All Systems & interiors articles – Page 796

  • News

    Prevention is better than cure

    1999-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The increase in disruptive airline passengers - the perpetrators of 'air rage' - is a warning sign that flying is becoming more stressful. Even its most ardent supporters would have to admit that airline travel is not always the most soothing of experiences. The advertised image is of the ...

  • News

    Southwest bites the Big Apple

    1999-02-01T00:00:00Z

    It is the news that other US carriers hoped never to hear. Southwest Airlines is about to take a bite out of the Big Apple and begin operating from New York. Analysts and rival airlines have speculated about the possibility for years, but Southwest has deliberately avoided the New ...

  • News

    Airlines face lawsuits for pesticide spraying

    1999-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Airlines are facing new complaints, union trouble and possible lawsuits over pesticide spraying on aircraft. In the USA, two major lawsuits filed by flight attendants in Louisiana and California against pesticide manufacturers claim that many crew members are suffering chronic illness and multiple chemical sensitivity from long term exposure ...

  • News

    EA-6B buy

    1999-01-27T16:34:00Z

    The US Naval Air Systems Command is to order six additional Northrop Grumman EA-6B Block 89A modification kits as part of a continuing programme to upgrade its ßeet of Block 82 standard Prowlers. The kits include new electronic flight information displays and navigation, communication and electronic warfare suites. Source: ...

  • News

    US report plays down fears of GPS navigation signal jamming

    1999-01-27T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC A study conducted by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory concludes that risks associated with jamming of the global positioning system (GPS) signal can be managed. This can be achieved if steps are taken to minimise the prospects of intentional and unintentional interference, says a ...

  • News

    Eurocontrol firms up separation plans in bid to beat congestion

    1999-01-27T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/DUBROVNIK Proposals for a major shake-up of Europe's congested airspace, aimed at securing extra capacity, will be considered by Eurocontrol in April. If approved, the programme will commit 38 countries to work together to introduce reduced vertical separation minima (RVSM) between flight levels 290 and 410 simultaneously ...

  • News

    SAA courts Asian partnerships

    1999-01-27T00:00:00Z

    South African Airways (SAA) is pursuing a new northern Asian partnership after restructuring its South-East Asian routes through extended codeshares with allies Singapore Airlines (SIA), Thai Airways International and Japan Airlines (JAL). An announcement is expected soon, but SAA will only say that it is talking to several airlines, ...

  • News

    New British Airways pilots' deal throws doubt on virtual airline

    1999-01-27T00:00:00Z

    The future of British Airways' London Gatwick-based "virtual airline" Airline Management (AML) is looking doubtful as BA pilots prepare to vote on a new employment deal. AML was set up by Flying Colours boss Errol Cossey in association with BA to function as its low-cost long haul division. It ...

  • News

    COPA completes deal for 12 new Boeing 737-700s

    1999-01-27T00:00:00Z

    COPA has finalised a deal to acquire 12 new Boeing 737-700s through order and operating leases. The carrier will re-equip its fleet completely and expand services to Central and South America. The privately owned Panamanian carrier has ordered eight 737s from Boeing and will lease a further four aircraft, ...

  • News

    Telephone approval

    1999-01-20T12:09:00Z

    AirCell has received a waiver of approval from the US Federal Communications Commission, allowing operation of its airborne telephone system, which connects with ground-based cellular networks. The system is targeted at general aviation and airline markets by the Louisville, Colorado-based company. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Canadian unveils new image

    1999-01-20T00:00:00Z

    Canadian Airlines has revamped its image with a new name, new uniforms and a new stylised "Canada goose" logo. The Calgary-based carrier has dropped the word "International" from its name in an effort to promote its domestic services, and the new livery features more bare metal so as to more ...

  • News

    Sticky business

    1999-01-20T00:00:00Z

    Tim Furniss/LONDON Dust from the comet Wild 2 will be collected and returned to earth by the fourth mission in NASA's Discovery programme which kicks off with a Delta II launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida on 6 February. It will be the first time that samples from a ...

  • News

    Safest approaches are those flown...

    1999-01-20T00:00:00Z

    Safest approaches are those flown at 3¼ angle- David Lonsdale's letter (Flight International, 23 December, 1998-5 January, 1999, P48) makes the very valid point that the safest approaches flown in a swept-wing transport are those that are close to a 3¼ angle, and the reply from SAS (Flight International, 6-12 ...

  • News

    DaimlerChrysler Airbus will link headquarters

    1999-01-20T00:00:00Z

    DaimlerChrysler has ordered an Airbus A319 Corporate Jet (CJ) for delivery in early 2000. The aircraft will be operated by a new subsidiary company, DaimlerChrysler Aviation, based in Stuttgart, to ferry employees between the German city and the conglomerate's second headquarters in Detroit, USA. Before it receives the International ...

  • News

    Whither Russia's Air Force?

    1999-01-20T00:00:00Z

    Little wonder that few Westerners understand Russia. In the month that its air force finally reveals the closest thing it has to a fifth-generation fighter aircraft (MAPO's Article 1.44), and hints at grandiose plans for new fighters, missiles and long-range bombers, it also announces swingeing manpower cuts that include some ...

  • News

    Management actions

    1999-01-20T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC Flight management systems (FMS) are no longer luxury items found only on large airliners, but essential equipment on commercial aircraft of all sizes and ages. The reason is the navigation accuracy now possible and the cost benefits available to airlines in the form of fuel and ...

  • News

    Lawyers raise MD-11 concerns

    1999-01-20T00:00:00Z

  • News

    Asiasat stake

    1999-01-13T13:24:00Z

    Luxembourg-based Société Européenne des Satellites (SES) has acquired a 34.13% stake in Hong Kong-based Asiasat in a $372 million deal that will give SES a hold in the Asia Pacific market. The deal came as Cable and Wireless and Hutchinson Whampoa left Asiasat. Cable and Wireless will use the cash ...

  • News

    Software problems delay WAAS implementation

    1999-01-13T00:00:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has delayed initial fielding of the Raytheon Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) by at least 14 months because of software development problems. The WAAS was to have entered service in July 1999, but the FAA says this has been pushed back to September ...

  • News

    Orenda wraps up Turkish deal

    1999-01-13T00:00:00Z

    Canada's Orenda Recip has clinched its first original equipment manufacturer contract after a multimillion dollar deal with Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI). Orenda will supply and install its OE-600 V-8 piston engine for a multimission aircraft, under development at TAI's Ankara, Turkey-based factory. "The agreement is expected to result in ...