Programmes – Page 1277

  • News

    Seizing the initiative

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Russia is taking steps to improve air-safety and save its international reputation. Paul Duffy/MOSCOW THE INTERNATIONAL furore, which followed the loss of an Aeroflot Russian International Airlines Airbus A310, en route from Moscow to Hong Kong, in March 1994, proved to be the catalyst, which prompted Russia's ...

  • News

    Japan sets budget for aerospace projects

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    JAPAN'S MINISTRY OF International Trade and Industry (MITI) will allocate '11,161 million ($106 million) in fiscal year 1996, to support indigenous and international collaborative aerospace programmes. The budget includes '5,328 million for continued studies into development of the next-generation supersonic transport, and basic research of a super/hypersonic propulsion ...

  • News

    Boeing sued over Dash 8 sale

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    BOEING IS embroiled in a legal action which alleges that it used bribes to secure the sale of five de Havilland Dash 8s to BahamasAir in 1989. The allegations are understood to be contained in documents filed in a Miami, Florida, court by Canadian entrepreneur Craig Dobbin. He claims that ...

  • News

    Malaysian Boeing choice was driven by capacity criterion

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE AIRCRAFT-SEAT capacity, rather than price, appears to have been the deciding factor in Malaysia Airlines' (MAS) selection of the Boeing 777 over the rival Airbus A340. Boeing had been widely expected for some weeks to win the MAS order with a combination of ...

  • News

    China and S Korea wrangle over AE-100 assembly

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE CHINA AND SOUTH Korea, have again pushed back their selection of a Western partner, to develop the AE-100 passenger aircraft, until the two countries agree on the location of a final assembly line. Nearly 15 months after the Chinese and South Korean Governments agreed ...

  • News

    Loral deal creates $30 billion Lockheed Martin

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ATLANTA LOCKHEED MARTIN has again raised the stakes in the US defence business with its agreement to buy the bulk of Loral for $9.1 billion. The latest deal, which comes less than a year after Lockheed's merger with Martin Marietta, will create a group with sales ...

  • News

    Lockheed Martin tests pre-production APALS

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ALBUQUERQUE LOCKHEED MARTIN has begun flight demonstrations with a pre-production version of its autonomous precision-approach and landing-system (APALS). Airline demonstrations are scheduled for early February at Richmond, Virginia, following a series of approaches conducted at Albuquerque, New Mexico, with an APALS-equipped Gulfstream II. The ...

  • News

    Air Libert, plans new routes

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS FRENCH DOMESTIC airline Air Liberte is poised to take advantage of the 1 January 1996, liberalisation of French skies (to national airlines only) with plans to launch 23 new domestic routes in the first six months of this year. Air Liberte President Lotfi ...

  • News

    Off target

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    1995's world airline safety performance shows that targets are not being met. David Learmount/LONDON FIGURES FOR 1995 confirm that numbers for world airline fatal accidents are showing an upward trend. The 1995 fatal-accident total (57) and the number of resulting fatalities (1,215) are significantly above the annual ...

  • News

    Varig president leaves within first year

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    VARIG PRESIDENT Carlos Willy Engels has stepped down after less than a year in charge of the Brazilian flag carrier. Officially, the company cites personal reasons for his departure, although it is believed that results for 1995 were not good enough to satisfy creditors who also sit on the Varig ...

  • News

    Dornier and Kulon to develop Open Skies radar for Tu-154M

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    DAIMLER-BENZ Aerospace subsidiary Dornier has signed a co-operation agreement with the Moscow-based Kulon Research Institute to develop a synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) to be integrated into Germany's Tupolev Tu-154M/OS Open Skies aircraft. The 32-month programme is to incorporate the SAR into the aircraft for the second phase of the ...

  • News

    BA tries to salvage plan to use USAir 737 pilots

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    BRITISH AIRWAYS' controversial plan to use 30 USAir Boeing 737 co-pilots at its London Gatwick hub hangs in the balance, after the UK Department for Employment and Education (DfEE) indicated that it is unlikely to grant the pilots work permits. The DfEE told BA on 5 January ...

  • News

    Loral pins future on space

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    IN THE 23 YEARS since Bernard Schwartz acquired control of Loral, he has built the company from sales of only $27 million into a $6.7 billion defence-electronics giant, in one of the most aggressive and sustained acquisition sprees in US aerospace history. The business, which he acquired ...

  • News

    Dornier pushes for laminar-wing funding

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH DORNIER LUFTFAHRT, the regional-turboprop subsidiary of Daimler-Benz Aerospace (DASA), is pushing for Government funding to test a laminar-flow wing on the Dornier 328 regional turboprop. The German company says that the project is one of several technology investigations applicable to future regional-turboprop designs, ...

  • News

    Burkhart Grob sacks half of its workforce as funding deadlock threatens Strato 2C

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH GERMAN COMPOSITE-aircraft manufacturer Burkhart Grob has sacked half of its employees because of continuing delays in the release of Government funding for the Strato 2C high-altitude research programme. The whole project now faces cancellation. Grob has made 131 of its staff redundant, shattering ...

  • News

    Chinese skies are safer, says CAAC

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    THE HEAD OF THE Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) has declared a marked improvement in the country's air-safety record, after nearly 18 months without a major accident. CAAC minister Chen Guangyi says that the country's airlines flew some 1.2 million hours without incident in the period. ...

  • News

    Rolls-Royce

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Rolls Royce of Reston, Virginia has named Dr Kenneth Bushell, vice-president of the company's St Louis, Missouri office. Since 1989, Bushell has served as vice-president for aircraft programmes for Rolls Royce, Long Beach, California.     Source: Flight International

  • News

    GE improves GE90 oil consumption

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    GENERAL ELECTRIC IS replacing the GE90 engines on the first Boeing 777 delivered to British Airways to improve the oil-consumption performance. The first engine change was performed at London Heathrow on 7 January, on one of the three 777s delivered to the airline to date, and is expected ...

  • News

    GECAS set to seal $8 billion order

    1996-01-17T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOSANGELES ONE OF THE LARGEST commercial-aircraft orders ever placed is expected to be announced within the next few weeks by GE Capital Services (GECAS), the leasing arm of US engineering conglomerate General Electric. The deal is widely expected to include orders and options for ...

  • News

    India turns down three domestic carriers' plans for expansion

    1996-01-10T00:00:00Z

    THE INDIAN Government has rejected the expansion plans of domestic carriers Jet Airways, Skyline NEPC and Sahara Indian Airlines. It is believed that the rejection was on the grounds that the airlines had failed to utilise earlier approvals to import aircraft. In the meantime, another Indian domestic carrier, ...