All aerospace news – Page 1825
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Internet pursuit heats up
Two US airlines - Northwest Airlines and Continental Airlines - have brought fresh attention on the Internet as an inexpensive marketing tool by establishing two-tier pricing structures for their heavily discounted Internet air fares. Northwest has been giving travellers a $20 discount if they buy special fares - posted ...
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Greenwald launches cuts crusade
United Airlines' chairman, Gerald Greenwald, has launched a crusade to cut costs by persuading carriers and manufacturers to standardise aircraft configurations. "Standardisation is an idea that can save airlines a lot of money," he told the SAE/ATA standard aircraft symposium inWashington DC in November. "We are our own worst ...
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Star attracts a galaxy
The Star Alliance will expand to nine full members before the end of 1999, following All Nippon Airlines' (ANA) decision to join. ANA president, Kichisaburo Nomura, says his company will take up full membership at the start of October 1999, following the example of Ansett and Air New Zealand, ...
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SAA dumps sale guidelines
Widely accepted guidelines for the privatisation of South African Airways (SAA) have been turned on their head by chief executive Coleman Andrews. The South African Government had said that it would sell off 49% of SAA, with 30-35% going to a single foreign partner and the balance finding its ...
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Airports can be low cost too
Spurred on by the low-cost carriers, Europe's local airports have begun to reinvent themselves as low-cost alternatives to the major hubs. Much attention has been lavished on the rise of Europe's low-cost airlines. But it is not only the carriers which are cutting costs. Following fast on their heels ...
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ROUTES
BA's eastern moves - BA and LOT are expanding their codesharing arrangement to include the London Gatwick-Krakow route. LOT will move to Gatwick's North Terminal. AB/Debonair build - AB Airlines is expanding its codeshare with Debonair to include services from London Gatwick to Barcelona and Palma. Swiss link-ups ...
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Capacity for sell-offs
While a flurry of airport privatisations has taken place across Latin America, a big unanswered question still remains over whether that will extend to the region's real giant, Brazil. Privatisation of Infraero, the Brazilian airports authority, has been talked about for years. But when Cardoso's four-year government auctioned off ...
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private investigations
A new European directive on data protection is threatening to change the rules for airline alliance partners seeking to share customer details. Imagine the global alliance makers as players on a Monopoly board, all lined up at the start and keen to roll the dice. The world's major airlines ...
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Pockets of growth
It should come as no surprise that in the USA, much of what can or cannot be done about capacity growth will boil down to politics. In keeping with all of American life, politics weaves its way through all of the major issues: not least the struggle to raise ...
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Flourishing in Florida
As Miami's major airport struggles to keep pace with the fastest growth in the USA, its smaller rivals are making a bid for more international service. Growth in Florida is a bit like the sunshine - there's always plenty to go around. No matter which way you slice the ...
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BA/American put alliance brakes on
Faced with declining yields across the North Atlantic, British Airways and American Airlines have confirmed plans to postpone a full alliance for up to five years. But their revised plans for limited codesharing have failed to dispel US opposition. BA now plans to codeshare with American in the US ...
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Precise mapping
Tim Furniss/LONDONOne of the few Space Shuttle flights guaranteed a launch date next year is the 11-day mission of the STS99/Endeavour.Because the flight is not related to the International Space Station (ISS) project, it is not subject to the schedule uncertainties that have plagued the ISS.The STS99 will be dedicated ...
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Executive decisions
Guy Norris/LOS ANGELESAlan Mulally, the newly appointed president of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, walks eagerly to the corner of his office and turns on the computer. Like an instant "state of the nation" monitor, the screen summarises the status of every single Boeing Commercial aircraft coming off the production ...
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OSC to build two satellites for Japan
Tim Furniss/LONDON Orbital Sciences (OSC) has been selected to negotiate a contract to build two Ka-band direct-to-home broadcast communications satellites for the Japanese Broadcasting Satellite System, an affiliate of the NHK network. The BSAT 2A and 2B satellites will be based on OSC's NovaStar lightweight geostationary orbit (GEO) ...
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Triana camera
Lockheed Martin has been selected by the University of California to design and build the earth polychromatic imaging camera for NASA's Triana mission, the deep space earth observer proposed by vice president Al Gore to return daily images of the globe from the camera, via the Internet. Source: Flight International
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Triana Camera
Lockheed Martin has been selected by the University of California to design and build the earth polychromatic imaging camera for NASA's Triana mission, the deep space earth observer proposed by vice president Al Gore to return daily images of the globe from the camera, via the Internet. Source: Flight International
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Tracking system causes Deep Space 1 problems
An error in the star tracking system aboard Deep Space 1, NASA's first New Millennium programme spacecraft, forced the craft to enter a "safe mode" shutdown on 13 November. Engineers brought it back to normal cruise configuration 48h later. Devices to control the deployment of the craft's solar arrays ...
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Navajo gear
The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has recommended the US Federal Aviation Administration to require recurrent inspections of Piper PA-31 Navajo inboard door hinge assemblies until they are replaced by a stronger hinge unit. The NTSB's advisory results from a 1997 regional airline incident in which a Cape Smythe ...
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Air New Zealand rolls over ATR fleet
Air New Zealand has reached agreement with ATR to replace its seven four-year-old ATR 72-210s with a similar number of improved -500 versions. The aircraft will be operated by its fully owned domestic operator, Mount Cook Airline. The "500 series" versions of the ATR 42/72 have a redesigned interior, advanced ...
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BWIA plans cash injection to expand fleet
Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON BWIA International Airways will undertake a major fleet expansion programme in 1999, funded by a soon-to-be-unveiled initial public offering (IPO). The move follows the successful implication of a restructuring plan earlier this year by chief executive Conrad Aleong, as the airline prepares for the first profit in ...



















