All Ops & safety articles – Page 1256

  • News

    Taca and AA get go-ahead

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Conditions attached to approval for American Airlines' alliance with the Taca Group and for its proposed alliance with British Airways are making celebrations ring hollow. The Department of Transportation finally gave its blessing to the AA-Taca alliance almost two years after the partnership was first proposed. The DOT has ...

  • News

    Mesaba to double RJ85 fleet

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Mesaba Airlines, a US regional feeder for Northwest Airlines, is to double its fleet of Avro RJ85 regional jets in a move that is bound to anger Northwest pilots who are already in bitter contract negotiations. The Northwest Airlink affiliate agreed to amend its regional jet agreement to increase ...

  • News

    Kelowna sells stretched Convair 5800s to IFL

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Kelowna Flightcraft has sold its two stretched, re-engined Convair 5800 freighters to US cargo operator IFL Group. The first aircraft is already in service with Pontiac, Michigan-based IFL's Contract Air Cargo. The second is being repainted at Flightcraft's Kelowna, British Columbia, plant ready for delivery. The Canadian company ...

  • News

    Next Generation 737 CFM56 failure was a 'one-off', says CFMI

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Initial investigations into the failure of a bearing on a new CFM56-7 powering a Maersk Air Boeing 737-700 show that the incident was a "one-off", says CFMInternational (CFMI). The Maersk aircraft, delivered to the Danish operator in early March, suffered "a complete failure of the number four bearing" on ...

  • News

    Third Airbus A300 for HeavyLift

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    HeavyLift Cargo Airlines is to acquire a third Airbus A300B4-200 freighter and is planning to increase its fleet by one aircraft every six months for the next two years. The first two are already in service, operating European flights for KLM Cargo and Lufthansa Cargo. A customer for the third ...

  • News

    $3 billion EC grant to Air France was illegal, says Court of Justice

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    The European Court of Justice has ruled that the European Commission decision to permit Air France Fr20 billion ($3 billion) in state aid was illegal. However, the Luxembourg-based court threw out all but two of the 110 complaints made by rival airlines, including British Airways, British Midland and SAS. ...

  • News

    American Eagle confirms ERJ-135

    1998-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/FORT WORTH American Eagle has selected the Embraer ERJ-135 to meet its requirement for up to 150 of the 37-seat regional jets. The carrier expects formally to announce the deal by early September - probably in time for the Farnborough air show. The decision will be a major, but ...

  • News

    Mongolian sackings

    1998-06-24T11:12:00Z

    Mongolia's Government has sacked the president of its civil aviation authority, Gongoriin Gangaatar, and the president of Mongolian Airlines, Huvaahuugiin Alesandr, following the second fatal crash of a 19-seat Harbin Y-12 inside 12 months. The latest crash, in May, killed all 28 people on board. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Marketplace

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    -British World Airlines is planning to double its British Aerospace ATP fleet, and has signed a memorandum of understanding for two white-tail aircraft for delivery in mid-1998. -Sun-Air of Scandinavia has also placed an MoU with BAe Asset Management Turboprops for a third BAe ATP. -C-S Aviation Services has delivered ...

  • News

    European growth

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    European passenger traffic growth in April returned to double figures after a brief slump to 6%in March, according to the Association of European Airlines (AEA). The AEA attributes the dip to "-the date of the Easter holiday distorting the monthly growth trend". This year's figures show a 10.7% increase on ...

  • News

    Decimating decibels

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    Noise regulations coming into force in Europe and the USA are forcing aircraft owners to consider the future of their ageing fleets Ian Sheppard/London A ban will apply in Europe after 31 December, 1999, on aircraft not complying with International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) Chapter III rules, while, ...

  • News

    Montreal Mirabel Metro crash

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    A Fairchild Metro II was destroyed in a crash at Montreal's Mirabel Airport on 18 June. All 11 people were killed on the Propair flight, which had departed from Dorval Airport en route to Peterborough, Ontario. Early reports speak of the pilot declaring an emergency, with smoke in the cockpit. ...

  • News

    Controlling interest

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    Privatising the UK's ATC service is part of a world wide move to put control of the airways on a commercial footing Having swung between ambiguity and hostility over possible privatisation of the UK National Air Traffic Services (NATS) while in opposition, the UK's Labour Government caught everybody flatfooted ...

  • News

    Difficult birth

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    It is difficult to think of a reason to regret the latest agreement to form a European Aviation Safety Authority (EASA). It is, alas, equally difficult to think of a single ground for optimism that the EASA's birth will be easy. European air-safety regulation, be it on certification or ...

  • News

    United, Cathay gain long-range benefits

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    United Airlines has launched the first year-round non-stop service between Hong Kong and Chicago, benefiting from improved engine fuel efficiency and new flexible routing. At the same time, Cathay Pacific Airways is considering Boeing 747 improvements to start the first scheduled non-stop New York service in 1999. The ...

  • News

    An ATC competitive market 'on the way'

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    Pending privatisations could create a competitive market in European air traffic control (ATC)services, complete with cross-border acquisitions, believes Sir Malcolm Field chairman of the UK Civil Aviation Authority, now preparing for the sale of its National Air Traffic Services (NATS). Field points to the experience of the airports, where ...

  • News

    Ministers approve European safety authority

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    A European safety authority could be set up within 18 months following an agreement by 15 European Union transport ministers on 18 June to establish a European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA). Membership of the agency will initially be open to all 27 members of the European Joint Aviation Authorities. ...

  • News

    Ryanair announces new share offering

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    Irish low-fares carrier Ryanair plans a fresh share offering and a possible listing on the London stock exchange to help back its ambitious fleet and network expansion programme. Ryanair, which launched on the Dublin and US Nasdaq markets last May, says that it plans to raise another IR£50 million ...

  • News

    PAL to slash aircraft fleet

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Philippine Airlines (PAL) is to offload 74% of its aircraft, including 15 new Airbus A330/ 340s, and will dump 68% of its international and domestic services in a bid to keep its finances afloat. Under a dramatic restructuring plan presented to the Philippine Securities and Exchange ...

  • News

    Cargo was misloaded on Fine Air fatal crash DC-8, says the NTSB

    1998-06-24T00:00:00Z

    The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) says the fatal crash of a Fine Air McDonnell Douglas DC-8 freighter at Miami International on 7 August last year was due to misloading of cargo that escaped the attention of the US all-cargo carrier and the Federal Aviation Administration. Investigators say ...