All news – Page 7420
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Emirates trains its ground staff
Sir - Capt T A Seedsman wrote from Oman (Flight International, 5-11 February, P41) suggesting that ground engineers who carry out engine-power runs in expensive aircraft should receive simulator or fixed-base training. In Dubai, Emirates does just that. All involved in engine runs receive thorough training in all ...
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Eurocopter pleads guilty to fraud
American Eurocopter has pleaded guilty in a US federal district court to charges of fraud and making false statements to the US Government in connection with commissions paid to an Israeli businessman which related to the sale of helicopters to Israel. The Israeli individual represents US defence contractors ...
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Hughes wins F-22 pilot training contract
HUGHES TRAINING has been selected to supply pilot-training devices for the Lockheed Martin/Boeing F-22 fighter. Hughes was the only bidder for the contract, after potential rival Loral was acquired by Lockheed Martin. Boeing has awarded Hughes a $28 million contract to supply a suite of training devices by ...
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Gore Commission pushes for user fees
The White House Commission on Aviation Safety and Security, being led by vice-president Al Gore, has come out in favour of replacing the US ticket tax with user charges as the best way to fund the new satellite-based National Airspace System (NAS), which it says should be brought in seven ...
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RAF considers longer lives for Hawk advanced trainers
Back to Warton for a refit before 2008? Douglas Barrie/LONDON Guy Norris/Los Angeles The Royal Air Force is examining a life-extension programme for its British Aerospace Hawk trainers, with BAe also looking at the possibility of addressing any emerging requirement with a re-engined aircraft fitted with a digital cockpit. The ...
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Hubble serviced
The seven crew of the STS 82/Discovery began the second mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope on 14 February. It will be fitted with a new imaging spectrograph and a multi-object spectrometer. Other components will also be replaced. Source: Flight International
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Tupolev plans to fly Tu-334 in May/June
Valentin Klimov, general director of Tupolev, says that the prototype of the much-delayed Tu-334 regional airliner will be flown for the first time in late May or June, following project funding from the Ukrainian Government. The proposed 100-seat twinjet, which is intended to replace the CIS' ageing fleet ...
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Fokker Aviation bolsters Asian sales support
Fokker Aviation is to take over LAB Asia Pacific's airframe-maintenance site in Singapore, in an effort to bolster flagging after-sales support for airlines in the region which are continuing to operate Fokker aircraft. The Dutch company has reached an accord with LAB to take over the running of ...
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Low-cost weather observation unit gets precipitation sensor
US instruments company AAI/Systems Management is offering the option of a precipitation identification sensor on its Next Generation Weather Observing System (NEXWOS) - a low-cost meterological device designed for smaller airfields. The sensor identifies rain, snow, haze, smoke and drizzle. The standard version of the ground-based automatic weather-observation ...
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Dutch investigate infra-red signature of NH90
The Dutch National Aerospace Laboratory (NLR) has carried out windtunnel testing of a model of the NH Industries NH90 helicopter, aimed at evaluating the aircraft's infra-red signature during a range of flight conditions. The tests provided data on engine air-intake characteristics and exhaust- gas recirculation, while simulating the aircraft in ...
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Air-force fighter competition heats up as bidders jostle
International competition to win a pending Philippine air force order for 18 fighter aircraft is intensifying, with the number of potential contenders and proposals continuing to lengthen. The air force has been given a range of industry briefings and presentations on at least nine different European, Israeli, Russian ...
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Navy pushes for ASuW helicopter
The Philippines is expected to give priority to the acquisition of new naval helicopters over competing claims for funding from the air force for replacement search-and-research (SAR) and heavylift machines. Increased concern over Chinese encroachment of the South China Sea Spratly Islands and the need to enforce the ...
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Companies gear up to renew air-surveillance radar-system tenders
Competing US and European radar manufacturers are dusting off 13-month-old tenders submitted to the Philippines for six air-surveillance systems, in anticipation of a renewed round of bidding. The Philippine air force is expected to ask companies to revalidate their proposals and submit revised pricing. The original six tenderers ...
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NASA again curbs funding request-
NASA has kept its budget request for 1998 down to $13.5 billion as it continues to seek lower, but more stable, funding over the next five years. The space agency, which has agreed this approach with the White House, has asked for a $13.7 billion budget this year ...
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Lockheed Martin receives Milstar 2 payload
Lockheed Martin has received the first medium-data-rate (MDR) payload from Hughes for the next series of upgraded Milstar military-communications satellites. These are scheduled to begin launches aboard Titan 4/Centaur boosters in 1999. The Block 2 spacecraft will have enhanced communications capabilities for all the US military services, including ...
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Diamonds are forever
Hughes Space and Communications has won $2.6 million from the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to study the use of commercial-grade diamonds to extend the lifetime of high-power transponders on communications satellites. Man-made diamonds would also allow transponders to be used at higher power. Source: Flight International
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-while Russia pledges fresh cash for the ISS
Better news has emerged for Russia's space industry, with the Russian Government pledging an immediate $100 million to pay overdue funds to the International Space Station (ISS) project, and the Khrunichev space-manufacturing concern securing a $36 million loan to support its Proton booster production work. The new cash ...
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Maintenance Directory Part 1, The Americas
MAINTENANCE AND overhaul companies in North and South America are benefiting from the return to profitability of the region's airlines. While cost-cutting measures such as outsourcing main- tenance have slipped down the airlines' priority lists as profits have soared, overhaul companies say that business has improved since the recession's end. ...
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Tracor wins Y-barrel
Tracor Flight Systems of Austin, Texas, has been awarded a ten-year, $27 million contract to manufacture over 400 "y-barrel" assemblies for the McDonnell Douglas MD-95. The y-barrel assembly forms the lower fuselage between the aircraft's wings, and it also houses the main landing gear, fuel and hydraulic and electrical lines. ...
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Full system testing is necessary
Sir - I read the letter from Jack Karran about the Lima Boeing 757 accident (Flight International, 5-11 February, P41). It should be noted that his suggestion that there should be the ability to test pitot/static "air-pressure sensors" would be adequate only if it were to be a ...



















