the airline's 108 pilots referred a pay dispute ...

  • News

    VASP gets eighth MD-11

    1996-07-10T10:53:00Z

    VASP Brazilian Airlines took delivery of its eighth McDonnell Douglas MD-11 from Long Beach, California, on 2 July. The Sao Paulo-based operator introduced its first MD-11 into service in 1992. More than 150 MD-11s are now in service with 19 operators.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    FAA should tidy up its own back yard

    1996-07-10T09:30:00Z

    Sir - When the US Federal Aviation Administration began its programme of declaring foreign airworthiness authorities as unfit, and prevented airlines under its jurisdiction from expanding services to the USA, I regarded this as tantamount to air piracy. As recent events, surrounding the ValuJet crash investigations have revealed, ...

  • News

    Kiwi

    1996-07-10T09:00:00Z

    US regional carrier Kiwi International Airlines, of Newark, New Jersey, has named Robert Wassman director of pricing and yield management. Before joining Kiwi, Wassman was manager of market research and route development for the Massachusetts Port Authority. Source: Flight International