All news – Page 7348
-
News
Teledesic selection is due by year end
Payload specialists, launchers and other major suppliers and components for Teledesic's global "Internet-in-the-sky" concept will be selected by Boeing by the end of the year. Boeing is prime contractor for the Teledesic Network which will involve a constellation of 288 low-Earth-orbit satellites providing affordable access to telecommunications services ...
-
News
Launch contracts
ILS International Launch Services has been awarded a contract from Luxembourg's Societe Europeéne des Satellites to launch the Astra 2A communications satellite aboard a Russian Proton booster from Baikonur in 1997. The 2A is also on the official Arianespace manifest, but will be replaced by another Astra satellite, originally an ...
-
News
Thai order
Thai Airways International has ordered four A330-300s and five A300-600Rs, completing the airline's fleet plans. Delivery of the A300-600Rs is set for early 1998, adding to the 23 A300s it operates. The A330s will begin arriving in mid-1998, bringing the total of the type in the Thai fleet to 12. ...
-
News
Airbus will limit A3XX engine choice
Airbus Industrie says that it will give airlines a choice of two engines only for the 550- to 650-seat A3XX. Three are now being offered: the Rolls-Royce Trent 900, a Pratt &Whitney PW4000 derivative, and a new engine from General Electric Pratt &Whitney Engine Alliance. "We are evaluating ...
-
News
ANZ drops Rolls for GE on next 747-400
AIR NEW ZEALAND (ANZ) has switched its allegiance from Rolls-Royce to General Electric for its next Boeing 747-400, due for delivery in 1998. The flag carrier opted for GE's CF6-80C2 over R-R's proposed RB.211-524G/H-T improved turbofan. The decision is a setback for the UK manufacturer's effort to sell ...
-
News
British Midland plans a foray into third-party maintenance market
British Midland is planning a major expansion into the third-party maintenance market, with the formation of British Midland Engineering, a new subsidiary company based at East Midlands Airport in the UK. The airline is also setting up a separate ground-handling company to expand its services in this area. ...
-
News
Boeing increases rates - again
BOEING IS TO raise production to 43 airliners a month by mid-1998 - the sixth rate increase announced over the past 14 months - citing its 1,389-aircraft firm-order backlog and the signing of long-term exclusive agreements with American Airlines and Delta Air Lines. Continental Airlines reportedly has agreed an exclusive ...
-
News
FAA grounds Great Lakes Aviation
GREAT LAKES Aviation suspended flights on 16 May in the face of a US Federal Aviation Administration-imposed shutdown because of alleged deficiencies with maintenance operations. The action forced codeshare partners United Airlines and Midway Airlines to accommodate stranded passengers. Great Lakes served 82 cities in 21 US states ...
-
News
Fokker to expand services in maintenance markets
Fokker Services plans to expand its activities beyond providing spares and technical support for Fokker turboprops and jet-powered aircraft, to include maintenance and modifications of other civil and military aircraft. As part of the Dutch company's planned diversification, it has acquired a two-bay service centre at Singapore's Seletar ...
-
News
US Federal Aviation Administration demands EMB-120 ice-detection
The US Federal Aviation Administration has proposed an airworthiness directive (AD) calling for the installation of ice-detection systems on the Embraer EMB-120 regional turboprop. The AD follows the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) report into the crash of a Comair EMB-120RT in Michigan on 9 January, which ...
-
News
Telephonics
Samuel Evans has been appointed as vice-president of Washington operations at US information and communications-systems supplier Telephonics of Farmdale, New York. Source: Flight International
-
News
Affordable start
Remarkably, Skyfox has been awarded the first certification for not one, but two aircraft under European/ Australian joint airworthiness regulations for very light aircraft (JAR/VLA). As a result of the certification of the tailwheel CA25 Impala, and its newer derivative, the nosewheel-equipped Skyfox Gazelle, the Queensland-based manufacturer is now promoting ...
-
News
Will A3XX ever get off the ground?
Sir - M Newman, writing about the Airbus Industrie A3XX (Letters, Flight International, 2-8 April, P96), asks: "Will political chicanery and commercial advantage preclude [its] worldwide adoption?" Urging us to "-remember Concorde", he also asks: "-how many of these aircraft were expected to be sold worldwide?" ...
-
News
Leisurely delivery schedule speeded up by Leisure
Leisure International Airways is to accelerate the delivery of its fleet of four Airbus A321-200s. The charter airline, owned by the Unijet travel group, received the first aircraft in May and started commercial services on 12 May. The original plan was to introduce the aircraft at the rate of one ...
-
News
Jakarta ATC System
Hughes Aircraft International Airspace Management Systems has successfully completed factory and site-acceptance testing of the FAT 50 Jakarta automated air-traffic-control (ATC) system now being installed at Sokarno-Hatta International Airport. Successful integration and testing of the US contractors Guardian flight and radar-data processing system and advanced colour controller workstations leaves only ...
-
News
New 737 studies set to be revealed
Boeing plans to reveal that it is studying three new versions of the next-generation 737 at the Paris air show in June. They are the -900X stretch, a commercial version of the Boeing Business Jet, dubbed the -700X, and a Quick Change freighter. The 737-900X, revealed exclusively in ...
-
News
Premier enters Malaysian regional market with 146s
The latest in a long line of new Malaysian start-up carriers, Premier Air, plans to launch charter services in September, equipped with two British Aerospace 146 regional jets. Premier general manager Selva Kumar says that the privately backed airline has already been granted an air-operator's certificate by the ...
-
News
RE220 order
AlliedSignal Aerospace's RE220(RJ) auxiliary power unit (APU) has been selected by Bombardier for the Canadair Regional Jet Series 700 in a deal valued potentially at more than $250 million over the projected life of the programme. The company beat competition from Auxiliary Power International, offering its APS2000. Source: ...
-
News
Bouw goes as profits fall at KLM prompts cost cutting
KLM has launched a cost-reduction plan aimed at saving Dfl1 billion ($528 million) over the next three years. The move comes in the face of the Dutch airline announcing a 57% fall in net profits for 1996 and the resignation of chairman Pieter Bouw. In contrast, European rivals British Airways ...
-
News
Mergers
++ Schlumberger has agreed the sale of its French-based Data Acquisition & Recorders Division (DAR) to Avicore, a UK company formed in 1996 to acquire W Vinten, the reconnaissance and electronic-countermeasures producer. The two operations are of roughly equal size, and together will boast a turnover of around £40 million ...



















