All news – Page 7140
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US airlines get EGPWS mandate
Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC THE Enhanced ground- proximity warning system (EGPWS) is to become compulsory for aircraft operated by major US long-haul and most regional airlines. The US Federal Aviation Administration will issue a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) in April 1998, calling for implementation by the end of the ...
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FAA recommendations
US air-traffic-control services must be removed from the US Federal Aviation Administration to a "performance-based" organisation if a "looming disaster" of aviation gridlock after 2000 is to be avoided, says the National Civil Aviation Review Commission. The Clinton Administration has previously failed to win Congressional approval to shift the FAA's ...
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French/US bilateral talks stall
Julian Moxon/PARIS Failure of the latest round of negotiations on a bilateral deal between France and the USA has put at risk a major element of the commercial agreement between Air France, Delta Air Lines and Continental Airlines and American Airlines' separate plans to link with Air Liberté. ...
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GE-P&W starts A3XX study
Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES Team members from the General Electric-Pratt & Whitney Engine Alliance began installation studies with Airbus Industrie on 18 December aimed at finalising a firm engine configuration for the A3XX by as early as the first quarter of 1998. "I would like to have a firm ...
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Cost cuts increase hopes for MD-95 production
Guy Norris/LONG BEACH Douglas Products division is optimistic that Boeing will clear continued develop- ment of derivatives and production of the MD-95 in January, after the development of a series of cost-saving initiatives by the manufacturer and its risk-sharing partners. Boeing is due to decide whether to proceed ...
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Marketplace
++ Philippine Airlines has agreed to the early return of two Boeing 747-200s to the lessor, Atlas Air. The two aircraft, acquired by Atlas under earlier sale/leaseback deals, were scheduled to be handed back in late 1998 and 2000 but will instead be terminated in January and February 1998. The ...
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RVSM comes of age after trial period
Following a successful eight-month trial period, North Atlantic tracks (NAT) working to reduced vertical-separation minima (RVSM) are to be declared fully operational on 27 March. Plans have also been announced to extend the RVSM vertical band in 1998. The NAT RVSM vertical band is now FL330-FL370 (33,000-37,000ft/10,060-11,280m). This is ...
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Sahara prepares for growth in spite of Government demise
Ian Sheppard/LONDON Sahara India Airlines (SIAL) aims to implement a comprehensive expansion plan in 1998 despite the delay caused by the fall of the Indian Government in November. The former Government had proposed new legislation which would have supported private domestic carriers . SIAL is preparing to place ...
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Singapore Airlines wins bond legal case in USA
Singapore Airlines (SIA) has successfully pursued a former first officer in a US court in a case to decide whether the carrier can legally enforce bonded contracts of employment on cockpit crew. The decision, which is viewed by many as setting a legal precedent, will cost the pilot $205,000 in ...
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TAECO may grow Xiamen venture with engine overhaul
Taikoo Aircraft Engineering (TAECO) is discussing expansion of its Xiamen-based Chinese joint venture with the addition of an aero-engine maintenance capability. The proposal is in the "initial stages of discussion" with potential partners. The Hong Kong Aircraft Engineering (HAECO)-managed joint venture is conducting a market study, with emphasis on ...
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TWA crash hearing helps to clarify policy on fuel tanks
The public hearing on the 1996 Trans World Airlines flight 800 fatal crash ended in Baltimore on 12 December without the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) coming any nearer to discovering the cause, although it can claim to have clarified potential safety policies. Measures to reduce the risk ...
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Air France president Spinetta lays plans for competitiveness
Julian Moxon/Paris Air France president Jean-Cyril Spinetta has unveiled the main elements in his plans to solve the "persistent competitiveness problems" which he says continue to plague the airline. Pilots' unions have objected to the plan, however. The strategy centres on a Fr40 billion ($6.7 billion) investment in ...
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British Midland expects to make record profits for 1997
British Midland (BM) expects to return record profits for 1997, after having successfully fended off growing competition from low-fare airlines, and benefited from the industrial dispute at British Airways. The news comes as the airline reveals plans for head-on competition with BAon the London-Manchester route. BM expects to ...
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CNAC trading starts sluggishly on Hong Kong exchange
Trading in newly listed China National Aviation (CNAC) stock on the Hong Kong exchange got off to lacklustre start on 17 December, with shares struggling to sustain their issue price. CNAC has placed 338 million newly issued shares with institutional investors and a further 37.7 million in the form ...
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Fairchild Dornier posts first result
Fairchild Dornier has revealed its financial figures for the first time, claiming strong net profits of just over $70 million for its latest 1996/7 year to the end of September. The privately owned US company, which has given out almost no financial information since taking over the troubled Dornier ...
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US Airways Sabre
Sabre Group will provide US Airways with computer services under a contract which covers the next 25 years. Sabre will be responsible for the US Airways data-centre operations and will purchase its information-technology assets for about $45 million. Source: Flight International
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PIA chairman begins mission to restore 'financial discipline'
New Pakistan International Airlines(PIA) chairman Shahid Khaqan Abbasi has set about a clean sweep of the carrier's finances, taking heavy write-offs in the latest 1996/7 accounts and pledging to "restore operational and financial discipline". The accounts, which show a heavy Rs4.8 billion ($110 million)net loss in the year to ...
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Thai privatisation is in prospect for 1998
The long-awaited partial privatisation of Thai Airways International finally looks set to proceed in 1998, spurred by a major Government financial shake-up and the urgent need to raise new capital for the debt-ridden carrier's planned fleet renewal. Thai invited a pre-selected group of finance brokers to a company briefing ...
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Hidden turmoil
There is something vaguely ironic about Boeing outlining continuing production delays and, in the same breath, of the need to shed production staff. The irony is, however, a reflection of the underlying turmoil in the civil airframe industry - a turmoil which has to some extent been hidden by the ...
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Aster 15 hits sea-skimming target drone in test
Aerospatiale's Aster 15 naval air-defence missile has successfully intercepted a sea-skimming target in a simulated threat environment which included stand-off jamming intended to protect the target drone, an Aerospatiale C22. The test engagement on 13 November was intended to simulate a sea-skimming missile attack with the in-bound missile protected ...



















