All Safety News – Page 1456

  • News

    Syrianair officers train in Arizona

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    PHOENIX-BASED AIRLINE Training Center Arizona (ATCA), a Lufthansa subsidiary, is providing first-officer training for Syrian Arab Airlines. ATCA says, that it was selected by Syrianair after the Arab carrier, evaluated several US flight schools. Students are being trained to US commercial pilot's-licence standard in a programme involving ground ...

  • News

    TRO strikes courseware deal with FSI

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    FLIGHTSAFETY International (FSI) has agreed to use TRO Learning's library of computer-based pilot- and maintenance-training courseware at its simulator centres. FSI will also market TRO's courseware to its airline clients. Minneapolis, Minnesota-based TRO has developed pilot-training courseware for the Airbus A300-600, A310, A320, A330 and A340, Boeing 737-300/400/500, ...

  • News

    Four were killed in Long March crash

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    THE LONG MARCH 3B booster (LM3B) which exploded and crashed 1.5km downrange from the Xichang launch centre, China, T+25s after launch on 14 February, killed four people and injured 52, China Great Wall Industry (CGWIC) has confirmed (Flight International, 21-27 February). The failure resulted in the loss of the Intelsat ...

  • News

    US airlines back in profit - for now

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    US airlines are back in profit, but the lessons of recession linger on. Kevin O'Toole/LONDON THE NOTORIOUS business cycles of the airline industry have at last come full circle for the US carriers. Just two years ago, three of the majors were fighting their way out of ...

  • News

    American warns on pilfered 757 parts

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    AMERICAN AIRLINES HAS issued a warning to the air-transport industry that "...stolen and damaged Boeing 757 parts are entering the surplus market". The airline says that there has been extensive looting from the wreckage of its 757 which crashed in mountains near Cali, Colombia, on 20 December, 1995. ...

  • News

    Russia plans to restructure its aviation administration

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    RUSSIAN FIRST DEPUTY prime minister Oleg Soskovets, has confirmed that his Government is to establish a federal aviation administration, to improve state control of the civil-aviation industry (Flight International, 21-27 February). At a transport ministry meeting to review the results of the air-transport industry in 1995, ...

  • News

    SAS profits as restructuring pays dividends

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    LONG-RUNNING restructuring efforts at Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS) began to pay dividends in 1995 as the carrier's profits soared, also helped by a rise in European business traffic. The Scandinavian carrier ended the year with a profit of more than SKr2.5 billion ($360 million), up from only SKr388 ...

  • News

    Italian Government backs fresh Alitalia union talks

    1996-02-28T00:00:00Z

    ALITALIA HAS opened new talks with its unions, to be overseen by the Italian Government and based on a more conciliatory, four-point, restructuring plan. Chairman Renato Riverso says that the new plan, which has been approved by the airline's parent, state-holding company IRI, will include a renewed ...

  • News

    Honeywell predicts Pegasus boom

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    MORE THAN 700 Boeing 757/767s and McDonnell Douglas MD-90/MD-11s could be retrofitted with Honeywell's newly developed Pegasus flight-management system (FMS), according to the company. The Pegasus FMS has 25 times the throughput capacity and up to 16 times more memory than that of the existing systems and will ...

  • News

    IPTN speeds up N-2130 regional-jet programme

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Paul Lewis/BANDUNG INDUSTRI PESAWAT Terbang Nusantara (IPTN) has advanced the planned entry-into-service date of the proposed N-2130 regional jet by two years, in response to domestic demand and forthcoming foreign competition. With Japan trying to revive its YS-X programme and talks on the Chinese/South Korean ...

  • News

    Pilots beware

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Sir - As the UK British Airline Pilots Association (BALPA) and the Independent Pilots Association (IPA) have received many recent enquiries, we are offering some cautionary advice to pilots seeking employment. We are led to believe that pilots are being offered employment verbally, subject to their obtaining UK ...

  • News

    Statistics reflect the effects

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Sir - I have lectured for 25 years on flight safety and, with reference to the Viscount article (Flight International, 20 December-2 January, P30), the hot-air anti-ice system does not necessarily supply sufficient heat to the tail-section leading edges in severe icing conditions, unless the fuel flow to engines two ...

  • News

    ValuJet expands fleet

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    VALUJET AIRLINES has purchased nine McDonnell Douglas (MDC) DC-9-30s and two MD-83s in deals which will take its fleet to 58 aircraft by the end of the first quarter of 1997. MDC helped locate the aircraft under the terms of ValuJet's launch order for 50 MDC MD-95s, deliveries of which ...

  • News

    Industry fights 'devastating' FAA flight-time proposal

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Graham Warwick/Atlanta PROPOSED NEW US Federal Aviation Administration rules on pilot flight and duty time will "devastate" the US on-demand air-charter industry, says the US National Air Transportation Association (NATA). Many charter companies and fixed-base operators will be unable to bear the cost of the additional pilots required ...

  • News

    Technical details

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    THE 407 WAS certificated by the Canadian Civil Aviation Authority, just a few days before our flight. US Federal Aviation Administration certification will follow. Even before this, more than 150 orders have been placed, with about 100 deposits paid. Initial deliveries will be at Heli-Expo '96 in Dallas, Texas, on ...

  • News

    British Airways/United to launch AlliedSignal EGPWS flight tests

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Allan Winn/SINGAPORE Kieran Daly/LONDON TWO MAJOR AIRLINES are about to begin trials of AlliedSignal's enhanced ground-proximity warning system (EGPWS). By the end of February, the system will be flying on a British Airways Boeing 747-400 and, in May, United Airlines is to begin a three-month revenue-service trial ...

  • News

    SAS concentrates on fleet requirement beyond 2000

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Gunter Endres/LONDON SCANDINAVIAN AIRLINES System (SAS) is to study a plan to purchase between ten and 20 long- and medium-range aircraft to add to its fleet starting by the year 2000. The study will examine the case for retaining the Boeing 767 in the SAS fleet ...

  • News

    PZL-Okecie to replace crashed prototype

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    POLISH AIRCRAFT manufacturer PZL-Okecie says that it wants to build another PZL-130T Turbo Orlik to replace the prototype lost in a fatal crash on 25 January. Contrary to earlier reports that the accident involved the Pratt & Whitney-powered PZL-130TC (Flight International, 7-13 February), marketing and sales director Maciej ...

  • News

    New conflict looms at Air Inter

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Gilbert Sedbon/PARIS FAILURE TO AGREE on a new contract for pilots at Air Inter Europe is pulling the financially struggling domestic and regional wing of the Air France Group towards a new crisis. Passenger traffic fell by 7% in 1995, to 15.7 million, largely because ...

  • News

    Time out

    1996-02-21T00:00:00Z

    IT IS "...POTENTIALLY the most expensive rulemaking ever proposed", says one industry association of the US Federal Aviation Administration's plan to revamp the rules governing pilot flight and duty times. "Asinine" is another association's less-guarded assessment of the proposed regulations. "This could be the first $1 billion rule," suggests one ...