All Safety News – Page 1432

  • News

    Delta launches low-cost Express from Florida base

    1996-08-14T00:00:00Z

    Karen Walker/ATLANTA DELTA AIRLINES has entered the low-fare market with the launch of Delta Express, a single-class service providing non-stop flights between Florida and cities in the mid-western and north-eastern USA. Services, using a dedicated fleet of 25 Boeing 737-200s, will begin on 1 October ...

  • News

    Engines should be treated separately

    1996-08-14T00:00:00Z

    Sir - Recent news suggests that civil organisations do not seem to share their safety-related views. I was amazed to find that an airline could conduct the same maintenance task, simultaneously, on both engines of a twin without a test before flight. Surely, if there is a need, for example, ...

  • News

    NTSB urges increase in inspections of JT8D fan-hubs

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    INCREASED inspection of Pratt & Whitney JT8D-200-series fan hubs has been urged by the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), following July's uncontained failure of an engine on a Delta Air Lines McDonnell Douglas MD-88. Two passengers were killed and four injured when the left-engine hub disintegrated, sending debris ...

  • News

    China backs US gyroplane

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    US GYROPLANE developer Groen Brothers Aviation (GBA) has signed a letter of intent covering licence-assembly of its aircraft in China. Shanghai Energy and Chemicals (SECC) plans to buy 200 H2X three-seat commercial gyroplanes with which to establish an air-taxi company in China, and for corporate transport around congested Shanghai. SECC ...

  • News

    FAA review attacks modern cockpits

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/LONDON MODERN AIRLINER cockpits are full of traps for pilots, according to a US Federal Aviation Administration-led international review of aircrew performance since the introduction of electronic flight-instrumentation systems. The report says that pilots "...too frequently had limited understanding of automation's capabilities, limitations, functions, ...

  • News

    Cessna reveals singles prices

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES CESSNA AIRCRAFT has announced the prices of its re-launched Model 172 Skyhawk and Model 182S Skylane. The first 172 is due to be delivered in January 1997, with the first 182 following a month later. The manufacturer has not produced single-engined aircraft since 1986. ...

  • News

    US airlines exploit the boom

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON THE MAJOR US AIRLINES have followed up their latest round of record profits with predictions that their spectacular performances will continue into the second half of the year. The airlines turned in their best-ever net profit - of more than $1.5 billion - ...

  • News

    SAS ends Saab 2000 order drought

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDONRamon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC SAS COMMUTER has ordered up to six Saab 2000s, which ends the aircraft's two-year new-customer drought. This comes as Saab concludes a three-week sales tour of the aircraft in the USA, where it is still seeking its first airline customer for the 50-seat ...

  • News

    Boeing settles baseline for 747-500X/600X designs-

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON BOEING HAS INCREASED the range of its 747-600X and reduced the size of the -500X following consultations with its airline working group. The revised configurations are now being offered as the baseline aircraft to potential customers. The move follows the US manufacturer's recent ...

  • News

    Macau has recorded 400,000

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    Sir - I refer to the article about Macau International Airport, "Slow start" (Flight International, 5-11 June, P26). Macau InternationalAirport was officially opened on 8 December, 1995, and one could not expect to see a lot of aircraft on the runway - especially when a ceremony for about ...

  • News

    Seeking Titan's secrets

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    The Huygens probe to Saturn's moon, Titan, could reveal evidence of how terrestrial life began. Julian Moxon/PARIS FIVE MONTHS AFTER the Cassini orbiter arrives at Saturn after a seven-year, 1.5 billion kilometre journey, a small, cone-shaped craft will be despatched to that planet's largest moon, Titan, on ...

  • News

    Malaysia seeks EGPWS change

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    Brent Hannon/HONG KONG MALAYSIA AIRLINES is seeking to be launch customer for AlliedSignal Aerospace's new enhanced ground-proximity warning system (EGPWS) on the Boeing 777. There may not be time, however, to incorporate the system into aircraft in production. Malaysia has requested a change to its 777 ...

  • News

    Turnaround in Mexico

    1996-08-07T00:00:00Z

    Mexicana is 75 years old this year Geoffrey Jones/MEXICO CITY MEXICANA, THE OLDEST airline in North America, celebrates its 75th anniversary this year. Under the new leadership of chief executive Fernando Flores, Mexicana has an optimistic vision for the future as it consolidates its market strengths, both ...

  • News

    Financial results

    1996-08-01T15:48:00Z

    Air France's $83.3m operating profit was its first since 1989. Passenger yields fell 6.5%, partly due to the strength of the French franc, and strikes cost $60m in lost revenue. The carrier made $402m of provisions for restructuring. Part of Finnair's growth was due to the 12% ...

  • News

    Financial data

    1996-08-01T15:45:00Z

    Economic trends: Fuel prices appear to have stabilised, and spot prices are back at the level before the March increase.   Airline traffic: May traffic was buoyant for the US majors, with revenue passenger km rising 7.6 percent and load factors up 3.2 points. Six of ...

  • News

    Appointments

    1996-08-01T11:42:00Z

    James P Kelly has been elected chairman and chief executive officer of United Parcel Service. Isaac Omolo Okero is the new chairman of Kenya Airways, which has renewed the contracts of managing director Brian Davies and finance director Malcolm Naylor. John W Power is to become ...

  • News

    Rivals in a state

    1996-08-01T00:00:00Z

    What should airlines do when their competitors benefit from state aid? Gerrit Schohe argues that the current system for approving state aids requires an overhaul, but suggests that Commission decisions can be challenged successfully. One of the biggest controversies in the European aviation industry arose when the European Commission ...

  • News

    Extra lift

    1996-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Atlas Air has found a winning formula: acquire used Boeing 747-200 freighters and operate them profitably on behalf of major airlines. Jane Levere reports. Some people say Atlas Air, the Golden, Colorado-based cargo carrier, is really in the taxi business rather than the air freight business. However you describe the ...

  • News

    Arabs set to close ranks

    1996-08-01T00:00:00Z

    Attempts to boost aviation cooperation in the Arab world are gathering pace. Ten carriers are considering a consultants' study recommending a pan-Arab airline alliance, while the birth of the long-awaited Arab Civil Aviation Commis- sion promises to strengthen ties further. A nine-month study on behalf of 10 of ...