All Safety News – Page 1500

  • News

    A firmer future

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    As the industry recovers, aircraft values are hardening and surpluses falling but some types are faring better than others. Clive Medland of SH&E explains why. Predicting the outlook for the commercial aviation industry is somewhat analogous to forecasting the weather. We can accurately predict that there will be winters and ...

  • News

    Follow the leader or fix?

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Did US airlines agree to cap travel agent commissions and then stage their announcements to make it look as if they were simply following the leader as usual? That is the key question in an antitrust class action filed by US travel giant Travel Network against the major ...

  • News

    Peace pays off for Jordan

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The peace process in the Middle East has brought mixed fortunes for Royal Jordanian. While the carrier stands to gain from co-operation with El Al and Israeli overfly rights, the government is slow in its plans to commercialise the airline. From the summer schedule, Royal Jordanian and El ...

  • News

    A definitive lesson in competence

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The US has split the European Union and pushed the European Commission further than ever in its attempts to obtain the right to negotiate air service agreements for its member states. But Mead Jennings and Mark Odell report that bloc negotiations are a long way off. Call it what you ...

  • News

    BM acts on code control

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    British Midland is trying to preempt possible regulation of codeshare agreements by the European Commission with a proposal to produce its own code of conduct in consultation with its seven codeshare partners. Speaking at an Airline Business conference in London, the UK independent's managing director Austin Reid said ...

  • News

    Give Commission a clear mandate

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Divisions in Europe on US bilaterals and state aid threaten the internal market Less than two months after moving to Brussels to take up his position as the new European transport commissioner, Neil Kinnock finds himself surrounded by controversy. In his early dealings he has adopted a spirited approach, ...

  • News

    Conditions: in your dreams

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    As the European Commission starts investigating Iberia's plan for a second state aid package from the Spanish government, it emerges that Aer Lingus was allowed to receive the second tranche of its £175 million ($270 million) aid package despite the breach of a key condition. Iberia is seeking ...

  • News

    AMR cuts go to the core

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    Restructuring of the executive ranks at AMR Corp is widely considered cosmetic for the short term, with an eye towards labour negotiations. However, the restructuring is also focusing on preparing for longer term goals such as forming partnerships and joint ventures, especially in information technology. Robert Crandall turned ...

  • News

    Sabena aided in opt-out?

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The momentum built up around Swissair's plans to take a 49 per cent stake in Sabena after the Belgian government granted an exemption on part of its flag carrier's social cost obligations, could yet falter as the opt-out comes under the scrutiny of the European Commission. Sabena stands ...

  • News

    Overhauling costs

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The US carriers are proving slow to react to calls for over-reliance on labour cost cuts to give way to a reengineering of the entire way in which airlines do business. Jane L Levere reports. While cost-cutting is nothing new to the US airline industry, the term 'reengineering' represents a ...

  • News

    Indian stake in question

    1995-04-01T00:00:00Z

    The high hopes of ModiLuft's management to pull Lufthansa in as an equity partner appear threatened by a claim from a US consultancy on 40 per cent of the carrier's equity. ModiLuft has made no secret of its desire to have the German major as an equity partner, ...

  • News

    DGPS demonstration is a success for Daimler-Benz

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    DAIMLER-BENZ Aerospace (DASA) has successfully demonstrated its differential GPS (DGPS) automatic landing system, using a Dornier 328 turboprop at Braunchweig, Germany. Four flights were carried out, each including one touch-and-go landing, during which 60 international observers had the opportunity to monitor guidance information in the aircraft cabin. The ...

  • News

    Oxford Cartographers develops new route-mapping concept

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    OXFORD Cartographers has developed a new concept in map imagery, which offers airlines a three-dimensional alternative to conventional "flat and featureless" route maps and inflight route-tracking displays. The UK mapmaker has based its "space" view of the Earth, on the photographic reproduction, of a specially modeled globe. ...

  • News

    Depressed market damps SAe figures

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    A DEPRESSED AIRCRAFT- maintenance market and higher taxation combined to push Singapore Aerospace's (SAe) net profit down by nearly 19% for the year ending 31 December 1994. SAe reported after-tax earnings of S$25 million ($17.6 million), compared with S$30.7 million posted in 1993. Company turnover, however, was up ...

  • News

    A340 fuel problem was 'acceptable'

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    THE EUROPEAN JOINT Aviation Authorities (JAA) says that the Airbus A340 fuel-indication problems highlighted in a UK safety inspectors' report were known of at the time of certification. JAA large-aircraft coordinator Adre Kraan says that the problems were considered to be acceptable teething troubles for which a fix ...

  • News

    Australians buy Honeywell/Pelorus DGPS

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    HONEYWELL AND Pelorus Navigation Systems have sold an SLS-1000 satellite landing-system for installation at Armidale Regional Airport in New South Wales, Australia. With certification planned for the second quarter of 1996, this will be the first local-area differential global-positioning-system (DGPS) in Australia, says purchaser Dumaresq Shire Council. ...

  • News

    Sabbath flight ban harms El Al

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    EL AL IS WARNING THAT it is being financially "crippled" by the Israeli Government's ban on its national carrier flying on the Jewish Sabbath and other holy days. There are also fears that the carrier's imminent privatisation could be affected. President Raphael Harlev issued the warning as he ...

  • News

    ICAO mandates GPWS upgrade

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    NEW REQUIREMENTS for the installation of ground-proximity warning systems (GPWS), on transport and general-aviation aircraft, have just been issued by the International Civil Aviation Organisation Council, in its fight against controlled-flight-into-terrain accidents. Commercial transport aircraft, which were registered before July 1979, which were previously exempted from the need ...

  • News

    FAA endorses de-icing boot change to overcome ATR 42/72 difficulties

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    THE US FEDERAL Aviation Administration (FAA) has approved the use of larger de-icing-boots on the ATR 42 and 72 regional turboprops. The modification, developed and tested by the Aerospatiale/Alenia consortium, is aimed at preventing the formation of an ice ridge on the wing by nearly doubling the effective coverage of ...

  • News

    US action triggers EC open-skies move scramble

    1995-03-29T00:00:00Z

    WITH ALMOST unprecedented speed, the European Commission (EC) has rushed through draft proposals for a pan-European open-skies agreement. The action follows US success in tying up individual open-skies deals with European countries. These are seen by the EC as being illegal and threatening to EC airlines as they ...