Networks – Page 1279

  • News

    SITA: Dedicated to communicating

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    From the start, airlines could not be efficient without good contactability. The need for better company communications, over developing long routes, gave birth in 1949 to SITA (once known as the Societe Internationale de Telecommunications Aeronautiques) - a non-profit-making co-operative, among major airlines - to provide self-managed communications. It has ...

  • News

    Aeronet: Development of a network

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    SITA's AeroNet is a centrally managed data network capable of handling and routeing high volumes of complex - and often commercially sensitive - digital data streams from sophisticated applications. It might be compared with the newest databus in civil aircraft - where a point-to-point bus system, such as the Arinc ...

  • News

    AA pilots are ready to abandon talks

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    Round-the-clock negotiations between American Airlines management and the Allied Pilots Association, a union which represents some 9,000 of the airline's flightcrew, had still failed to produce a new contract 18h before a threatened 15 February strike was due to begin. The talks have become bogged down on pay ...

  • News

    Oscillations force BA 777 back to Heathrow

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    Oscillations force BA 777 back to Heathrow The UK air-Accident Investigation Branch is looking into a mysterious in-flight incident involving a British Airways Boeing 777-200A, which was forced to turn back to London Heathrow in October 1996 after suffering uncommanded rudder movement. BA and Boeing have so far ...

  • News

    BAe flies its first converted A300B4 freighter

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    British Aerospace's Filton, UK-based division, BAe Aviation Services, flew its first converted Airbus A300B4 freighter on 23 January, and hopes to be able to secure approval from the US Federal Aviation Administration and UK Civil Aviation Authority approval by the end of March. The conversion of the first ...

  • News

    BMed resurrects BA franchise agreement

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    BRITISH Mediterranean Airways (BMed) has struck a new agreement with British Airways to operate as a franchise partner on routes between London Heathrow and the Middle East as from April. The two airlines originally agreed to a link for their 1996/7 winter schedules, but the plans were later ...

  • News

    Rescued Kiwi takes expansion slowly

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    Kiwi International Airlines, which re-introduced scheduled passenger services to four US cities at the end of January, plans a gradual expansion of its fleet and destinations over the next three months. Kiwi was forced to suspend all scheduled services in October 1996 after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy ...

  • News

    Fly by net

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    The AeroNet, SITA's latest data-communications system, could be the aviation industry's answer to the Internet. Long established as a provider of data communications for the aviation industry, SITA recently had a self-contained, high-performance data network grafted on to its support structure. Called the AeroNet, it is aimed at eradicating paper ...

  • News

    Spare a thought

    1997-02-19T00:00:00Z

    Airlines in Europe are becoming increasingly reliant on third-party component support services. Maintaining a comprehensive spare-parts inventory for a modern airline is an expensive business, particularly for a small- or medium-sized operator. Many expensive components may be languishing in storage, under-used but held in case an unforeseen failure grounds an ...

  • News

    IAI's expanding Commodore moves into SabreTech's Miami site

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Commodore Aviation, the overhaul subsidiary of Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI), is expected to complete a deal acquiring the troubled SabreTech's maintenance operation at Miami International Airport within the next two weeks. The IAI unit, which is based at Miami International, will move into SabreTech's much larger site after ...

  • News

    Myanmar shelves A320-lease plans

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Myanmar Airways International has scrapped plans to lease two Airbus Industrie A320s and instead extended an interim lease agreement with Malaysia Airlines (MAS)for two Boeing 737-400s. In late 1996, the Singapore-Myanmar joint-venture carrier signed a letter of intent with Airbus to lease two A320s for five years. The ...

  • News

    Guatemalan start-up

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Mayan World Airlines has taken the first of two AI(R) ATR 42s, to launch regional services in Guatemala. The Guatemala City-based start-up will initially serve Flores from its base, and plans to expand services soon. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Air Niugini finalises order for Dash 8s

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    The planned order by Air Niugini of Papua New Guinea (PNG) for two Bombardier de Havilland Dash 8-200s is to be finalised, after delays during final contract negotiations. The airline has been negotiating the order with Bombardier for some months to replace its fleet of de Havilland Dash ...

  • News

    Bidders jostle for SilkAir order

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    SilkAir of Singapore has begun evaluating formal proposals submitted by competing airframe and engine manufacturers for a replacement fleet of up to ten narrowbody passenger jets. The Singapore Airlines-owned regional carrier is looking for a new family of 100- and 150-seat aircraft to replace its fleet of Boeing ...

  • News

    Lufthansa revamps its management

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Lufthansa is restructuring its passenger operations from 1 April, in a move to cut management costs. Subject to supervisory board approval, the company is to incorporate marketing, network management, operations, cockpit and, cabin crew and ground stations into an independent passenger division, effectively separating the running of the ...

  • News

    Strong market

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    From November 1996, any airline with over 50% Australian and/or New Zealand ownership has been allowed to fly freely between the two countries or within them, subject only to border restrictions. That this new freedom has not precipitated a rash of low-cost start-up carriers and a scramble for new routes ...

  • News

    Bombardier's Challenger 604 is first to be given RVSM approval

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    BOMBARDIER ISTHE first business-jet manufacturer to gain regulatory approval for a service bulletin enabling operators to comply with reduced vertical-separation minima (RVSM) to be introduced on North Atlantic routes on 27 March. Initial approval from Transport Canada is for the latest Challenger 604. Bombardier expects Canadian certification of service bulletins ...

  • News

    European enquiry

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    The European Commission (EC) has opened an inquiry into the acquisition of bankrupt French independent Air Liberté by British Airways. It has given potential objectors to the deal ten days to present arguments against it to the competition directorate and is expected to rule within four weeks. The take-over, giving ...

  • News

    Breaking through

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Breaking the monopolistic stranglehold of national carriers in Asia has never been easy and, for Asiana Airlines, playing second fiddle to Korean Air (KAL) for the past eight years has proved to be particularly hard going. This situation may be about to change though, as Asiana embarks on an ambitious ...

  • News

    Start-up AirAsia muscles into Malaysia market

    1997-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Start-up carrier AirAsia has taken advantage of a growing barrage of criticism against Malaysia Airlines (MAS) to announce that it intends to expand its embryonic aircraft fleet and route network. Three months after first taking to the air as Malaysia's second scheduled international carrier, AirAsia is looking to ...