All news – Page 7466
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Boeing delays 747X go-ahead
Guy Norris and Paul Lewis/SEATTLE Boeing has been forced to delay the 747-500X/600X programme by at least four months because of continuing market uncertainty and the late definition of the General Electric/Pratt & Whitney joint-venture engine. The stretched, rewinged 747 was expected to be given the ...
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Simulators are part of Airbus packages
AIRBUS INDUSTRIES, offering to furnish airlines with flight simulators, as integral parts of aircraft purchases. The European consortium has already concluded aircraft/simulator package deals with Asiana, Emirates, Philippine Airlines and at least one other carrier. Ansett Australia, which has yet to decide between Airbus and Boeing, has also ...
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US ATA plans to establish safety-information exchange
US airlines will have a prototype system for the exchange of safety information operational within a month if predictions by US Air Transport Association (ATA) vice-president operations Al Prest are realised. The aim is to build a database of safety-incident information, which will be large enough to enable ...
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Constellation prefers A320s to 737-300s
Constellation International Airlines has switched from its selection of the Boeing 737-300 to the Airbus Industrie A320 to replace its fleet of Boeing 727-200s. The Belgian charter airline will take delivery in April 1997 of two A320s on lease from International Lease Finance, in time for its 1997 ...
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AI(R) offers pilots with Avro RJs
Andrew Doyle/LONDON Aero International (Regional)is offering to supply flight crew and pilot-training packages to airlines which buy Avro regional jets, following the success of a ground-breaking project with Sabena. The regional-aircraft manufacturer developed its "bespoke training system" after Delta Air Transport (DAT), Sabena's regional subsidiary, found ...
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Emergency-exit changes foreshadowed
David Learmount/LONDON Emergency escape hatches on commercial aircraft used in Europe may have to be modified to make them easier and quicker to open, if the findings from a new UK study are implemented. This could lead to fleet retrofit requirements as well as new-build changes if the ...
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GAO opposes airliner user fee plan
The US General Accounting Office (GAO) has warned that smaller US airlines would be hurt by a "user-fee" plan proposed by seven of the major US carriers. The seven airlines, which include United Airlines, American Airlines and Delta Air Lines, say that the fee should be used as ...
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HAL considers taking over assembly of Fokker 50
Hindustan Aeronautics (HAL) is considering an approach to the Dutch receivers of Fokker Aircraft to acquire the design, marketing rights, tools and jigs for the Fokker 50 turboprop airliner. The Indian aerospace company's chairman R N Sharma says that an earlier approach to buy the programme was rebuffed ...
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Indian Airlines selects Saab 2000s for regional services
The Saab 2000 has emerged as the winner in the competition to supply the Indian Airlines low-cost division, Alliance Air, with a 50-seat regional airliner. Alliance is planning an initial acquisition of six aircraft. Alliance, launched in April with Boeing 737-200s transferred from its parent, had been evaluating ...
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Factory crash
Sixteen of the 17 aircraft occupants and a factory worker were killed on 7 December when an IPTN-built CASA 212 twin-turboprop regional airliner crashed near the South Kalimantan capital of Banjarmasin, Indonesia. The crew reported difficulties, shortly after take-off and aircraft fire, was reported by witnesses on the ground. The ...
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Bomb detector tested
A Thermedics SecurScan prototype walk-through explosives detector has been field-tested at Boston's Logan International Airport, USA. Developed with US Federal Aviation Administration funding, it is designed to pick up explosives traces on people. Up to ten passengers can be screened every minute. The FAA has awarded Thermedics a $1 million ...
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London limits blocked
A UK court ruling on 10 December blocked the planned introduction of new noise limits for aircraft taking off from London airports. The regulations cannot be introduced until a judicial review of the legislation, requested by the International Air Transport Association, takes place. A date has yet to be set. ...
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CTA approves Emb-145
Embraer has received a type certificate from the CTA, Brazil's civil- aviation authority, covering the standard and extended-range versions of its EMB-145 aircraft. US Federal Aviation Administration certification is expected this month followed by European Joint Airworthiness Authorities approval, in January. Continental Express was due to take delivery of the ...
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Botswana takes out arrest warrant
The Botswana Government has started an international search for airline executive Brian Pocock after issuing a warrant for his arrest, alleging an offence of corruption during the period when he was general manager of national airline Air Botswana. The warrant was issued following, a two year investigation into ...
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FAA approval for single-engined IFR operations nears
The long-standing rules, banning single-engined commercial operations under instrument-flight-rules (IFR), will be withdrawn in the USA, if a Federal Aviation Administration notice of proposed rule-making is accepted. If it occurs, this will be a blow to US/European regulatory harmonisation, because the European Joint Aviation Authorities appears to have ...
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Kato launches Sirocco to lead R-R-powered Tu-204 effort
Paul Duffy/MOSCOW Sirocco Aerospace International has been launched in Moscow by Egypt's Kato Aromatic and its partners, to spearhead marketing for the re-engined Tupolev Tu-204-120. A list price for the aircraft, which is powered by Rolls-Royce RB.211-535s, has been set at around $36 million. The ...
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Condit takes over as chairman as Boeing booms
Boeing president and chief executive Phil Condit will be appointed chairman, on 1 February, 1997. The surprise board decision was made known at the company's year-end press conference on 9 December, when Boeing revealed orders for 621 commercial aircraft for the year to date, almost double the 1995 tally and ...
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French Government rethinks plans for Thomson group sale
The French Government has decided to divide the sale of its defence and consumer electronics giant, Thomson SA, into two components following the collapse of the attempt to sell off the entire company in one piece. The privatisation process will now take place in two distinct phases. Firstly, ...
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Malmo steps in
Sweden's Malmö Aviation has stepped in to help struggling Irish start-up CityJet fight to avoid bankruptcy, promising to provide the carrier with a fifth British Aerospace 146 regional jet. It is also discussing taking a stake in the carrier. CityJet, set up three years ago, hopes for 4 million of ...
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MTU and Volvo strengthen ties
AndrzejJeziorski/ MUNICH Daimler-Benz Aerospace (DASA) aero-engine subsidiary MTU Munich and Swedish power plant manufacturer Volvo Aero are on course to achieve closer co-operation in civil-engine programmes. In a memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed on 10 December, the two companies have agreed to intensify their links ...



















