All Ops & safety articles – Page 1414

  • News

    British Airways/United to launch AlliedSignal EGPWS flight tests

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Allan Winn/SINGAPORE Kieran Daly/LONDON TWO MAJOR AIRLINES are about to begin trials of AlliedSignal's enhanced ground-proximity warning system (EGPWS). By the end of February, the system will be flying on a British Airways Boeing 747-400 and, in May, United Airlines is to begin a three-month revenue-service trial ...

  • News

    Russia sets up aviation body

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    RUSSIA'S NEWLY appointed transport minister, Nikolai Tsakh, plans to announce the formation of a new Federal Aviation Service by the end of this month. The body is being created to help improve state control of civil aviation and co-ordinate its development. Air-traffic-control agency Rosaeronavigatsia will be incorporated ...

  • News

    Pilots beware

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Sir - As the UK British Airline Pilots Association (BALPA) and the Independent Pilots Association (IPA) have received many recent enquiries, we are offering some cautionary advice to pilots seeking employment. We are led to believe that pilots are being offered employment verbally, subject to their obtaining UK ...

  • News

    Honeywell predicts Pegasus boom

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    MORE THAN 700 Boeing 757/767s and McDonnell Douglas MD-90/MD-11s could be retrofitted with Honeywell's newly developed Pegasus flight-management system (FMS), according to the company. The Pegasus FMS has 25 times the throughput capacity and up to 16 times more memory than that of the existing systems and will ...

  • News

    PZL-Okecie to replace crashed prototype

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    POLISH AIRCRAFT manufacturer PZL-Okecie says that it wants to build another PZL-130T Turbo Orlik to replace the prototype lost in a fatal crash on 25 January. Contrary to earlier reports that the accident involved the Pratt & Whitney-powered PZL-130TC (Flight International, 7-13 February), marketing and sales director Maciej ...

  • News

    As McDonnell Douglas revises JAST design

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    The McDonnell Douglas-led JAST team has unveiled a near-tailless aircraft, using main-engine thrust-vectoring to achieve pitch, roll and yaw control. In 1995, it dropped the gas-driven lift-fan concept for a lift-plus-lift/cruise short take-off and vertical-landing configuration. In this, a forward engine being developed by General Electric/ Allison provides ...

  • News

    Technical details

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    THE 407 WAS certificated by the Canadian Civil Aviation Authority, just a few days before our flight. US Federal Aviation Administration certification will follow. Even before this, more than 150 orders have been placed, with about 100 deposits paid. Initial deliveries will be at Heli-Expo '96 in Dallas, Texas, on ...

  • News

    Industry fights 'devastating' FAA flight-time proposal

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/Atlanta PROPOSED NEW US Federal Aviation Administration rules on pilot flight and duty time will "devastate" the US on-demand air-charter industry, says the US National Air Transportation Association (NATA). Many charter companies and fixed-base operators will be unable to bear the cost of the additional pilots required ...

  • News

    Statistics reflect the effects

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Sir - I have lectured for 25 years on flight safety and, with reference to the Viscount article (Flight International, 20 December-2 January, P30), the hot-air anti-ice system does not necessarily supply sufficient heat to the tail-section leading edges in severe icing conditions, unless the fuel flow to engines two ...

  • News

    ValuJet expands fleet

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    VALUJET AIRLINES has purchased nine McDonnell Douglas (MDC) DC-9-30s and two MD-83s in deals which will take its fleet to 58 aircraft by the end of the first quarter of 1997. MDC helped locate the aircraft under the terms of ValuJet's launch order for 50 MDC MD-95s, deliveries of which ...

  • News

    Time out

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    IT IS "...POTENTIALLY the most expensive rulemaking ever proposed", says one industry association of the US Federal Aviation Administration's plan to revamp the rules governing pilot flight and duty times. "Asinine" is another association's less-guarded assessment of the proposed regulations. "This could be the first $1 billion rule," suggests one ...

  • News

    The criteria for flightpaths are incomplete

    1996-02-14T11:48:00Z

    Sir -It is stated in the article "Wavionix speeds up design of air-traffic flight patterns" (Flight International, 24-30 January, P23) that en route airways flightpaths are designed according to criteria laid down by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) aircraft operations manual. ICAO Document 8168 - Procedures for ...

  • News

    Wings win

    1996-02-14T10:58:00Z

    The French state-owned pilot-training organisation SEFA has selected Wicat Systems' Wings ab initio computer-based pilot-training system, developed jointly with, and used by, Swissair and British Aerospace Flying College.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    Singapore pushes West to support AE-100

    1996-02-14T00:00:00Z

    SINGAPORE WANTS prospective Western partners to commit to taking a greater stake in the development, production and marketing of China's planned AE-100 regional jet. Singapore Technologies (ST) has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Aviation Industries of China (AVIC) to take a 10% share in the programme. ...

  • News

    BA to equip European fleet with TCAS 2

    1996-02-14T00:00:00Z

    BRITISH AIRWAYS WILL announce this week that it is fitting traffic-alert and collision-avoidance systems (TCAS 2) to its 116-aircraft short-haul fleet The airline is the first major European carrier to order the TCAS 2 for its entire fleet. Its 102 long-haul aircraft are already fitted with the system, ...

  • News

    Airbus closes on A330-200 sale

    1996-02-14T00:00:00Z

    AIRBUS CLAIMS to be in final negotiations with Korean Air (KAL) and two other unidentified international carriers to place the first orders for the recently launched A330-200 "shrink". According to Airbus senior vice-president John Leahy, KAL is looking for between 12 and 15 A330-200s, and up to six ...

  • News

    Boeing nears launch order for 747 stretch 747

    1996-02-14T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/SINGAPORE BRITISH AIRWAYS, Lufthansa and Singapore Airlines are close to negotiating launch orders with Boeing for the 747-600X, the stretched version of the present 747-400 and the first major derivative of the 747. The airlines will meet Boeing in early April at a crucial meeting ...

  • News

    US help sought in 757 crash probe

    1996-02-14T00:00:00Z

    THE DOMINICAN Republic has asked the USA for help in investigating the 6 February crash of a Boeing 757 into the sea just north of the island. The aircraft, chartered by Dominican carrier Alas Nacionales from Turkish airline Birgenair, was climbing through 7,000ft (2,000m) after a night take-off ...

  • News

    Boeing examines longest-range 777 yet

    1996-02-14T00:00:00Z

    BOEING IS studying an ultra-long-range 777-200 as a possible alternative to the development of the smaller-capacity short-bodied -100X. The study has been prompted by airline demand for an ultra-long-haul aircraft combining the range of the -100X with the higher capacity of the -200. Boeing hopes that the move ...

  • News

    Embraer confident about its future

    1996-02-14T00:00:00Z

    EMBRAER EXPECTS to have launched a finance and leasing operation to support sales of the EMB-120 Brasilia turboprop and EMB-145 regional jet by the time of the first delivery of the latter aircraft late this year. The Brazilian manufacturer is already starting to establish the structure of the ...