All articles by Flight International – Page 7

  • Opinion

    Why aviation should look to cars for cockpit commonality

    2019-05-24T15:44:00Z

    Do you regularly drive, say, a Volkswagen car and worry about going on holiday and hiring a Ford? Of course not – you just jump in and drive away. Cars are not really quite so simple – you may need a minute to find the rear-screen wiper switch – but the basic operating and safety functions all ­translate near enough directly between types and makes. Automobiles benefit from an impressive degree of standardisation.

  • Opinion

    Rolls-Royce may rue missed NMA opportunity

    2019-05-17T20:05:00Z

    The race to deliver the next step in commercial engine technology is being dictated by Boeing’s requirements for its New Mid-market Airplane project. And it looks like there can only be one winner, if Seattle decides to stick with its recent policy of a sole-source deal.

  • Opinion

    Electric power must spark widespread change

    2019-05-17T20:04:00Z

    Most machinery improves with ­electrification. Compared to internal combustion, electric motors are smaller, lighter, more powerful, smoother-running and easier to cool. They start instantly, waste no fuel idling, respond fluidly and deliver full torque at any speed.

  • sala crash vigil
    Opinion

    Sala tragedy should spur crackdown on illegal charter

    2019-05-10T12:59:00Z

    The charter industry has been battling the scourge of illegal public transport for some time, and its attempts to raise awareness of the practice – where aircraft that have not been approved for paying passengers are used for air taxi services – had been largely fruitless until the tragic death in January of footballer Emiliano Sala.

  • planes queued on runway at heathrow
    Opinion

    Why ADS-B technology could drive air traffic revolution

    2019-05-10T12:57:00Z

    There is a revolution under way in civil aviation – and it has nothing to do with new engines, supersonics, ultra-long-haul or in-flight wi-fi. What is about to save time, fuel and lives is an invisible knitting together of existing technologies into an air traffic management system fit for the 21st century.

  • Bombardier Belfast - REX/Shutterstock
    Opinion

    Who will buy Bombardier Belfast?

    2019-05-03T14:15:00Z

    News that Bombardier plans to divest its Belfast aerostructures plant, along with a smaller operation in Morocco, as it consolidates its remaining aerospace activities into Bombardier Aviation, was not surprising.

  • Dennis Muilenburg - Jim Young/AP/REX/Shutterstock
    Opinion

    Boeing chief can find no escape from tough questions

    2019-05-03T14:08:00Z

    The difficult position of Boeing’s chief executive – and the delicate balancing act he must perform – became particularly evident during the annual shareholder meeting on 29 April.

  • F-35C Super Hornet - US Navy
    Opinion

    Can US Navy maintain carrier aviation edge?

    2019-04-26T11:58:00Z

    Anyone who knows the US Navy (USN) is aware that the service is very proud of its heritage. But observers also know this justifiable pride runs extremely close to worship. And, as any secular observer knows well, worship is blind.

  • Opinion

    737 Max airmanship needs as much scrutiny as MCAS

    2019-04-26T10:52:00Z

    There is an uncomfortable aspect of the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max accident that complicates an investigation whose narrative has been dictated by debate over the controversial Manoeuvring Characteristics Augmentation System.

  • Opinion

    No winners if Airbus-Boeing WTO saga carries on

    2019-04-23T08:58:00Z

    The current sparring between Europe and the USA over subsidies paid to airframers Airbus and Boeing drags on.

  • Spruce Goose 970x674 c Mark J Terrill AP Shutterst
    Opinion

    Stratolaunch hopes to avoid Spruce Goose's fate

    2019-04-23T08:16:00Z

    Howard Hughes’ Spruce Goose – more formally known as the H-4 Hercules – was until 13 April this year the largest aircraft ever to have flown. Conceived as a WWII transatlantic troop carrier, the fighting had, mercifully, ended before the flying boat finally flew, for just a few seconds, in 1947. Retirement followed.

  • Harop - Israel Aerospace Industries
    Opinion

    Autonomous lethal drones a legal challenge

    2019-04-12T13:19:00Z

    Are they lethal autonomous weapons systems, with the tidy acronym “LAWS” – or killer robots? Either way, politicians, soldiers, society and the aerospace industry that serves them must grapple with the question: how far should we go in marrying artificial intelligence (AI) and unmanned air systems – or, to use their more emotive name, drones?

  • F-35 assembly line - Lockheed Martin
    Opinion

    OPINION: Should Washington eject Ankara from F-35 project?

    2019-04-05T15:30:25Z

    Never say never. Sound advice, but probably not words that will be well received by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. His refusal to cancel Ankara’s order for Almaz-Antey S-400 Triumf surface-to-air missiles creates the real possibility that his country will lose something even more valuable: participation in the Joint Strike ...

  • Airbus CDC - Airbus
    Opinion

    Airbus in control of interiors with own cabin centre

    2019-04-05T13:19:00Z

    The opening by Airbus – on the eve of the Aircraft Interiors Expo in Hamburg – of an expanded cabin customisation ­facility at its local production plant is a clear signal to airlines, suppliers and competitors that the airframer wants to be in control of the interior completion process.

  • Opinion

    E-7 purchase is good news for UK

    2019-03-29T12:09:00Z

    Confirming one of the worst-kept ­secrets in UK defence procurement, late March’s £1.5 billion ($1.96 billion) order for five Boeing 737NG-based E-7 airborne early warning and control system aircraft was nevertheless a welcome development for the Royal Air Force (RAF).

  • Opinion

    OPINION: UTC's electric dreams are achievable

    2019-03-29T09:48:08Z

    ​United Technologies (UTC) has become the latest major aerospace supplier to unveil its strategy for a more-electric powertrain, pursuing the goal under its Project 804 initiative.

  • Opinion

    OPINION: Hard work for Safran in making Zodiac's stars align

    2019-03-25T14:00:00Z

    ​When it announced it was in talks to buy fellow French company ­Zodiac Aerospace back in January 2017, Safran probably did not have a complete picture of its target's woes.

  • Opinion

    OPINION: Response to Max crashes will define Boeing's reputation

    2019-03-22T12:25:00Z

    Bilateral arrangements in aviation safety rely on the assumption that the rules and practices across different jurisdictions are largely interchangeable.

  • Opinion

    OPINION: The F-15's unlikely renaissance

    2019-03-18T15:11:00Z

    Not too long ago, the Boeing F-15’s days looked numbered.

  • b737max8-ethiopian-c-Boeing-640
    Opinion

    OPINION: Confidence threatened by polarised Max response

    2019-03-14T14:04:14Z

    ​Partial suspension of Boeing 737 Max operations exposed an extraordinary regulatory disparity, with European and US authorities – normally fixated on procedural harmonisation and alignment – entrenched in opposing positions on the matter.