All Safety News – Page 1439

  • News

    Aer Lingus evaluates 180-seaters

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON AER LINGUS IS evaluating the various 180-seat (two-class seating) aircraft types, with a view to introducing a new aircraft in 1997, but more likely in 1998. The airline says that it is in "-the early days of looking at the options available". The ...

  • News

    China to resume satellite launches

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    CHINA GREAT WALL Industry (CGWIC) is to resume satellite launches with Asia Pacific Satellite's Hughes-built ApStar 1A aboard a Long March 3 (LM3) booster from Xichang, in July. This follows a hiatus in launches, after the loss of the first Long March 3B booster on 15 February, along with its ...

  • News

    Lufthansa struggles with weak first half

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    CONCERNS ARE growing among analysts that Lufthansa may be left showing a loss for the first half of the year after a poor set of traffic performances over the first five months of the year. "The traffic figures are not very promising at all. The year has ...

  • News

    Unions agree to Alitalia facelift

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON Andrea Spinelli/GENOA ALITALIA'S UNIONS have given a tentative go-ahead to the airline's increasingly urgent restructuring plans, agreeing to accept cost-cutting in exchange for three places on the board and an eventual 20% stake in the group. The deal was finally thrashed out on ...

  • News

    Boeing prepares to offer 747-500/600MD

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    Guy Norris/SEATTLE BOEING IS to seek board authority to offer the "Major Derivative" (MD) 747-500/600 in July, but may be forced to extend the development timescale by more than a year to incorporate more advanced technology, at the insistence of its airline advisory group. Boeing ...

  • News

    ValuJet fallout hits FAA

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC THE FALL-OUT from the 11 May crash of ValuJet Flight 592 in the Florida Everglades has spread across the USA, from Long Beach, California, to the inner circle of the US Federal Aviation Administration. The unprecedented commercial-airline safety probe and subsequent grounding ...

  • News

    EU to start talks with USA

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON EUROPE'S TRANSPORT Commissioner Neil Kinnock has won a mandate to start negotiations with the USA, which are expected to lead to a transatlantic open-skies pact, possibly within two years. The mandate was agreed by European Union (EU) transport ministers on 17 June, with ...

  • News

    Investigators query Garuda DC-10 abort

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    INVESTIGATORS of the Garuda Indonesia Airlines McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 fatal runway overrun (Flight International, 19-25 June) are examining the captain's decision to abort the take-off following a No 3 engine failure, say sources close to the accident inquiry. The aircraft had been rotated for take-off. At that stage, ...

  • News

    Brunei FANS-1 upgrade is first on 'Classic' 747

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    Andrew Doyle/LONDON THE Brunei royal family has ordered the world's first Future Air Navigation System-1 (FANS-1) upgrade for a "Classic" Boeing 747. Work on the modification, which is being performed by Lufthansa Technik, is under way. The aircraft, a 747SP, is being fitted with ...

  • News

    Rivals set to benefit from ValuJet suspension of operations

    1996-06-26T00:00:00Z

    Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON VALUJET HAS built its main hub at Atlanta Harts-field, and at its peak, the airline represented about 8% of the passenger traffic at the airport, ranking it second only to Delta Air Lines. With ValuJet flights unavailable, "price-sensitive" customers from Atlanta have been ...

  • News

    767 precautions

    1996-06-19T10:54:00Z

    A high-capacity flight-data recorder is being fitted to the Martinair Holland Boeing 767-300ER which suffered total electronic flight-instrument system failure and partial flight-controls loss on 28 May (Flight International, 5-11 June, P8) before the aircraft may return to service, says the US National Transportation Safety Board. Investigator Robert Hancock says ...

  • News

    Fatal training

    1996-06-19T10:53:00Z

    An Iran Air Boeing 727-200 (EP-IRU) on a crew training flight crashed just after take-off from Rasht, Iran, on the south-western shores of the Caspian Sea, killing four of the seven crew, confirms insurance loss-adjuster Air-claims. The 21-year-old aircraft, one of five 727-200s and two 727-100s in Iran Air's fleet, ...

  • News

    Bristol

    1996-06-19T08:50:00Z

    Mark Bills and Paul Davies are the new operations manager and health and safety manager, respectively, at Bristol Airport, in the UK. Bills were previously at the UK Civil Aviation Authority. Davies is an examiner with the National Examination Board in Occupational Safety and Health.   Source: ...

  • News

    TechniFlite launches simulator-on-wheels deal for regionals

    1996-06-19T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/ATLANTA A mobile flight-simulator for the Raytheon Beech 1900D regional turboprop is to enter service in January 1997 with Denver, Colorado-based TechniFlite. It will be housed inside a tractor-trailer, which will be driven around the USA to provide on-site initial and recurrent pilot training. ...

  • News

    UK industry to launch research effort

    1996-06-19T00:00:00Z

    Kevin O'Toole/LONDON AFTER YEARS of failing to win new Government funding for civil research-and-technology programmes, the UK's aerospace companies have taken matters into their own hands and launched a programme of industry-funded technology-demonstrator pilots. They hope that the UK Government will now help build the ...

  • News

    Boeing plans for further FANS-1 certification

    1996-06-19T00:00:00Z

    BOEING IS PLANNING to certify future Air Navigation System 1 (FANS-1)-equipped versions of its 757s and 767s by late 1997, possibly as part of a joint US Federal Aviation Administration/European Joint Airworthiness Authorities effort. The US company is developing an improved version of its FANS-1 avionics package to ...

  • News

    False pride

    1996-06-19T00:00:00Z

    THE VERY PUBLIC LOSS of the prototype Ariane 5 on 4 June was not so much a setback for European space activities as it was for European space pride. It should also, however, make European space officials - and their paymasters - reflect on just what is the object of ...

  • News

    New study identifies high-risk CFIT categories of operation

    1996-06-19T00:00:00Z

    David Learmount/LONDON An accident involving controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) in instrument meteorological conditions (IMC), is most likely to happen to a single-crew operation in Africa flying a non- precision approach without a ground-proximity warning system (GPWS) says a so-far-unreleased report which quantifies CFIT risks. ...

  • News

    CAA licence to overcharge is simply not on

    1996-06-19T00:00:00Z

    Sir-The three letters on "GAMTA must look at training" (Flight International, 3-9 April, P95) focus on the high costs incurred by aviation businesses in the UK. As a licensed engineer working for a foreign international airline in this country, I am required to hold a licence issued in ...

  • News

    -IPTN's N250

    1996-06-19T00:00:00Z

    -IPTN's N250 will be a winner, if performance figures match the aircraft's characteristics IF THERE IS any lingering cynicism, over the destiny of IPTN's N250 programme, a visit to the company's design, manufacturing and flight-testing site at Bandung, Indonesia, would be likely to put it to rest. The site ...