All Safety News – Page 1434

  • News

    Under oversight?

    1996-07-31T00:00:00Z

    FIRST, THE FEDERAL Aviation Administration in the USA was the target: now it is the Civil Aviation Authority in the UK. Each has been accused of failing to maintain satisfactory oversight of airline maintenance operations. If they cannot satisfy the expectations of the travelling public and their legal representatives, are ...

  • News

    Industry opposes airline safety ranking

    1996-07-31T00:00:00Z

    US AIRLINES ARE opposing a US Federal Aviation Administration proposal to rank airlines by safety. The concept is favoured by consumer groups and by some US lawmakers, who say that the US Transportation Department should go beyond ranking airline on-time performance only. The FAA is studying the issues ...

  • News

    British Midland fined

    1996-07-31T00:00:00Z

    British Midland Airways has been fined £150,000 ($233,000) by a UK court after admitting "negligently endangering life", following an unprecedented criminal prosecution brought by the UK Civil Aviation Authority. The case relates to an incident in February 1995, when one of the airline's Boeing 737-400s made an emergency ...

  • News

    Boeing to review 777 cabin pressure after diversion

    1996-07-31T00:00:00Z

    BOEING IS AGAIN reviewing the design of the 777 cabin-pressurisation system, following the diversion of a United Airlines (UAL) aircraft to Gander, Newfoundland, while being flown on a transatlantic flight. The 777 suffered "a loss of pressure" rather than a sudden depressurisation, says the airline, which adds that ...

  • News

    Computers must be kept in their place

    1996-07-31T00:00:00Z

    Sir - Charles Manning says that British Airways pilots were "petulant" in threatening strike action (Letters, Flight International, 17-23 July, P38). In the event, a compromise agreement was reached with their employer, which sounds like healthy industrial relations to me. As for replacing pilots entirely with automatic systems, ...

  • News

    Pressure drop

    1996-07-24T15:45:00Z

    An America West Airbus A320 lost cabin pressure at 33,000ft (10,000m) shortly after take-off from Columbus, Ohio, en route to Newark, New Jersey, on 12 July. The crew made an emergency landing at Port Columbus International Airport. None of the 37 passengers and seven crew members were injured. ...

  • News

    Air safety

    1996-07-24T15:44:00Z

    Malaysia and Ghana have been added to the list of countries whose monitoring of air safety is found acceptable to the US Federal Aviation Administration. The aviation agency is assessing the safety oversight of carriers, which operate to the USA. The FAA has judged aviation safety standards of 58 nations ...

  • News

    Latin two-step

    1996-07-24T14:52:00Z

    Miami-based Pan Am International Flight Academy and Phoenix East Aviation, a flight school in Daytona Beach, Florida, have formed the Latin American Flight Training Academy marketing alliance to offer ab initio airline-pilot training, including simulator training at Pan Am, as well as flight-attendant training. Meanwhile, Pan Am is installing an ...

  • News

    KLM to cut costs

    1996-07-24T07:57:00Z

    KLM has announced a programme to cut DFl300 million ($175 million) from its procurement costs, covering areas such as catering and fuel. The cut represents around 5% of the airline's supplier costs.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    Volga-Dnepr thrives

    1996-07-24T07:57:00Z

    Russian cargo carrier, Volga-Dnepr Airlines reports a sales boom, over the first half of the year, led by demand for its fleet, of six heavy-lift Antonov An-124-100 Ruslans. Sales for the An-124s rose by 55%, to $44 million, over the half year. Volga-Dnepr estimates that it now holds, around 60% ...

  • News

    Time factor essential in safety

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Sir - The dispute between the US and French investigation authorities over the background to the Roselawn ATR 72 accident (Flight International, 17-23 July, P6) centres on the transfer of safety information between authorities, manufacturers, airlines and aircrew. If the US National Transportation Safety Board's view is justified, ...

  • News

    Icy relations

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Did previous icing incidents provide clues, which could have prevented the Roselawn ATR 72 crash? France and the USA disagree. Graham Warwick/ATLANTA CRUCIAL TO THE disagreement between US and French accident-investigation agencies on the cause of the October 1994 American Eagle ATR 72 crash is whether previous ...

  • News

    United and MDC test cockpit weather link

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    UNITED AIRLINES and McDonnell Douglas (MDC) have begun flight tests of a system to display real-time weather information in the cockpit. A three-month in-service trial of a United MDC DC-10, equipped with the cockpit weather-information system (CWIN), is to begin following certification of the equipment. Tests are being ...

  • News

    Suspect JT8D-200 fan hubs are removed from service

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    FAN HUBS FROM six Pratt & Whitney JT8D-200 engines have been removed from service after it was determined that they have the same manufacturing defect believed to have caused the uncontained failure on a Delta Air Lines McDonnell Douglas MD-88 on 7 July. The 25mm-long fatigue crack, which caused the ...

  • News

    US/Japanese cargo row flares up again

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/SINGAPORE THE US AND Japanese Governments are once again become embroiled in a bitter row over air-cargo rights, with the two sides threatening to impose sanctions from the end of July. The US Department of Transportation (DoT) says that it will restrict certain Japan ...

  • News

    LOT orders additional 737s

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Andrzej Jeziorski/MUNICH LOT POLISH Airlines is expanding its fleet with an order for four new Boeing 737s, including two new-generation -800s, in response to rising domestic and international traffic. The order, believed to be worth $160 million, is for two 144-seat 737-400s and two ...

  • News

    Slovakia and Croatia set to join Eurocontrol

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    SLOVAKIA AND Croatia, are on the verge of becoming the newest members of Eurocontrol, with the acceptance of their membership applications by the air-traffic-control organisation's Permanent Commission. Membership now has to be confirmed by domestic parliamentary ratification procedures, and Eurocontrol says that it hopes that both countries will ...

  • News

    TWA 747 crash raises spectre of terrorism

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ATLANTA LOCATING THE cockpit-voice and flight-data recorders was the priority following the 17 July crash of a Trans World Airlines (TWA) Boeing 747-100 into the Atlantic Ocean off Long Island, New York. All 210 passengers and 18 crew on board TWA Flight 800 were killed ...

  • News

    Deja deja vu

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    THE JAPANESE AND US Governments are once again going to the edge in the latest round of bilateral-air-service negotiations by threatening each other with sanctions and counter-sanctions. The news has been greeted by industry observers, in Tokyo and Washington, with a collective cry of "here we go again". ...

  • News

    Japan blames Airbus and China Airlines for 1994 Nagoya Airport accident

    1996-07-24T00:00:00Z

    AIRBUS INDUSTRIE and China Airlines (CAL) have both been attributed with blame by a Japanese investigation into the April 1994 crash of an A300-600R at Nagoya. A final report issued by Japan's Aircraft Accident Investigation Commission (AAIC) points to deficiencies in the design of the aircraft's flight-control ...