All Ops & safety articles – Page 1439

  • News

    US schools drop R22s

    1995-02-08T00:00:00Z

    TWO MAJOR US flight schools have decided to replace their Robinson R22s with Schweizer's new Model 300CB training helicopter, citing as a factor safety concerns with the R22. Schweizer launched the 300CB at Heli-Expo with orders for 23 aircraft, including ten for Concord, California-based Helicopter Adventures. Oakland, California-based ...

  • News

    Western partners lose patience over An-124

    1995-02-08T00:00:00Z

    Kieran Daly/LONDON WESTERN CARGO companies with interests in the Antonov An-124 Ruslan outsize freighter are expressing growing exasperation with its engines. The combination of the D-18T turbofan's unreliability and future difficulties in coping with noise restrictions has led to a showdown with Ukrainian engine design bureau ...

  • News

    Western partners lose patience over An-124

    1995-02-08T00:00:00Z

    Kieran Daly/LONDON WESTERN CARGO companies with interests in the Antonov An-124 Ruslan outsize freighter are expressing growing exasperation with its engines. The combination of the D-18T turbofan's unreliability and future difficulties in coping with noise restrictions has led to a showdown with Ukrainian engine design ...

  • News

    Handling trouble

    1995-02-01T13:55:00Z

    The ground handling debate is underlining the challenges facing the European Commission in policing Europe's single market. The trouble with the European Commission is that it has too many difficulties putting its laudable objectives into action. Ground handling offers the latest example of this. A year after ...

  • News

    US shapes and wavers

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Canada's intent to liberalise its bilateral with the US will give transportation secretary Federico Peña his first major foreign policy success. And moves in Brussels over the US open skies proposal to nine European nations may add impetus to resolve the dispute over how to address codesharing in the offer. ...

  • News

    Pricing it right

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    As O&D yield management techniques take systems to unprecedented levels of capability, the real challenge for airlines will be their proper integration and use. Jackie Gallacher reports. Like many technologies, yield management has taken time to evolve from the early systems of the 1980s to reach its current level ...

  • News

    Sense stems Pacific pride

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    South Pacific island governments are finally taking steps to stem the flow of red ink that has bedevilled most of their tiny national airlines for the past decade. At presstime, aviation officials from the dozen isolated nations were studying a comprehensive new report designed to set them back ...

  • News

    Making the right moves

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Understanding how to adapt their strategies to a rapidly changing 'newgame' environment may be one of the most important lessons for airline managers in the 1990s. Dr John Steffens proposes a suitable framework. It should be a basic premise in any industry that new games require new rules. And the ...

  • News

    Human software is the safest option

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Sir - "Lessons from the cockpit" (Flight International, 11-17 January, P24) shows that, although the automation of aircraft is sold as an improvement in safety, it is unfortunately not all gain. The main shortcoming is that the "modernisers" assume that the pilot receives relevant information from the instrument ...

  • News

    Higher interest

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    As the economic recovery moves into full swing this year, business can look forward to steady growth with little risk of inflation. But interest rates will increase and the US dollar may appreciate somewhat. David Walton explains. A year ago the global economic recovery was hesitant and patchy. Today, the ...

  • News

    Saginaw ghost

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    A mystery from the past may have relevance for the present. David Learmount/LONDON When Capt. Harvey "Hoot" Gibson's aircraft, a Trans World Airlines Boeing 727-100, suddenly rolled out of control and dived 32,000ft (10,000m), Gibson had to pull more than 5g before recovering control at ...

  • News

    Longhaul freedom

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Christopher Chataway, chairman of the UK Civil Aviation Authority, examines the obstacles to competition on longhaul routes and suggests how to overcome them. Drawing from a recent CAA report, he highlights bilaterals, EU bloc negotiations, problems faced by smaller airlines, corporate discounts, fare levels, and airline collusion. Longhaul aviation ...

  • News

    Still not free to handle

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The European Commission may have finally produced a directive aimed at dismantling the European ground handling monopolies, but its application is at least three if not six years away. Instead, Brussels will continue to pursue complaints with traditional methods, as it has with its most recent action against the Greek ...

  • News

    PAL faces home threat

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Faltering deregulation in the Philippines will receive a boost this month with the startup of the first serious domestic competition for the country's flag carrier. Grand International Airways (GrandAir), set up by a group of former senior Philippine Airlines officials, will operate two Airbus A300s on a four ...

  • News

    Late decisions

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Kieran Daly/LONDON Frequency congestion in Europe is giving the future air-navigation system a bad name and delaying its implementation. Progress towards use of the future air-navigation system (FANS) continues to prove slow for regulator and airline alike. Operators and governments remain reluctant to make the ...

  • News

    Support for the customer

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The creation by Airbus of a new finance corporation has focused more attention on the arcane world of manufacturer support. David Knibb reports.The decision by Airbus Industrie to form a separate finance corporation raises questions about the attraction and use of such units. Ten billion dollars worth of customer support ...

  • News

    China feels the pinch

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Just when China's airlines are facing a struggle, Bank of China is pressuring them to find at least some unguaranteed finance for 1995 aircraft deliveries. As a result CAAC affiliates, including flag carrier Air China, are testing the market by notifying Hong Kong financiers of their desire to ...

  • News

    Crash cause may never be known

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/PITTSBURGH THE CAUSE OF the 8 September, 1994, crash of a USAir Boeing 737-300 at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is unlikely ever to be known for certain, according to US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators. The aircraft inverted and dived to earth from 6,000ft (1,800m), killing all ...

  • News

    Playing catch-up

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Look for some progress in Africa and more competition in the Middle East. After years in the doldrums, African aviation looks set for an upturn in fortunes in 1995. Political instability and financial hardship will ensure the negatives still outweigh the positives, but any form of progress will provide the ...

  • News

    Nagoya crash victims prepare to sue CAL

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE CRASH VICTIMS' relatives and survivors of the China Air Lines (CAL) Airbus Industrie A300-600 accident on 26 April, 1994, at Nagoya, Japan, say that they are to sue the carrier for pilot error. The action coincides with publication of the first draft of ...