All Systems & interiors articles – Page 892

  • News

    Can you do IT better?

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The quest for greater efficiency and financial benefits is driving carriers to outsource their information technology services. Carlos de Pommes and Steve Geller detail the benefits and potential pitfalls. As airlines dig more deeply to uncover efficiency improvements, the restructuring of information technology departments is being reviewed with greater vigour. ...

  • News

    US looks for more allies

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    If the first three months of 1996 are any indication, this year may be remembered for the broad expansion of alliance-building between the world's airlines. US carriers are leading the way, typically ruffling a few feathers, especially in Latin America. So far, few players have been left out ...

  • News

    Airline news

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    British Airways is to fit out its entire shorthaul fleet with the Traffic Alert & Collision Avoidance System supplied by Honeywell Avionic Systems. Lufthansa is launching a weekly, non-stop service from Frankfurt to Shanghai from July. It will start four flights a week from Munich to Pisa and ...

  • News

    Aiming high

    1996-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Asiana's president has ambitious plans for the young carrier, which is now among the world's 50 most profitable. Richard Whitaker reports. Sam Koo Park, president of Asiana Airlines, does not pull his punches. 'Will you take an old airplane?' asked a recent round of advertisements. 'Do you want to receive ...

  • News

    Saf-T-Glo hopes Pathfinder lighting will shine in USA

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    AN EMERGENCY FLOOR-path-lighting system, which requires no electrical power and has no batteries, bulbs or wiring to install and maintain, has been certificated in the USA by Diversified Aviation Services (DAS). The Pathfinder photo-luminescent lighting system, manufactured by UK company Saf-T-Glo, has been approved and installed by airlines, in France ...

  • News

    FAA warns Wilcox on WAAS

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC WILCOX ELECTRIC IS in danger of losing its $475 million contract to develop and produce the global-positioning-system (GPS) wide-area augmentation system (WAAS) for the US Federal Aviation Administration. On 18 March, the aviation agency advised the US-based subsidiary of Thomson-CSF that the WAAS ...

  • News

    UK turns up heat on engine-control study

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON AN ADVANCED electronic engine-control (EEC) system, capable of operation in the high-temperature core of a jet engine, rather than being mounted on the fan casing, is under development by a UK consortium. The project could lead to production of more-responsive and reliable EECs ...

  • News

    Crossair

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Josef Felder has been appointed to head Swiss airline Crossair's new product-management division and will serve as executive vice-president in the carrier's new corporate organisation. He was formerly vice-president of marketing. Bettina Schaub becomes vice-president for cabin crew and a member of Crossair's corporate management. Schaub, who is a former ...

  • News

    Charter collaboration

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    As an extension of the Sabena/Swissair equity alliance, the respective charter subsidiaries will begin joint flights in July. Sobelair and Balair/CTA, the latter operated by Swissair subsidiary Crossair (but retaining the name for long-haul flights), are co-operating on a Brussels-Zurich-San Francisco route, to be flown by the Belgian company's 270-seat ...

  • News

    USA told: 'offer more' to beat bilateral block

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC LACK OF LEVERAGE ON the part of US negotiators has led to the current impasse in bilateral aviation talks with the UK, according to the US General Accounting Office (GAO). As the GAO issued its report, British Airways chairman Sir Colin Marshall, visiting Washington, was ...

  • News

    Air France Europe fights to regain business

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    FRENCH DOMESTIC and regional carrier Air France Europe (incorporating the former Air Inter) is fighting to regain traffic, which it has lost since French air services were opened to competition from domestic rivals. In what he says will be an "aggressive" campaign to prepare the airline for total ...

  • News

    An easy job? Think again

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Sir - Would W J Foden ("...but basically it's an easy job", Flight International, 13-19 March, P37) care to fly in aircraft piloted by people trained only for the aviation equivalent of a passenger-service or heavy-goods vehicle? I suspect that, if so, he would be alone in the cabin. ...

  • News

    Mitsubishi delivers first XF-2 prototype

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE MITSUBISHI HAS delivered the first prototype, XF-2 single seat fighter, previously known as the FS-X, to the Japan Defence Agency (JDA), to begin a three-year programme of flight testing and evaluation. The XF-2, handed over on 22 March at Mitsubishi's Komaki South plant, ...

  • News

    Tu-144 supersonic testbed rolled out

    1996-03-27T00:00:00Z

    A MODIFIED Tupolev Tu-144LL was rolled out at Zhukovsky Flight Test Centre on 17 March, marking the beginning of a six-month joint Russian-US flight-test programme in support of NASA's high-speed-research programme. The project is aimed at developing technology for a next-generation US high-speed civil transport. The US industry ...

  • News

    MDC outlines five-year plan

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGFELES McDONNELL DOUGLAS is studying the launch of three new products over the next 18 months, including a stretched MD-95 and two re-winged variants of the MD-11. Douglas Aircraft vice-president and general manager John Feren says that future milestones already include delivery of ...

  • News

    Inevitable end

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    The ultimate declaration of bankruptcy by Fokker will be greeted in various quarters with varying degrees of anger, regret and relief. The anger - from Fokker's employees - will be understandable. The regret - especially from Fokker's suppliers and customers - will be justifiable. The relief - from competitors - ...

  • News

    Biting into false alarms

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Despite modern diagnostics, "no fault found" is frequently the mechanics' verdict after avionics fault alerts. Terence Hardeman/SINGAPORE FAULT INDICATIONS on avionics line-replaceable units (LRUs) are costing airlines millions of dollars, and engineering executives around the world have called for action by component manufacturers to combat ...

  • News

    Cali 757 crash speeds American EGPWS trials

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Bernie Fitzsimmons/LONDON AMERICAN AIRLINES plans to join British Airways and United Airlines in trials of AlliedSignal's enhanced ground-proximity warning system (EGPWS), which the manufacturer plans to start delivering by the third quarter of this year (Flight International, 21-27 February). American has already decided to test ...

  • News

    Bell Helicopter cracks Latin America market with 407

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Bell Helicopter Textron has sold some 50 Model 407 light single-turbine helicopters in Latin America. Of more than 160 firm orders received for the new aircraft, 40 are from customers in Brazil, the company says - with at least ten of those coming from first-time customers. The US ...

  • News

    Airbus partners scale up combined R&D for A3XX

    1996-03-20T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON AIRBUS INDUSTRIE IS pushing for an unprecedented level of co-operation between its partners and suppliers during the research-and-development (R&D) phase of the proposed A3XX ultra-high-capacity airliner. The new approach, under the so-called "3E Plan", is seen as crucial to the consortium's efforts to keep the aircraft's ...