All Ops & safety articles – Page 1422
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News
Euro unions strike out
The signs in Europe for labour relations are ominous - and it's not just carriers with the more 'radical' unions facing a difficult start to the year. Strike action at Sabena started at the end of Nov-ember with one-day strikes after management cancelled all labour contracts. ...
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US faces labour strife
The state of US aviation labour relations does not bode well for the new year, with union negotiations due at Northwest Airlines, USAir and United Airlines, among others. By early December, the 32,500 members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers at Boeing had been on ...
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LA is lax on fee
After a two year battle with Los Angeles International airport, airlines won a decisive round when a Department of Transportation ombudsman backed an internal investigation which found $32.7 million in airport revenues collected from landing fees had been improperly used. From the improper spending of $33,750 for a ...
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Financial results
Air Canada's international passenger sales jumped 25% and operating income rose 14.4%. There was a US$43m gain on the sale of warrants. The move into profit was helped by lower debt, but comes before a charge for cabin crew redundancies. A full-year loss of $240m is expected. ...
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Lloyd's find out what's in a Name
After several horrendous years in which the accumulated losses of the London insurance market climbed to £8.2 billion ($12.7 billion), it is at last possible to believe that Lloyd's is far enough along the road to recovery and reform to remain a significant factor in the global insurance industry. ...
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Hawaiian set to sell stake
Hawaiian Airlines looks set to sell a controlling stake to a group of US east coast investors for $20 million, ending the carriers intensive search for additional capital which has been underway since its emergence from bankruptcy. Hawaiian has declined to identify investors in the group, called Airline ...
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Hubs and partners
Since being spun off into the world's first separate airline cargo subsidiary last January, Lufthansa Cargo has been free to pursue its aggressive global network strategy. Jackie Gallacher reports.As the biggest non-integrated cargo carrier in the world and the second largest air freight carrier after Federal Express, Lufthansa Cargo Airlines ...
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Valu lost on key NY slots
ValuJet is pressing its antitrust case against Delta Air Lines despite failing to stop its rival from buying 10 coveted slots at New York/LaGuardia pending the outcome of its lawsuit. Atlanta-based ValuJet claims it was the sole bidder for the slots when TWA initially offered them and that ...
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Smooth operators
The third package not only improved market access, it gave European Economic Area carriers the ability to choose the most favourable environment for their operations. Dermot Scully reports on the advantages of using more than one licence.European airlines are beginning to recognise the full extent of the potential benefits ...
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Muddy end for 747
AN EMPTY CHINA AIRLINES Boeing 747-200 swerved off the runway and crashed at Manila's Ninoy Aquino International Airport on 12 December, during an attempted three-engine take-off. The aircraft, with only the aircrew aboard, was being returned to Taiwan for repairs after earlier hitting a truck when landing, damaging one of ...
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GE90 power surge hits 777 ETOPS progress
Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES PLANS TO BEGIN extended-range twinjet-operations (ETOPS) tests of the General Electric GE90-powered Boeing 777 have been hit by an incident in which a British Airways aircraft suffered an engine surge during pre-delivery flight tests. Although the engine recovered automatically from the surge, ...
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The Viscount: still darting about
Harry Hopkins, who flew Vickers Viscounts in the 1960s, renews his acquaintance with one of the last passenger versions. IT WAS ALL THERE, in black and white. The cockpit instruments lacked colour coding, or pastel panels - but then I was going back 30 years. Vickers Viscounts were once flown ...
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Europe agrees on ground-handling
Julian Moxon/PARIS IN A LANDMARK decision, European transport ministers have agreed to a full liberalisation of the region's airport ground-handling from 1 January 2003. Germany and Austria have refused to sign the agreement, but will still be bound by the decision, which is expected to ...
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Fair comparisons are needed on Airbus aircraft
Sir - I read the article "Battle of the big twins" (Flight International, 22-28 November, P16), which contains a number of errors and misleading comments. The airliners competing for the 300- to 350-seat market are the Airbus Industrie A330 and A340, the Boeing 777-200A, -200B and -300, ...
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FAA proposes to amend commercial-pilot flight hours
NEW FLIGHT, duty and rest rules for commercial pilots have been proposed by the US Federal Aviation Administration in a move to improve aviation safety. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) reduces the number of duty hours (the time a flight crewmember is on the job available to ...
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Lufthansa and BAe set up joint-venture company
Andrzej Jeziorski/BERLIN LUFTHANSA AND British Aerospace have established a new joint-venture company to run Avro RJ85 regional-jet simulator and classroom training at Lufthansa's Flight Training Centre at Berlin-Schonefeld Airport. The company, established on 12 December as City Line Avro Simulator and Training, will offer training for ...
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Bombardier expands in Montreal
Brian Dunn/MONTREAL BOMBARDIER HAS opened a training centre in Montreal as part of a strategy to double its annual aerospace sales to C$6 billion ($4 billion) by 2000. Canadian simulator manufacturer CAE Electronics provided two-thirds of the financing for the C$108 million Bombardier Aerospace Training Centre, ...
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British World's Viscounts soldier on
BRITISH WORLD AIRLINES (BWA) is now the largest operator of Viscounts, with eight active at the end of 1995. At one stage, BWA and its predecessors operated 18 of the aircraft. Of the eight left, five have been converted to freighters and three soldiers on in passenger guise, ...
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JAA group will define tests for evacuations
JAA group will define tests for evacuations NEW CRITERIA for cabin emergency-evacuation tests are to be defined by the European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) to enable the safety of a greater variety of exit configurations to be accurately assessed, according to JAA secretary-general Klaus Koplin. After a 12 ...
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Pilots pave way for Delta low-cost plan
Graham Warwick/ATLANTA DELTA AIRLINES has reached a tentative agreement with its pilots' union, which would enable it to establish a low-cost, short-haul, operation to compete with carriers such as ValuJet Airlines. The accord is contingent on the pilots signing a wider agreement designed to reduce Delta's overall costs, ...