All Ops & safety articles – Page 1381

  • News

    China sets legal puzzle

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    China's new aviation law has changed the legal landscape and finance lawyers will be busy for months sorting it out, but they do not think it will change the overall risk of dealing with China. 'People will have to reevaluate risks and figure out how to cover them,' ...

  • News

    Cargo talks stumble on

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    After a period of fractious relations, the US and Japan may still be able to agree to a limited liberalisation of the air cargo market between the two countries. But events of the past month have dashed US officials' hopes that renegotiating the cargo bilateral would be a relatively easy ...

  • News

    Can you do IT better?

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The quest for greater efficiency and financial benefits is driving carriers to outsource their information technology services. Carlos de Pommes and Steve Geller detail the benefits and potential pitfalls. As airlines dig more deeply to uncover efficiency improvements, the restructuring of information technology departments is being reviewed with greater vigour. ...

  • News

    Stop this free for all

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    he article by Dermot Scully about the third package and increased access within the European Economic Area (Airline Business, January 1996) neglected an important aspect of the new situation. It is all very well to encourage companies to obtain operating licences in whichever country has the slackest regulations. ...

  • News

    It's all Greek to Doganis

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The Greek government may wish it had consulted the oracle before sacking Olympic Airways' chairman and chief executive Rigas Doganis - the Brussels oracle, that is. Privately, a senior European Commission official is unimpressed by the sacking in mid-March, which came only a week after transport commissioner Neil ...

  • News

    New deal for airline reps

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    I read with interest the remarks of Doug Rhymes in 'The Market Makers' in the February issue of Airline Business. While I share most of Mr Rhymes' opinions, I am under the impression that 'outsourcing' is a new, better word for the old concept of 'airline representation'. We ...

  • News

    Airline news

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    British Airways is to fit out its entire shorthaul fleet with the Traffic Alert & Collision Avoidance System supplied by Honeywell Avionic Systems. Lufthansa is launching a weekly, non-stop service from Frankfurt to Shanghai from July. It will start four flights a week from Munich to Pisa and ...

  • News

    Saf-T-Glo hopes Pathfinder lighting will shine in USA

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    AN EMERGENCY FLOOR-path-lighting system, which requires no electrical power and has no batteries, bulbs or wiring to install and maintain, has been certificated in the USA by Diversified Aviation Services (DAS). The Pathfinder photo-luminescent lighting system, manufactured by UK company Saf-T-Glo, has been approved and installed by airlines, in France ...

  • News

    FAA warns Wilcox on WAAS

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC WILCOX ELECTRIC IS in danger of losing its $475 million contract to develop and produce the global-positioning-system (GPS) wide-area augmentation system (WAAS) for the US Federal Aviation Administration. On 18 March, the aviation agency advised the US-based subsidiary of Thomson-CSF that the WAAS ...

  • News

    UK turns up heat on engine-control study

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON AN ADVANCED electronic engine-control (EEC) system, capable of operation in the high-temperature core of a jet engine, rather than being mounted on the fan casing, is under development by a UK consortium. The project could lead to production of more-responsive and reliable EECs ...

  • News

    Disconnect option

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    The European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) has changed its philosophy on auto-pilot-disconnect options for Airbus A300-600 and A310 pilots on precision approaches. This results from lessons learned from the April 1994 China Airlines A300-600 crash at Nagoya, Japan, in which 264 people died. Previous regulation required that, below 400ft (120m) ...

  • News

    Lessons to learn from Concorde

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Sir - In "Twenty years young" (Flight International, 7-13 February, P41) you comment that "...in terms of flight cycles and hours, the aircraft [Concordes] are remarkably young, despite the physical age of the fleet". British Airways, you report, operates each Concorde for 900-1,100h a year - one-quarter (or less) of ...

  • News

    USA told: 'offer more' to beat bilateral block

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC LACK OF LEVERAGE ON the part of US negotiators has led to the current impasse in bilateral aviation talks with the UK, according to the US General Accounting Office (GAO). As the GAO issued its report, British Airways chairman Sir Colin Marshall, visiting Washington, was ...

  • News

    Atlas contract

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Atlas Air has signed a long-term contract to operate a Boeing 747-200 freighter for Swissair Cargo. The aircraft, the first of five leased from FedEx, enters service this month. Atlas already operates 11 cargo 747s.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    ...And standing alone

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    THE ROW THAT has erupted suddenly between France and the USA over traffic rights demonstrates yet again the weakness of individual countries when they attempt to negotiate balanced agreements with the world's most powerful air-transport nation. The USA has concluded individual "open-skies" agreements with eight other European countries, ...

  • News

    Tentative Agreement

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    FedEx has tentatively agreed a new five-year contract with its 3,000 pilots, including pay increases partly linked to profitability and work-rule changes to improve flexibility and productivity. FedEx pilots, who took industrial action when talks broke down, have yet to vote on the deal. The carrier began direct US-China cargo ...

  • News

    France to hit back after US rebuff

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    FRANCE SAYS THAT it will "...react accordingly" to the US rejection of its application for an increase of 24% in the number of flights to North America during the summer season. One Paris source says that the USA is "flexing its muscles" to push France towards an open-skies ...

  • News

    AeroMexico on firmer footing

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    AEROMEXICO HAS emerged from a critical year with its financial restructuring safely in place and its losses apparently under control. The Mexican carrier, which came close to collapse during 1995, reports that net losses ended the year at 173 million pesos ($23 million). That compares to more than ...

  • News

    CVR data indicate chaos in 757 crash

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/LONDON THE COCKPIT-VOICE recorder (CVR) of the Birgenair Boeing 757-200 which crashed in February reveals a picture of pilots who, faced with minor problems, became confused and lost control of a flyable aircraft, according to an interim report by the Dominican Republic's accident-investigation commission. ...

  • News

    UK set to re-examine foreign pilot-training policy

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    UK CIVIL AVIATION Authority chief Sir Christopher Chataway has told the UK General Aviation Manufacturers and Traders Association (GAMTA) that he will "look again" at the policy of allowing CAA-approved foreign flying-training schools to issue UK commercial pilot licences. GAMTA chief executive Graham Forbes says that UK flying-training-school ...