All news – Page 7245
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Conair joins Orenda in study
Conair Aviation is studying the feasibility of re-engineing Cessna 400-series and Piper Navajo piston twins with fellow Canadian company Orenda Recip's OE-600 Vee-8 aero-engine. The study is to be completed in mid-September, after which the pair plan to sign a commercial agreement under which Conair would certificate OE-600 installations, which ...
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New administrator looks to sell Skyfox Aviation or find investor
Australian light-aircraft manufacturer Skyfox Aviation will either be sold or seek a shareholder to invest additional funding. It manufactures the Skyfox Gazelle at the rate on one aircraft a week, and holds an order backlog representing several months' worth of production (Flight International, 28 May-3 June). Brian Irving, ...
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Taiwan's Chung Sang Institute develops initial turboprop designs
Taiwan's Chung Shan Institute has completed the preliminary design work on its proposed new six-to nine-seat turboprop, and is now seeking to enlist partners to launch full-scale design and development of the programme. Conceptual and preliminary design work on the tentatively designated small aircraft project (SAP) has until ...
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Cathay to place orders with Airbus and Boeing
Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE Cathay Pacific Airways is planning to place orders for up to 20 additional new Airbus Industrie and Boeing widebody aircraft, as part of a large-scale expansion of its international operations. The airline is opening up the engine side of the competition to all three potential suppliers. ...
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Bombardier proposes Dash 8-300X flightdeck upgrade
Bombardier is showing customers an upgrade of the 50-seat Dash 8-300, which incorporates the Sextant Avionique glass-cockpit suite being introduced on the new 70-seat Dash 8-400. The move would be in line with the Canadian company's moves to achieve a common type-rating across its turboprop family. The upgrade, ...
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Reasons why outsider Mullin heads Delta
The decision of Delta Air Lines to pick a new chief executive from outside the USA's third-largest carrier was prompted by the need "-to take a fresh look at the way things are done", says Delta board member Gerald Grinstein (Flight International, 20-26 August). Leo Mullin was hired ...
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Yeltsin arms shake-up
Russian President Boris Yeltsin has sacked the head of the country's arms export agency, Rosvooruzheniye, and decreed that a new organisation be set up under MAPO-Bank chairman Yevgeny Ananyev. Yeltsin has also given some other organisations permission to trade arms, supplanting the previous monopoly situation. Source: Flight International
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Circuit-card cloning beats avionics obsolescence
Lockheed Martin has "cloned" a circuit card in the F-16 stores-management system to demonstrate a method of solving the problem of out-of-production parts in military avionics. The technique involves developing a software model of the card's behaviour, then programming a current-technology replacement board. The US Air Force awarded ...
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Rockwell - Collins
Bruce Thigpen is named manager, field sales at the Collins General Aviation division of Rockwell Avionics and Communications. Thigpen has 27 years' experience sales experience in the airline business. Colleague Bryan Vester has become manager, original-equipment-manufacturer sales. He was previously manager, regional-airline marketing and, before that, he was regional sales ...
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Antonov An-70 has its public debut at show
The Kiev Aviant plant in Ukraine has started to raise funds to finance a commercial version of the Antonov An-70 four-propfan military transport, the An-70T, according to plant manager Alexander Kharlov. Aviant is collaborating with the Aviakor plant in Samara, Russia, in preparing the An-70 for series production. ...
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Antonov An-140 regional turboprop will fly soon
Antonov's An-140 twin-turboprop regional transport is due to have its maiden flight no later than 10 September, says Piotr Balabuyev, Antonov's general designer. The aircraft is undergoing high-speed ground runs at the Antonov plant in Kiev, Ukraine. The Ukrainian company hopes that the An-140 will replace several hundred ...
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Boeing and Airbus sign Russian deals
AIRBUS and Boeing have both signed deals extending their co-operations with the Russian aviation sector. The European consortium's agreement with the Russian Ministry of Economics covers a range of joint projects in the fields of certification, research and development and production, including assistance with European Joint Aviation Authorities ...
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Kharkov confirms Iran order
The state aircraft production factory of Kharkov, Ukraine, has confirmed that Iran has placed an order for 12 Antonov An-74 transports. At least two have been delivered. Although the factory will not confirm how many will be delivered as the military version, it is known that the first two were ...
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Sukhoi starts radar tests with Flanker
Sukhoi is about to begin flight testing of an Su-27 Flanker fitted with a Phazotron multi-mode pulse-Doppler radar which could be fitted to future batches of Su-27s and, possibly, two-seat Su-30s for China. Phazotron says that it has already delivered the radar, effectively the Zhuk-27, to the Komsolosk-on-Amur ...
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NASA plans for new Hubble instrument
NASA plans to order the $25 million Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) from the University of Colorado, to be installed on the Hubble Space Telescope during the fourth servicing mission scheduled to take place in late 2002. The COS will enhance the Hubble's spectrographic capabilities at ultraviolet wavelengths and ...
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Level playing field?
Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC Canada's quest for a new search-and-rescue (SAR) helicopter has attracted the usual bidders - with a twist. One candidate helicopter used to be operated by Canada, until all examples were sold; two were considered in a previous competition, but rejected; and one was ordered by ...
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Europe's B-RNAV plans in 'chaotic mess'
Julian Moxon/PARIS The attempt to introduce the new basic radio-navigation (B-RNAV) standards into European airspace by January 1998 has been termed a "chaotic mess" by the avionics industry as it faces a last-minute change of specification from the European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA). B-RNAV avionics will ...
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Air UK's ATR 72s
Air UK is in final negotiations with Aero International (Regional) to acquire four ATR 72s, which it aims to introduce into service in early 1998, if the order can concluded soon (Flight International, 8-14 August). The airline is understood to be negotiating to buy the -210 version of the ATR ...
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Plea for the young
Sir - I am amazed that it is almost impossible to become a trainee pilot with so many major UK airlines. I have written countless letters seeking information on becoming a pilot, but each reply, instead of giving me encouragement, has left me downhearted and shaken about pursuing ...
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"Non-addition" Chapter 3 rules
Sir - The editorial "Noise blight" (Flight International, 16-22 July) criticises the European Civil Aviation Conference and the European Commission for drafting "non-addition" rules for aircraft which are hushkitted to comply with Chapter 3 noise-certification standards, adding that the best environmental results will be achieved "-with the co-operation of the ...



















