Systems & interiors – Page 887

  • News

    Sanders

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    Lockheed Martin electronics company Sanders, of Nashua, New Hampshire, has named Paul Cotter C-130J programme manager at the avionics division. With the former Lockheed Electronics since 1977, Cotter was most recently business area manager for fire-control and sensor systems. Robert Cotter becomes director for displays and mission computers at the ...

  • News

    Hunting interior slips

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    Hunting has shed two top executives from its Aviation division after cost overruns on its contract to supply interior kits to Bombardier for the Dash-8. Ian Marsh, chief executive of Hunting Aviation, and John Adkins, who heads the interiors business, have both left.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    ValuJet halves its network as NTSB probe centres on cargo-fire issue

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    THE THEORY that the ValuJet McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 accident on 11 May was linked to the unauthorised freighting of oxygen-generator units has been reinforced by the investigator's discovery of pieces of the canisters embedded in a tyre from the forward cargo hold. At the time of going to ...

  • News

    RAA wants icing AD extended to cover more than turboprops

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    SENIOR US OFFICIALS from the Regional Airline Association (RAA) are pressing the US Federal Aviation Administration to extend a new airworthiness directive (AD) on severe icing to all commercial aircraft, rather than singling out turboprops. The RAA feels that the AD, which requires guidance for pilots on how ...

  • News

    RAA launches plan to counter poor public image of regionals

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    AN IMAGE-enhancement campaign has been adopted by the Regional Airline Association (RAA) in an effort to counter public uncertainties about the safety of commuter airlines. Called Plane Sense, the programme focuses on three main groups - passengers, travel agents and professionals, and the employees of regional airlines. Packages ...

  • News

    AI(R) aims for launch of regional-jet in 1997

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    AERO INTERNATIONAL (Regional) (AI(R)) says that development of a 58- to 85-seat regional-jet family is its "main goal", with a market study already under way and a launch pencilled in for the Paris air show in June 1997. The plan is to work towards an in-service entry ...

  • News

    Market for 30-seat regional jet studied

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    ALLIEDSIGNAL ENGINES believes that a 30-seat regional jet may be economically feasible and has embarked on a study to examine the market for regional jets with fewer than 50 seats. General Electric, meanwhile, says that it is in the "exploratory phase" of studying the market for 35- to 45-seat regional ...

  • News

    Small, but is it beautiful?

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    ALL OF A SUDDEN, the discussion is about small jets. Not just the 100-seater which China and Korea, or China and Singapore, want to build with European help. Not just the rival 100-seater, for which Boeing and Bombardier may link up with Japan. Not just the 100-seater which IPTN wants ...

  • News

    IPTN aims N270 stretch at US buyers

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    IPTN IS OFFERING a further stretch of the N250 regional turboprop, aimed at the US market. The 70-seat N270 is being marketed by American Regional Aircraft Industry (AMRAI), 40% owned by the Indonesian manufacturer, with a launch planned for the third quarter of 1996, leading to first delivery in the ...

  • News

    Lufthansa will attack costs

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON A SET OF RECORD figures for 1995/6 has ensured that British Airways reclaimed its title as the world's most profitable airline. The group shows no intention of letting its lead slip, making an immediate announcement of another massive drive to improve costs, further product upgrades ...

  • News

    BA and American move closer to unveiling alliance

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON BRITISH AIRWAYS and American Airlines are close to unveiling an alliance, initially expected to include joint marketing and codesharing of flights, but which could pave the way for a long-awaited US-UK open-skies agreement. The tie-up, which is expected to be announced shortly, will give ...

  • News

    Advanced flightdecks

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    ALL FUTURE DOUGLAS (DAC) aircraft will share a common display and avionics architecture to be based around Honeywell's Versatile Integrated Avionics concept, VIA 2000. The MD-95 will be the first aircraft to be equipped with the full system, while the MD-90 is set to be changed to ...

  • News

    Super facilities

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    DAC IS PROUD OF THE advanced lavatory design developed for the MD-95 in association with Jamco. "Using concurrent design and engineering techniques, we've been able to provide much more lav for the money," comments MD-95 programme management interiors IPT project manager, Terry Watson. "This lavatory looks more like ...

  • News

    Deregulation: not as good a picture as it is painted

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    Sir - The article "Low-cost carriers save passengers $6 billion" (Flight International, 1-7 May, P10) raises hope that European "deregulation" will bring a similar reduction in air fares. Judging by results in the USA, however, the real benefit for airline passengers is difficult to measure. Less than 3% ...

  • News

    Fairchild considers a 'stand-up' Metro

    1996-05-29T00:00:00Z

    FAIRCHILD AIRCRAFT will decide by late July whether to launch a version of its Metro 23 19-seat regional airliner with a "stand-up" cabin. The aircraft would be available 24 months after launch, says chairman Carl Albert. The cabin would be stretched vertically, to give the same 1.8m aisle ...

  • News

    Airliner hulls set to be 'fireproofed'

    1996-05-22T00:00:00Z

    FIRE WILL TAKE TWICE as long to burn through an airliner fuselage if materials being tested by the US Federal Aviation Administration achieve their promise, giving greater time for passenger evacuation and for firefighters to bring the blaze under control. The development could have great lifesaving potential, notably ...

  • News

    NTSB investigates oxygen canisters in crashed DC-9

    1996-05-22T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC Karen Walker/ATLANTADavid Learmount/LONDON FOCUS ON WHAT caused the ValuJet Airlines McDonnell Douglas (MDC) DC-9-30 accident in Florida, USA, is concentrating on oxygen-canisters wreckage is slowly recovered from the Everglades swampland into which the aircraft dived on 11 May. US National Transportation Safety ...

  • News

    China Eastern A340-300s arrive

    1996-05-22T00:00:00Z

    China Eastern Airlines took delivery of its first of eight A340-300s on 15 May. The Shanghai-based carrier is the first airline in the People's Republic of China to receive the long-haul aircraft. A340 services will be inaugurated in June, between Shanghai and Los Angeles. China Eastern's A340s are configured with ...

  • News

    Muddy waters

    1996-05-22T00:00:00Z

    THE GREATEST problem of aircraft-accident investigation is not the disappearance of the evidence into a Florida swamp or the unreadability of data-recorder tapes. It is the demand by the mass media and its customers for instant answers, and the temptation of those on the periphery of the investigation to give ...

  • News

    Spritely contender

    1996-05-22T00:00:00Z

    Peter Gray/BLOOMFIELD, CONNECTICUT Shortlisted for selection by the Australian and New Zealand navies, the "Super" version of Kaman's Seasprite has come a long way from the original launch model. THE KAMAN SEASPRITE was first flown in 1959 and was developed and sold to the US Navy as a single-engined ...