All Airframers articles – Page 1692

  • News

    Boeing warns over production cuts

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON BOEING EXPECTS airliner sales to fall again this year and warns that production rates may have to edge down further if some financially troubled US airlines fail to recover. The airlines have not been named by Boeing, but Continental Airlines has admitted that ...

  • News

    Nagoya crash victims prepare to sue CAL

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE CRASH VICTIMS' relatives and survivors of the China Air Lines (CAL) Airbus Industrie A300-600 accident on 26 April, 1994, at Nagoya, Japan, say that they are to sue the carrier for pilot error. The action coincides with publication of the first draft of ...

  • News

    Fedex Increases Capacity

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    FedEx is to replace two of three McDonnell Douglas DC-10Fs used on daily transatlantic services with higher-capacity MD-11 freighters, one based at London Stansted and one at Paris Charles de Gaulle, and is considering adding a fourth aircraft on the North Atlantic early in 1996.   Source: ...

  • News

    Crash cause may never be known

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/PITTSBURGH THE CAUSE OF the 8 September, 1994, crash of a USAir Boeing 737-300 at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is unlikely ever to be known for certain, according to US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators. The aircraft inverted and dived to earth from 6,000ft (1,800m), killing all ...

  • News

    Hughes wins contracts for four communications satellites

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Tim Furniss/LONDON HUGHES SPACE and Communications International has maintained its lead in the satellite-manufacturing market with contract awards to build three HS-601 and one HS-376 communications satellites for Luxembourg, Malaysia and Afro-Asian Satellite Communications (ASC). The deals bring orders for the three-axis HS-601 to 38 ...

  • News

    Crisis over - don't let up

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Airline industry fortunes may be on the upturn, but much work remains. Here are our 10 commandments. At long last, there's something to be optimistic about. For many airlines, traffic has returned, costs have been cut, and the bottom line is looking, well, better than it has for a ...

  • News

    United expands shuttle operations

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    SHUTTLE BY UNITED is to expand its frequencies in eight US West Coast city-pairs and connect San Francisco, California, with Phoenix, Arizona, beginning in early February. The short-haul discounted air service has expanded from its initial 184 daily departures when it started operations in October 1994, to 342 ...

  • News

    PAL faces home threat

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Faltering deregulation in the Philippines will receive a boost this month with the startup of the first serious domestic competition for the country's flag carrier. Grand International Airways (GrandAir), set up by a group of former senior Philippine Airlines officials, will operate two Airbus A300s on a four ...

  • News

    MEA fights for funds

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The tug of war for control of Lebanon's troubled carrier, Middle East Airlines (MEA), has seemingly come to an end with the government's approval of a crucial $100 million loan. However, in mid-January the funds had yet to be released and there was uncertainty over whether the carrier's ...

  • News

    Fiinding the way

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    The only surprise in the regional-airliner tie-up between Aerospatiale, Alenia and British Aerospace is that it is happening. The tie-up does not represent the end of the restructuring of the European regional-airliner industry, but the beginning of a new route for which there are, as yet, no maps. By including ...

  • News

    Saginaw ghost

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    A mystery from the past may have relevance for the present. David Learmount/LONDON When Capt. Harvey "Hoot" Gibson's aircraft, a Trans World Airlines Boeing 727-100, suddenly rolled out of control and dived 32,000ft (10,000m), Gibson had to pull more than 5g before recovering control at ...

  • News

    Higher interest

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    As the economic recovery moves into full swing this year, business can look forward to steady growth with little risk of inflation. But interest rates will increase and the US dollar may appreciate somewhat. David Walton explains. A year ago the global economic recovery was hesitant and patchy. Today, the ...

  • News

    TWA hits more snags

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Highly publicised problems at TWA and numerous successes at Northwest Airlines do not tell the full story at either carrier. TWA, though in the midst of a difficult financial restructuring in an attempt to stave off bankruptcy, may not be compromised in its negotiating position. Northwest is still carrying a ...

  • News

    Human software is the safest option

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Sir - "Lessons from the cockpit" (Flight International, 11-17 January, P24) shows that, although the automation of aircraft is sold as an improvement in safety, it is unfortunately not all gain. The main shortcoming is that the "modernisers" assume that the pilot receives relevant information from the instrument ...

  • News

    Sense stems Pacific pride

    1995-02-01T00:00:00Z

    South Pacific island governments are finally taking steps to stem the flow of red ink that has bedevilled most of their tiny national airlines for the past decade. At presstime, aviation officials from the dozen isolated nations were studying a comprehensive new report designed to set them back ...

  • News

    Douglas concentrates on proposal for MD-11 Twin

    1995-01-25T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/ LOS ANGELES McDONNELL DOUGLAS has revealed new details of the medium-range twin-engined version of the MD-11 now emerging as an early leader in Douglas Aircraft's (DAC) studies of potential developments of the tri-jet. The twin would be aimed primarily at the McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 ...

  • News

    Entertainment problem hits delivery of Cathay's A330

    1995-01-25T00:00:00Z

    DELIVERY OF the first Rolls-Royce Trent 700-powered Airbus A330 to Cathay Pacific Airways has been delayed by problems with the aircraft's Matsushita inflight-entertainment (IFE) system. Cathay was due to accept the aircraft in mid-January, but that has slipped to 23 February because of "teething problems with the Matsushita ...

  • News

    Snecma to lead CFM56-XX development programme

    1995-01-25T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS FRENCH ENGINE manufacturer Snecma and its CFM International partner General Electric expect to agree by the end of the year to launch the CFM56-XX turbofan for the growth Airbus A340 variant and other Airbus and Boeing derivatives. New Snecma president Bernard Dufour has made ...

  • News

    China Yunnan 767s replace 757 order

    1995-01-25T00:00:00Z

    CHINA YUNNAN Airlines' recently announced order for three Rolls-Royce RB.211-524H-powered Boeing 767-300s (Flight International, 18-24 January) replaces a previously unannounced order for three 757-200s. The Kunming-based carrier had been scheduled to receive three 757s from state-owned China Aviation Supplies (CASC). The aircraft are among 13 RB.211-535-powered 757s originally ...

  • News

    Boeing says 777 noise 'better than forecast'

    1995-01-25T00:00:00Z

    BOEING IS about to submit "better than expected" noise data on the 777 to the US and European Joint Airworthiness Authorities. The noise data are essential for the type to qualify under Stage 3 requirements at certification, expected in late April 1995. Boeing 777 noise-engineering supervisor, Billy Glover, ...