Programmes – Page 1258

  • News

    TWA resists Pan Am rerun

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    After years of proving detractors wrong and just as the carrier was showing signs of recovery, TWA is once again fighting to prove that it can survive, following the crash of Flight 800 off New York's Long Island on 17 July. In the three weeks that followed the ...

  • News

    Running for cover

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The war in former Yugoslavia highlighted some problems for that invention of the previous decade, political risk insurance for aircraft lenders. Angus von Schoenberg tells how the insurance product has developed and matured. Political risk insurance (PRI) as a form of security for aircraft financiers is no longer the new, ...

  • News

    ValuJet's long shadow

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    US The crash of ValuJet Flight 592 in May has had more impact on the US airline industry than any other commercial aviation tragedy. Mead Jennings explores the longer-term repercussions of the ValuJet affair. The repercussions of the crash of a 27-year-old ValuJet Airlines DC-9 in Florida's Everglades, which killed ...

  • News

    Mandela inspires trade into Africa

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    After more than a decade of being regarded as a lost cause, there are increasing signs that sub-Saharan Africa is making a return to the global economic and political system. In the 1990s, apart from periodic bouts of brutal violence in countries as diverse as Rwanda, Burundi, Liberia and Nigeria, ...

  • News

    China's links are at stake

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    The clearing of the aeropolitical clouds over Hong Kong may be having a downwind effect in Taiwan, where direct air links with China (PRC) are moving from political rhetoric to actual preparation. Wang Guixiang, chairman of China National Aviation Corporation and new chairman of Dragonair, was the first ...

  • News

    Qantas faces union threat

    1996-09-01T00:00:00Z

    Qantas's management is facing confrontation with unions over a new wage agreement as it launches a drive to try to control costs and improve on disappointing productivity gains. Flight attendants and ground workers have already hinted at industrial action if they fail to win agreement on across the ...

  • News

    Aerotaca Saab

    1996-08-28T14:19:00Z

    Aerotaca Airlines is to introduce a used Saab 340B, acquired through Saab Aircraft of America. The ex-Aer Lingus 340B joins the Bogota, Colombia-based airline's fleet of two de Havilland Canada Twin Otters, one Beech C90 and one Fairchild FH-227, operating services to Yopal and Bucaramanga. The addition of ...

  • News

    MDC

    1996-08-28T14:02:00Z

    Former astronaut Richard Covey has been appointed director of the McDonnell Douglas Aerospace Houston, Texas, division. Covey, who was formerly deputy programme director for Unisys Information Management Services' space operations, also in Houston, replaces George Kersels, who has left the company. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Swearingen

    1996-08-28T14:00:00Z

    Jack Braly, president of Beech Aircraft from December 1990 to August 1993, has joined Sino Swearingen Aircraft (SSAC) as president and chief executive officer. Braly comes to the Taiwan-backed US company, which is developing the SJ30-2 light business-jet, from Rockwell International, where he was general manager of the North American ...

  • News

    Seven-year countdown

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Airbus makes progress towards a launch of its vitally important new large aircraft. Julian Moxon/TOULOUSE THIS AIRCRAFT "-will be the biggest challenge in civil-aviation history", says Jurgen Thomas, head of the new large-aircraft division of Airbus Industrie charged with developing the A3XX. While such words ...

  • News

    Farnborough '96 show guide

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Compiled by Kate Sarsfield/LONDON SINCE ITS INAUGURATION in 1948, the Farnborough air show has blossomed into one of the largest and most important events on the aerospace calendar. Yet, with other show organisers relentlessly launching new challenges to Farnborough's superiority, the Society of British Aerospace Companies (SBAC) is ...

  • News

    Family favourites

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Boeing's new-generation 737is the same, only different Guy Norris/SEATTLE EXACTLY 30 YEARS ago, the first Boeing 737 was taking shape at the company's plant in Renton, Washington. At the time, not everyone was convinced that the "Baby Boeing" gamble would be a winner. The concern ...

  • News

    The curtain rises

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Coming soon - the next installment in an exciting tale of aircraft engines and orders. Guy Norris/LOS ANGELES This year's Farnborough air show provides the stage for an extraordinary drama, the cut and thrust of which would defy even the most imaginative playwrights of the West End ...

  • News

    Slow progress

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Progress towards achieving a US/Russian bilateral airworthiness agreement remains slow. Ramon Lopez/WASHINGTON DC THE USA AND RUSSIA will break no speed records in their marathon efforts to complete a bilateral airworthiness agreement, say US aviation officials involved in the negotiations. While some progress is reported ...

  • News

    Regional rivalry

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    The Embraer EMB-145's Farnborough debut will help to focus attention on regional airliners. Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDON WHILE THE 1996 show is the first occasion on which the three major airliner manufacturers - Airbus Industrie, Boeing and McDonnell Douglas (MDC) - will be exhibiting their latest commercial wares at ...

  • News

    X-tended players

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Airbus Industrie, Boeing and McDonnell Douglas are all poised to move forward with their X projects. Max Kingsley-Jones/LONDONGuy Norris/LOS ANGELES THE LATEST AIRCRAFT models of the big three airliner manufacturers are all now carrying revenue passengers, and the industry is standing by for the next ...

  • News

    Australia and South Africa reach agreement on capacity boosts

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Paul Phelan/CAIRNS AUSTRALIA HAS AGREED to several capacity increases on international routes, which will enable carriers to step up the number of services operated. South Africa and Australia have lifted capacity restrictions and approved codeshare arrangements between the two countries. This will enable a fourth ...

  • News

    Passenger/baggage matching system planned

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    MICRON Communications has signed a co-operative research-and-development agreement with the US Federal Aviation Administration to develop a prototype positive passenger-baggage matching system. The objective is for the system to recognise automatically when baggage has been placed on an aircraft without the associated passenger, says Boise, Idaho-based Micron. ...

  • News

    GE prepares Snecma invitation to A340-600 engine project

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS GENERAL ELECTRIC Aircraft Engines says that Snecma will "-definitely be invited" to join development of a power plant for the Airbus A340-600, if Airbus Industrie accepts the US company's proposal to supply an engine for the aircraft. Under a six-month exclusivity deal signed ...

  • News

    Government is urged to sell further stake in Thai Airways

    1996-08-28T00:00:00Z

    AN IMPROVING financial performance from Thai Airways is raising calls for the Thai Government to press ahead with a further sale of shares in the national airline. Thai transport minister Wan Mohammed Nor Matha is on record as urging the country's finance ministry to sell some of its ...