All Safety News – Page 1373

  • News

    USA and Japan aim to clinch bilateral deal in September

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Mollet/TOKYO Kevin O'Toole/LONDON Japan and the USA have agreed to make Tokyo the venue for their first full negotiations on a new passenger transport bilateral accord on 4-6 August, with the aim of producing a deal in September. Until now, the two sides have been ...

  • News

    Northwest Airlines RJ85 order doubles AI(R)'s Avro backlog

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON Aero International (Regional) (AI(R)) has seen its order backlog for the Avro RJ family doubled as a result of the $620 million deal with Northwest Airlines, which has exercised its options for 24 RJ85s. Deliveries are spread out over three years, however, so production rates will ...

  • News

    American clinches Latin deal

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDONRamon Lopez/Washington DC The American Airlines group, AMR, is to take a stake in Aerolineas Argentinas and form an alliance with Iberia, under a deal struck with Spanish state-holding company SEPI, which effectively controls both carriers. British Airways has also started co-operation talks with the Spanish carrier, ...

  • News

    CAA warns on potential flight disruption

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The UK Civil Aviation Authority has raised the spectre of a return to massive disruption to air travel if a way is not found to fund the large-scale capital investment required for the National Air Traffic Service (NATS) to keep pace with traffic growth. CAA chairman Sir Malcolm ...

  • News

    Risky business

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The gambles associated with Macau Airport are beginning to pay dividends PaulLewis/MACAU To invest over $1 billion on an all-new airport for a small city of 400,000 inhabitants would appear to be a financial gamble, but Macau, having built its economy around the casino industry, is accustomed to ...

  • News

    European safety groups band together to help other nations

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/Paris Regulation and safety organisations in France, Germany and the UK are forming a new group to offer assistance to countries wishing to improve operational safety standards. India, Mexico and the Philippines have already signed up. The UK Civil Aviation Authority's international services branch, France's ...

  • News

    FAA details free-flight plan

    1997-07-30T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/WASHINGTON DC DETAILS OF a two-year, 2,000-aircraft, demonstration of the technologies required for the free-flight concept have been released by the US Federal Aviation Administration. Almost $400 million in funding required to stage the trial has yet to be approved by Congress, however. Free flight ...

  • News

    Pittsburgh ruling due

    1997-07-23T16:37:00Z

    The US National Transportation Safety Board may soon close the book on the mysterious crash of the US Airways Boeing 737-300 on 8 September, 1994. Rudder-system malfunction is suspected.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    How far can you go?

    1997-07-23T15:52:00Z

    There is nothing new about outsourcing (the practice of obtaining components from a third party). No-one expects an airline to make the tyres for its aircraft, and many successful carriers do not undertake their own heavy maintenance. The trend to outsource more work and concentrate on core services has ...

  • News

    Nothing to show

    1997-07-23T14:44:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/Washington DC On 17 July, as the first anniversary of the Trans World Airlines Flight 800 crash passed, US Government and industry officials were still waging a war of words over what lessons have been learned and what, if anything, should be done as a result of the ...

  • News

    NTSB wants to limit Tomahawk training

    1997-07-23T12:06:00Z

    The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) believes that flight training in the Piper Tomahawk should be restricted pending completion of flight-testing by the US Federal Aviation Administration. The Safety Board recommendation to the FAA follows the crash on 4 March, 1994, of a Piper Tomahawk which killed a ...

  • News

    UK CAA and single-engined flights

    1997-07-23T09:59:00Z

    Sir - I was disappointed to read in Bob Crowe's letter "Getting round UK night-rules" (Flight International, 9-15 July) that he believes that he received a curt "…wait until the JARs are in place" reply from the Civil Aviation Authority, when his operators asked to operate under Joint Aviation ...

  • News

    CD players are still risky on aircraft

    1997-07-23T09:51:00Z

    Sir - Capt Mark Zucal (Letters, Flight International, 18-24 June) is quite wrong to rail against rules which forbid the use of a compact-disc (CD) player in passenger aircraft. I can assure him that the rules are not nearly tough enough. The problem is that some portable electronic devices ...

  • News

    Commercial flights only concern JAA

    1997-07-23T09:29:00Z

    Sir - The European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) is concerned with extended-range operations (ETOPS) of smaller, twin-turbofan aircraft only when they are flown for the purpose of commercial air transport. Nobody in the JAA has ever suggested that the proposed rules under discussion should be applicable to these smaller ...

  • News

    Operators shrug off FAA's 727 payload restrictions

    1997-07-23T00:00:00Z

    OPERATORS ARE playing down the impact of payload restrictions to be imposed on Boeing 727 freighter conversions under four airworthiness directives (ADs) proposed on 14 July. The ADs, which cover over 300 727s converted from passenger to freighter configuration by third-party modification companies, will require operators to fit strengthened floor ...

  • News

    FAA accelerates 747 fuse-pin inspections

    1997-07-23T00:00:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration has re-issued an emergency airworthiness directive (AD) reducing the time allowed for replacing the engine/ pylon fuse pins on General Electric- and Pratt & Whitney- powered Boeing 747s. The action follows the discovery of a fractured forward fuse pin on an unidentified aircraft. ...

  • News

    Europe's JAA places Trent-powered A330 on ETOPS trial

    1997-07-23T00:00:00Z

    The Airbus A330-300, equipped with Rolls-Royce Trent 700s, will have to have several months of reliability exhibited before the European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) restores 180min extended-range twin-engined operations (ETOPS) clearance for the aircraft. The Trent-powered variant became the last of the three A330ss to be cleared by ...

  • News

    FAA orders flight data-recorder upgrades

    1997-07-23T00:00:00Z

    COMMERCIAL passenger aircraft being operated in the USA must be retrofitted with enhanced flight-data recorders (FDRs) within four years, according to a new ruling from the US Federal Aviation Administration. The FAA rule change, which was finalised this month, was urged by the US National Transportation Safety Board ...

  • News

    DC-8 training faulted

    1997-07-23T00:00:00Z

    Flight-simulator fidelity in reproducing aircraft stall characteristics may have to be improved, if the US Federal Aviation Administration accepts National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) recommendations emerging from its investigation of December 1996 fatal crash on an Airborne Express McDonnell Douglas DC-8-63 in Virginia. The aircraft crashed when the ...

  • News

    Engine failure marks the end for Orient

    1997-07-23T00:00:00Z

    Orient Avia, the independent Russian airline, has ceased operations following an engine failure on its last serviceable Ilyushin Il-62 on 10 July. The airline primarily operated services from Moscow to Vladivostok and Petroparlovsk in Kamchatka. At its peak, Orient operated three Il-62s, an Ilyushin Il-86 and a Tupolev ...