All Safety articles – Page 31

  • Airbus H2 aircraft-c-Airbus
    News

    Airbus and Air France spearhead Paris bid to advance hydrogen-hub airports

    2021-02-11T08:46:00Z

    Airbus and Air France-KLM are joining airports operator Groupe ADP and other French entities to explore the use of hydrogen at Parisian airports. They are seeking projects focused on storage and distribution of gaseous and liquid hydrogen within airports, options for hydrogen recycling, and diverse uses of hydrogen in aeronautics ...

  • Hop ATR damage-c-BEA
    News

    ATR gear door hit wing root after in-flight separation

    2021-02-10T23:23:00Z

    French investigators have determined that a Hop ATR 42-500 sustained serious damage after a lost nut caused a main landing-gear door to separate during descent to Aurillac. The turboprop (F-GPYF) had departed Paris Orly on 25 March 2018, with 48 passengers and three crew members. As it descended through 18,000ft ...

  • SJ182-c-Creative Commons
    News

    Subtle thrust-lever shift may have caught out Sriwijaya 737 crash crew

    2021-02-10T15:08:00Z

    Preliminary findings from the Sriwijaya Boeing 737-500 crash probe increasingly support an in-flight upset scenario in which the crew was suddenly caught out by the insidious development of an asymmetric thrust condition. No conclusions have been drawn over the 9 January accident. But the highly-unusual retardation of a single throttle ...

  • Sriwijaya Air 737-500 PK-CLC
    News

    Thrust lever asymmetry emerges in Sriwijaya 737 crash inquiry

    2021-02-10T09:36:00Z

    Indonesian investigators will focus their attention on the autothrottle system of a Sriwijaya Air Boeing 737-500 that crashed into the sea minutes after taking off from Jakarta, after revealing a thrust-lever asymmetry developed during the flight.

  • MH17 detonation
    News

    No evidence Ukraine aware of threat before MH17 shot down: analysis

    2021-02-08T15:04:00Z

    Independent analysis has found no evidence that Ukrainian authorities were aware of the threat to high-altitude traffic, and specifically civil aviation, before a Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777-200ER was shot down by a surface-to-air missile. This is despite Ukrainian national security officials’ openly floating the possibility that high-powered weapons might have ...

  • BelugaXL first landing
    News

    Airbus intends ETOPS for BelugaXL to support transatlantic operations

    2021-02-05T12:02:00Z

    Airbus is to seek extended twin-engined operations (ETOPS) approval for the BelugaXL outsize transporter, in order to support commercial services involving overwater flights. Three BelugaXLs, based on the A330, have been built, the most recent introduced in October 2020. Another three will be manufactured, the last two of which will ...

  • SJ182-c-Creative Commons
    News

    Sriwijaya 737-500 'slowly' turned left before entering fatal descent

    2021-02-04T13:29:00Z

    Components of the crashed Sriwijaya Air Boeing 737-500 including the flight-control computer, autothrottle computer, and autothrottle actuator assembly are undergoing examination, a Indonesian parliamentary commission has heard. The commission held a session on 3 February during which various representatives involved in the inquiry provided preliminary information on the flight and ...

  • TCTS II in first flight on FA-18E Super Hornet
    News

    Collins’ dogfighting training system flies on US Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet

    2021-02-03T23:26:00Z

    The US Navy has completed the first in-flight test of Collins Aerospace’s Tactical Combat Training System II (TCTS II), a system that could become the brains behind future large-scale virtual dogfights.

  • Robin DR400
    News

    Robin pilots warned over carbon monoxide risk from swapped heater ducts

    2021-02-02T12:50:00Z

    Operators of Robin DR400 light aircraft are being warned that a possible misfitting of ducts on the type could lead to the pilot becoming intoxicated by carbon monoxide ingestion. One in-service occurrence has emerged of the cabin-heater and carburettor-heater ducts on a DR400/120 model having been wrongly installed on the ...

  • Summit Dornier 228-c-Summit Air Charters
    News

    Summit amends Dornier 228 ice procedures after dual-engine flame-out

    2021-02-01T23:47:00Z

    Canadian operator Summit Air Charters has modified icing procedures after an incident in which both engines on a Dornier 228 flamed out just after take-off on a service to Yellowknife. The turboprop had been departing the remote Cahcho Kue in the Northwest Territories on 19 January, according to a Transport ...

  • Ju 52 simulation-c-SUST
    News

    How the appeal of vintage flight helped solve the Alps crash puzzle

    2021-02-01T16:46:00Z

    With its unusual historic triple engine sound and vintage appearance, the Junkers Ju 52 would have been as anachronistic as it was distinctive and engaging to those capturing its passage through the Alps with high-resolution mobile-phone cameras. But the appeal of the pre-war aircraft to onlookers combined with a technological ...

  • Pegasus 737 crash Istanbul
    Analysis

    How did airline safety rank in extraordinary 2020?

    2021-02-01T11:28:00Z

    With a dozen fatal airline accidents reported during 12 months of operations that were severely disrupted by Covid-19, how did aviation’s safety record for 2020 stack up against previous years?

  • shutterstock_3576037
    News

    Industry groups urge US government to reject domestic testing requirement

    2021-01-30T01:13:00Z

    A coalition of travel industry lobby groups and unions is urging the new US administration to reject a coronavirus testing mandate for domestic air travel similar to the one that was introduced for international arrivals earlier this week.

  • AA CRJ900 DFW
    News

    PSA returns CRJs to service after inspections

    2021-01-29T20:08:00Z

    Regional carrier PSA Airlines is again flying its MHIRJ CRJ jets after having grounded the aircraft for mandatory inspections, PSA parent American Airlines says.

  • Air Canada_A220-300-9
    News

    Canada suspends all flights to Mexico and the Caribbean

    2021-01-29T18:10:00Z

    Canadian airlines will suspend all flights to Mexico and the Caribbean for the next three months as the country imposes even stricter measures to stem the spread of new variants of the coronavirus.

  • 737 Max 8-c-Boeing
    News

    New Spanish facility of BAA Training to offer 737 Max simulators

    2021-01-29T16:53:00Z

    Pilot-training organisation BAA Training is intending to introduce Boeing 737 Max simulation devices at its Spanish facility over the course of this year. The company says the Barcelona centre will be introducing a Max full-flight simulator in April, and complement this with a flight-training device in the fourth quarter. With ...

  • Ju 52 wreck-c-SUST
    News

    Crashed Ju 52 was poorly-maintained and not airworthy: inquiry

    2021-01-29T11:28:00Z

    Swiss investigators have determined that a Junkers Ju 52 was not fit to fly, having been poorly maintained, before it spiralled into the ground after stalling during a sightseeing flight in the Alps. But the inquiry believes that – despite being “not airworthy in a physical or formal sense” – ...

  • Chicago O'Hare airport 082520. Pilar Wolfsteller-2
    News

    US airlines blast possible Covid-19 test requirement for domestic travellers

    2021-01-28T22:13:00Z

    Requiring Covid-19 tests for US domestic air passengers would be unnecessary, complex and impractical – or as one Southwest Airlines executive puts it, “a real goat rodeo”.

  • Ju 52 dive-c-SUST
    News

    Ju 52 fatal crash probe uncovers atrocious catalogue of safety violations

    2021-01-28T20:25:00Z

    Swiss investigators have concluded, in a damning inquiry, that a Junkers Ju 52 on a pleasure flight stalled after the crew flew it into a narrow valley at low altitude, at a dangerously low airspeed and with its centre-of-gravity out of limits. The crew intended to exit the valley via ...

  • 737 Max-c-Boeing
    News

    Controlling out-of-trim 737 Max will not require ‘exceptional’ strength

    2021-01-28T12:16:00Z

    Critical to pilots’ acceptance of the Boeing 737 Max’s re-entry into service is the assurance that a serious out-of-trim situation can be easily resolved without the risk of manual controls becoming impossible to manipulate owing to aerodynamic forces. Not only will aircraft need to be modified but Max simulators will ...