All General aviation articles – Page 625

  • News

    RVSM modifications

    1997-05-21T16:43:00Z

    Lynton Aircraft Sales, based at Kidlington in Oxford, is claiming to be the first UK operator to have certificated modifications to one of its aircraft in line with new reduced vertical-separation minima (RVSM) regulations imposed by the US Federal Aviation Administration and adopted on trial by the UK on 27 ...

  • News

    Blast-resistant container is set for tests

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    A composite/aluminium-hybrid blast-resistant cargo container for aircraft, developed by New Jersey-based Galaxy Scientific, has successfully passed two US Federal Aviation Administration screening processes and is to be prepared for field tests in July. The trials may lead to certfication in the third or fourth quarter of 1998. The ...

  • News

    Outlook:bright, with some cloud

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    US general aviation (GA) is poised to grow, and grow steadily - at least to 2008 - in fleet size, pilot population, aircraft use and hours flown. The US Federal Aviation Administration is predicting more than a decade of steady, incremental growth for the market. This should bode well for ...

  • News

    Schweizer plans to resume Twin Condor testing

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Flight testing of the Schweizer Aircraft RU-38A Twin Condor will resume this month, and the twin-engined surveillance aircraft will be delivered to the US Coast Guard once flight evaluation is completed, around October/November. The programme has been in limbo for nearly a year since one of two operational ...

  • News

    EJA creates Hawker record

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    EXECUTIVE JET Aviation (EJA) has ordered 20 Raytheon Aircraft Hawker 800XPs, representing the largest single order ever for Hawker business jets. The fractional-ownership specialist, which already has 22 Hawker 1000s, has also increased its order for the Cessna Citation X to 31, from 25. The Hawkers are valued ...

  • News

    New regulations

    1997-05-21T00:00:00Z

    The UK Civil Aviation Authority is confident that the next round of European Joint Aviation Authorities (JAA) regulations, known as JAR-OPS (1), governing the "self-audited" operation of fixed-wing aircraft, will be implemented on schedule by April 1998. The claim comes despite growing concern in the industry about delays to the ...

  • News

    Cessna

    1997-05-14T14:14:00Z

    Ken Kantola has been appointed general manager of Cessna's Sacramento, California, Citation service centre. Before joining Cessna, Kantola was director of turbine-aircraft maintenance for Patterson Aircraft, also of Sacramento.   Source: Flight International

  • News

    AASI begins revised Jetcruzer stretch

    1997-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Advanced Aerodynamics and Structures (AASI) has begun work at its Long Beach factory in California on the stretched Jetcruzer 500P, a pressurised high-speed version of the original Jetcruzer 450. "It will be pressurised to 30,000ft [9,150m] with a good high-altitude engine," says AASI executive vice-president Gene Comfort. "We're ...

  • News

    Chek Lap Kok is 'on target' despite railway concerns

    1997-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Hong Kong's Airport Authority (AA) remains confident that the new airport at Chep Lap Kok will open as planned in April 1998, despite concern that the new airport express railway line and cargo-handling centre may not meet this schedule. With 12 months remaining before the $6.38 billion airport ...

  • News

    Northwest cleared

    1997-05-14T00:00:00Z

    The US Federal Aviation Administration has given the maintenance operations of Northwest Airlines a clean bill of health, following three inspections of its various maintenance centres. The move follows complaints from Japan's civil-aviation bureau of a high incidence of equipment failure and diversions by Northwest-operated aircraft which are operated from ...

  • News

    Passenger-violence measures upgraded

    1997-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Rising incidences of airline passenger violence in the USA have resulted in the US Department of Transportation (DoT) expanding its experimental "interference with crew member programme". Special arrangements in force at Honolulu and Los Angeles have been extended to New York's Kennedy, LaGuardia and Newark airports. The programme ...

  • News

    Single-minded

    1997-05-14T00:00:00Z

    FLIGHT TESTING OF the VisionAire Vantage single-engined business jet is demonstrating the high- and low-speed performance necessary for the aircraft to be competitive and safe, says its developer. VisionAire says that the proof-of-concept (PoC) aircraft, built and flown by Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites, is achieving cruise speeds equivalent to other ...

  • News

    Information on EBAS '97

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    By Air There are direct airline services to London Stansted Airport from most European destinations. A shuttle bus will transport visitors to the exhibition site. Arrivals by business aircraft should make arrangements with one of the following Stansted-based companies: Inflite; tel: +44 (1279) 680373. Metro Business Aviation; tel: ...

  • News

    FAA re-issues Teledyne crankshaft AD

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    A PROPOSED airworthiness directive (AD) requiring replacement of the crankshafts in some 10,000 Teledyne Continental 360-and 520-series piston engines has resurfaced, with the US Federal Aviation Administration citing an abnormally high failure rate. The original July 1993 notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) was strenuously opposed by the US ...

  • News

    Breath of fresh AI(R)

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    When Aero International (Regional) (AI(R)) was formed in January 1996 from the regional-aircraft businesses of Aerospatiale of France, Alenia of Italy and British Aerospace, its declared policy was to manufacture and market a family of complementary regional aircraft. That family now includes the Jetstream 41 turboprop (with 29-30 seats), the ...

  • News

    US air-traffic-control fees draw foreign fire

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    NEW USER FEES which cover flights through US-controlled airspace which neither take off from or land in the USA have raised a storm of protest from foreign airlines. The fees, to be assessed against commercial and general-aviation aircraft, were authorised by US Congress in 1996. The US Federal ...

  • News

    Operators alerted on Cessna-twin fire risk

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    OPERATORS OF CESSNA turbocharged piston-twins have been urged to inspect the exhaust systems, while the US Federal Aviation Administration considers action to prevent leaks which could cause in-flight fires. The Cessna Pilots Association (CPA) has advised operators of 300- and 400-series turbocharged twins to inspect the exhaust systems ...

  • News

    A return to business

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    With confidence in the UK economy on the rise, it seems fitting that the 1997 European Business Air Show (EBAS) should be hosted at London's Stansted Airport for the first time. The sixth annual EBAS will run from the 13-15 May, and will feature all aspects of business aviation. "EBAS ...

  • News

    Diamond reveals four-seat Katana

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    Austrian manufacturer Diamond Aircraft Industries has displayed a mock-up of a four-seat addition to its Katana aircraft family for the first time. The DA 40 Katana is set for its maiden flight by July, and Diamond hopes to certificate it to European JAR 23 standards by the end ...

  • News

    Historic manufacturers return

    1997-05-07T00:00:00Z

    Two famous names from German aviation history staged a comeback at the Aero '97 show, with the presentation of new prototypes from Zeppelin and Junkers. The general-aviation show, in Friedrichshafen, Germany, from 23-27 April, featured the public debut of the Zeppelin New Technology (NT) airship, the LZ N07. ...