All Systems & interiors articles – Page 824

  • News

    Pierson warns on A3XX costs

    1998-03-04T15:55:00Z

    Airbus president Jean Pierson has warned that the A3XX 550-650 seat airliner should not be launched until the consortium is satisfied that the programme can meet its promised target of delivering significantly better economics than those offered by the Boeing 747. Speaking at his last official press conference before ...

  • News

    Fairchild Dornier examines 728JET partners

    1998-03-04T11:39:00Z

    From Flight International Principal risk-sharing partners in Fairchild Dornier's proposed new 728JET family of regional aircraft should be known by the end of the month. The main design configuration is expected to be frozen by May. The company's regional and business aircraft president Earl Robinson says that a total ...

  • News

    Range, range...range

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Confused over Boeing's plans for future 747 derivatives? Take heart. For two years since the cancellation of the ambitious 747-500X/600X development, Boeing appears to have been as perplexed as anybody. Devising a strategy for product development is, at best, an inexact science. Boeing knows this ...

  • News

    FAA seeks further FANS funding

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration is seeking Congressional approval to divert more than $100 million in 1998 funding towards future air navigation system (FANS) modernisation of US air traffic control centres (ATCCs), following complaints that it was not moving fast enough. Funding is needed to upgrade 20 US continental ...

  • News

    Eastern premise

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    The abiding lesson from the recent Singapore air show is not the magnitude or nature of the present economic unrest in the Asia-Pacific region, but the vulnerability of the aerospace community in the region to such a crisis. Much as time and effort needs to be expended in countering the ...

  • News

    Norway completes evaluation of landing system

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    Ian Sheppard/LONDON Complex precision approaches to some of the world's most inaccessible airfields could soon be possible after the Norwegian Civil Aviation Administration (NCAA) successfully completed evaluation trials of a new satellite navigation landing system. The trials were conducted at the northern Norwegian airport of Bod¿, where Raytheon ...

  • News

    Commercial close-ups

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    Russia's Kometa remote sensing satellite, launched as Cosmos 2349 aboard a Soyuz booster from Baikonur on 17 February, is producing 2m and 10m resolution panchromatic images - such as this view of the Great Pyramids of Giza in Egypt - which are commercially available from Sovinformsputnik, Moscow. The company has ...

  • News

    France will retain majority stake in Air France

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS The French Government has opted for a progressive reduction in its 94% stake in Air France, but will retain a 53% stake in the carrier, leaving it as one of the last in Western Europe to remain state controlled. The move, which comes as Air France ...

  • News

    Comets satellite stranded in wrong orbit after shutdown

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    Tim Furniss/LONDON The $360 million Japanese Communications and Broadcasting Engineering Test Satellite, Comets, was stranded in low Earth orbit on 21 February when the LE-5 second stage engine of its H-2 launch vehicle shut down prematurely. The second stage was 44s into a planned 192s burn to place ...

  • News

    AIA 98 WINNER:Rockwell Collins (Avionics)

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    Improving cockpit awareness through a 3D flight planning mapAdvances in flightdeck technology have brought major benefits to the cockpit but also some new potential concerns. Among them is the need to ensure that pilots retain good situational awareness despite the increasing volumes of data that they have to handle from ...

  • News

    AIA 98 FINALIST:Alenia Difesa and Swedavia (Infrastructure)

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    The FarAway project, co-ordinated by Italy's Alenia Difesa, represents another step in the development of the future air traffic management concepts that Europe will have to adopt if growth is to continue in its overcrowded airspace. The project, financed by the European Commission, aims to validate the benefits of ...

  • News

    A3XX collaboration initiative speeds up

    1998-03-04T00:00:00Z

    Two of Europe's leading avionics companies are collaborating with Aerospatiale in a programme backed by the European Commission (EC) aimed at improving the ability of system suppliers to work together. The concurrent engineering project, one of several centred around the proposed Airbus A3XX, has entered the demonstration phase and ...

  • News

    Suppliers

    1998-03-01T12:09:00Z

    China Airlines has started an IBM-based online booking system for internet reservations. IBM Global Services Australia is taking over the management and control of Cathay Pacific's data centrein Sydney. Unisys has supplied Cathay Pacific with the electronic ticketing system Unisys Aircare. Servisair has won a contract to provide ...

  • News

    Weakened by taxation

    1998-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Growing profits at many airlines have led to an increase in the taxes levied by governments and a rash of new charges. Tom Gill assesses the current state of affairs worldwide.'An airline is like a fat cow - everyone is milking it.' Like most airline executives, Franco Mancassola of UK-based ...

  • News

    Kiwi quests

    1998-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Air New Zealand sees its future in a global alliance but has yet to gain access to the Star Alliance. Meanwhile the carrier still needs to overcome major challenges close to home. David Knibb reports from Auckland. Air New ZealandThey say events often happen in threes - all the more ...

  • News

    And then there were four . . .

    1998-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The latest 'virtual merger' means four airlines have 70 per cent of the US market. The airline alliance dance has moved into a new phase with the announcement of the virtual merger between Northwest Airlines and Continental Airlines. The entire industry is still trying to digest the implications of this ...

  • News

    US-Japan: is this the finish post?

    1998-03-01T00:00:00Z

    The new US-Japan civil aviation bilateral might go down in history as the agreement that metamorphosed from a full open skies prospect into a reality check. Given the increasingly obvious premise that full open skies was not on the table, it eventually came down to the US Department of ...

  • News

    Labour strife hits Europe

    1998-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Cancellations are set to continue at Olympic Airlines if the question of staff shortages is not resolved, while labour strife is also plaguing Virgin Express. Olympic's unions are demanding that the airline reinstate the 64 seasonal flight attendants it fired in February. At presstime, the airline was forced to ...

  • News

    Enter the eurozone

    1998-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Airlines need to get to grips with the pricing and IT issues that are posed by the planned arrival of Europe's single currency on 1 January, 1999. Report by Gemini's Keith Turner. A year ago it was debatable whether Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) would ever happen. Since then there ...

  • News

    BA alliance faces delay

    1998-03-01T00:00:00Z

    Patience is a virtue that American Airlines and British Airways surely must be learning. Both carriers seem resigned to more months of delay as their proposed alliance faces scrutiny on both sides of the Atlantic. But BA now hopes that the European Commission might put all alliances at a ...