Thursday, November 4, 2010

Airline fined for … operating as an airline without a license

I don't know whether this is funny, silly, stupid or scary. Seems to me like the "airline" should have known what was going on, but what do I know. I'm just a caveman.
Amplify’d from www.elliott.org
Here’s something you don’t see every day: A $30,000 government fine against a company called City Skies for operating an airline without economic authority from the Transportation Department.

In other words, the airline had a little paperwork problem. Here’s the consent order (PDF).

Running an airline without authority is illegal, obviously.
See more at www.elliott.org

Saturday, October 23, 2010

United Adding Service To Denver From Love Field

Why is the Wright amendment still in effect again?



I should start referring to Dallas Love Field as the little airport that could. Despite efforts to kill it over the years, the airport has refused to die and is actually being renovated in anticipation of the expiration of the Wright amendment in 2014.



I'll try to post some pictures of Love field and a United ERJ-145 over on my aviation news site

Amplify’d from www.dallasnews.com

United Airlines Inc. will begin offering service between Dallas Love Field and its Denver hub in 2011, using commuter partner United Express to operate two daily flights on regional jets.

The arrival of United Express on April 3 will mean that four airlines will be operating out of the airport: United Express, Southwest Airlines Co., ExpressJet Inc. and Pinnacle Airlines Inc.

United Express' Dallas-Denver route is one of a number of city pairs that parent United Continental Holdings Inc. will launch next year as it optimizes the route systems of United and Continental Airlines, spokeswoman Mary Clark said Friday.

United and Continental finalized their merger Oct. 1 but will continue to operate as separate airlines for some time.

The Wright amendment, a 1979 law, limits nonstop service out of Love Field on airplanes larger than 56 seats. Those restrictions, which expire Oct. 16, 2014, require at least one stop in Texas or eight other states.

Colorado isn't inside the Wright amendment boundaries. However, United Express will operate 50-seat Embraer ERJ-145s on the route, a size that can be flown from Love Field to anywhere in the U.S.

Read more at www.dallasnews.com
 

Iran To Mass Produce The IRAN-140 Plane

Apparently, the plane was originally designed to perform maritime patrol duties, but is also capable of light passenger carrying work as well.

Amplify’d from english.farsnews.com
"Once the Roads and Transportation Ministry makes the decision for purchasing such airplanes from the Defense Ministry, the Ministry is fully prepared to manufacture them," Vahidi told FNA.



He further pointed out that his ministry has already manufactured seven IRAN-140 planes and would soon finish production of the eight and nine planes.



The Defense Ministry is ready to mass-produce the airplane on demand, Vahidi said, reminding that the aircraft which can be used as a 52-seater passenger plane is also good for cargo transportation and marine patrolling.



The IRAN-140 is a double-engine turboprop aircraft which can fly almost 1,865 miles before re-fuelling and seats 52 people.
See more at english.farsnews.com
 

Friday, October 22, 2010

Thai Airways To Start New Airline

Thai plans to start a new short haul carrier so it can focus on its long haul wide-body routes.

Amplify’d from www.aviationweek.com



Thai Airways International plans to establish a separate full-service, short-haul carrier, so Thai Airways mainline can concentrate solely on widebody operations.



The new carrier will be a separate business unit and have its own brand and its own profit and loss (P&L) center, says Teerapol Chotichanapibal, Thai Airways’ acting executive VP-commercial. Having short-haul premium services under a separate business unit means that it will be able to achieve a lower cost base than Thai Airways mainline, he says. It also means Thai Airways can focus on operating only widebodies, and as a consequence deliver a more consistent level of service, says Teerapol. He says it is hard to provide a consistent user experience if one has a mix of narrowbody and widebody aircraft.



Thai Airways in recent years has transferred some Boeing 737-400s and short-haul routes to its low-cost carrier Nok Air, but it still operates five 737-400s, mostly on domestic routes popular with either international tourists or government officials. Teerapol says the yet-to-be named carrier will focus on serving these same premium travelers. Its routes will include Bangkok-Phuket, Bangkok-Koh Samui and Bangkok-Chiang Mai, he says.

Read more at www.aviationweek.com
 

Crocodile Causes Plane Crash

This is just a bizarre story. The croc escaped from a bag where it had been hidden, created a panic on board the plane and caused the crash.



All that's missing, is someone yelling out "I'm tired of these mother luvin crocs, on this mother luvin plane" or something like that.

Amplify’d from www.telegraph.co.uk

A lone survivor apparently relayed the bizarre tale to investigators.



The crocodile survived the crash, only to be dispatched with a blow from a
machete.



Danny Philemotte, the Belgian pilot and 62-year-old owner of the plane's
operator, Filair, struggled in vain with the controls, with Chris Wilson,
his 39-year-old First Officer from Shurdington, near Cheltenham, Glocs.



The plane was on a routine flight from the capital, Kinshasa, to the regional
airport at Bandundu when the incident unfolded, on August 25.



It crashed into a house just a few hundred feet from its destination. The
occupants of the property were outside at the time.



According to the inquiry report and the testimony of the only survivor, the
crash happened because of a panic sparked by the escape of a crocodile
hidden in a sports bag.



One of the passengers had hidden the animal, which he planned to sell, in a
big sports bag, from which the reptile escaped as the plane began its
descent into Bandundu.

Aircraft crashes after crocodile on board escapes and sparks panic
See more at www.telegraph.co.uk
 

Monday, October 11, 2010

Virgin Galactic Spaceship Flies Solo

This is a pretty cool story. I'd love to have the scratch to buy myself a ticket on this thing.

Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk

The spaceship was carried to an altitude of 45,000ft (13,700m) by an aeroplane and then dropped to glide back to the Mojave Air and Space Port.


Enterprise will soon be taking people prepared to pay $200,000 (£126,000) on short hops above the atmosphere.


The British billionaire behind the project, Sir Richard Branson, was on hand to witness the drop test.


"This was one of the most exciting days in the whole history of Virgin," the entrepreneur said.


"For the first time since we seriously began the project in 2004, I watched the world's first manned commercial spaceship landing on the runway at Mojave Air and Space Port and it was a great moment."


Virgin Galactic is aiming to become the world's first commercial space line, and has already taken deposits from 370 customers who want to experience a few minutes of weightlessness on a suborbital flight.


"We're not far off booking out our first year of operations," said Stephen Attenborough, head of astronaut relations at Galactic.



Drop test (Virgin Galactic)

Enterprise will soon start rocket motor testing

"We'll see exactly how many we decide to fly in year one, but the intention has always been around 500. We're well on our way to that," he told BBC News.


The Enterprise ship is based on the X-Prize-winning SpaceShipOne vehicle, which made history in 2004 by successfully flying to 100km (60 miles) in altitude twice in a two-week period.


The new ship, built by Mojave's Scaled Composites company, is bigger and will be capable of carrying eight people - two crew and six passengers.

Virgin Galactic's suborbital spaceship, Enterprise, has made its first solo test flight, in California. Read more at www.bbc.co.uk
 

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Mesa Air Bankruptcy Shows What's Wrong With Bankruptcy?

Well, I don't necessarily agree that "all" that is wrong with bankruptcy is shown in this case. However, I do think that it's crappy that the same management team that drove, or flew, Mesa into the ground are going to stay on board in their same positions.



Maybe I'm oversimplifying this whole thing, but I do think that if you're the person in charge of a company that goes bankrupt, then maybe you shouldn't get to keep your job.

Amplify’d from www.bnet.com

Mesa was not out of money, and in fact it says it has funded the reorganization with cash on hand as well as operating revenues and some asset sales. No outside money was needed. So what was needed? A vehicle to dump all the extra airplanes and other random assets that management no longer wanted.


Before the bankruptcy filing, Mesa owned 44 airplanes and leased another 134. During bankruptcy, Mesa abandoned 21 of its owned aircraft and rejected 96 leases (13 were leased again under an amended contract). The new Mesa now will operate a mere 77 airplanes, much to the dismay of all those lessors who are now stuck with homeless planes.

See more at www.bnet.com
 

Boeing Delays 747-8 Deliveries

Yep, Boeing is delaying the delivery of the 747-8 by 6 months to re-work some components. The intercontinental is also delayed.

Amplify’d from www.bloomberg.com

Boeing Co. extended a yearlong
delivery delay for its newest 747 jet by six months as engineers
redesign some parts and said it will add a fifth plane to the
test fleet to speed up the work.


The postponement to mid-2011 shouldn’t have a material
impact on Boeing’s 2010 earnings, the Chicago-based company said
in a statement today. Boeing has taken $2.04 billion in charges
amid three prior delays that had pushed back the latest delivery
date of the freighter version -- due before the passenger model
-- to the end of this year.


The fifth variant of the 40-year-old jumbo jet stretches
the iconic hump on top and features new engines and the longest
wing Boeing has ever built. The new design forced engineers to
make more changes than the company expected. While analysts
surveyed by Bloomberg had predicted additional charges, higher
profit from existing jets helped Boeing make up for added
expenses for the 747, Gleacher & Co.’s Peter Arment said.

Boeing Delays 747-8 Another Six Months to Mid-2011
See more at www.bloomberg.com
 

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Rocket Powered Helicopter

This is cool. I love that the rocket engines are at the tip of the blades and that it only emits water as a byproduct.

Amplify’d from www.wired.com

As menacing as the combination might sound, the Dragonfly is rather tame. It’s super-simple to fly and uses two small but powerful hydrogen peroxide motors mounted at the tips of the rotor. The engines are small, just 8 inches long 1.5 pounds apiece. But don’t be fooled by their diminutive size. This baby will top out at 100 knots if you’re really pushing it.


“Each engine is equivalent to 102 horsepower,” says Ricardo Cavalcanti, the man marketing the latest iteration of an idea that’s been bouncing around since the 1950s. “So 204 horsepower to move a unit that is only 230 pounds.”


And the exhaust? Water vapor.

See more at www.wired.com
 

Rocket Powered Helicopter

This is cool. I love that the rocket engines are at the tip of the blades and that it only emits water as a byproduct.

Amplify’d from www.wired.com

As menacing as the combination might sound, the Dragonfly is rather tame. It’s super-simple to fly and uses two small but powerful hydrogen peroxide motors mounted at the tips of the rotor. The engines are small, just 8 inches long 1.5 pounds apiece. But don’t be fooled by their diminutive size. This baby will top out at 100 knots if you’re really pushing it.


“Each engine is equivalent to 102 horsepower,” says Ricardo Cavalcanti, the man marketing the latest iteration of an idea that’s been bouncing around since the 1950s. “So 204 horsepower to move a unit that is only 230 pounds.”


And the exhaust? Water vapor.

See more at www.wired.com
 

Friday, September 24, 2010

American Airlines Closes Overhaul Base

I saw a Dateline special on American Airlines that featured some of the workers in this plant. I'm glad to see that most of those workers have figured something out.

Amplify’d from www.fox4kc.com
American Airlines Overhaul Base Closes in Platte County
PLATTE COUNTY, MO -

Back in the seventies they were known as Kansas City's largest private employer. At its peak, TWA employed 6,000 employees and was the largest commerical aircraft maintenance facility in the world. In 2001, it was bought out by American Airlines, and on Friday, the last remaining 450 employees will have to find work elsewhere.



Two hundred of those accepted a buyout package. Eighty-five will head to Dallas Fort-Worth where American Airlines will be opening another overhaul base. The remaining 165 will head to other positions within American Airlines in St. Louis, Tulsa, Okla., and other areas.Read more at www.fox4kc.com
 

Lufthansa Group Orders 48 Jets

Lufthansa is buying about $4.6 Billion worth of planes from Airbus and Embraer. No Boeing jets are in the mix.

Lufthansa Group’s supervisory board has approved orders for 40 Airbus aircraft and eight Embraer 195s, with the Airbus aircraft destined for Lufthansa, group subsidiary airlines Swiss International Air Lines and Germanwings and the Embraer 195s to go to Lufthansa Regional.

Deliveries of the aircraft will begin in 2012, according to Lufthansa, which values the overall order at some €3.5 billion ($4.675 billion) at list prices. Airbus estimates the value of the Airbus part of the deal – which includes 32 A320-family aircraft and eight A330-300 widebodies – at $4.3 billion, suggesting that Lufthansa’s order for eight Embraer 195s is valued at around $375 million.

The Airbus order comprise 20 A320-family aircraft and three A330-300s for Lufthansa; four A320-family aircraft and five A330-300s for Swiss; and eight A319s for Germanwings. With this order, the Lufthansa Group, Airbus’s biggest airline customer, will have acquired a combined total of 410 Airbus aircraft.

See more at www.airlinesanddestinations.com
 

Turkish Airlines To Buy Double Decker Planes

The "partial double-deck" aircraft they talk about, is the 747-8i.

Amplify’d from www.forexyard.com

ISTANBUL, Sept 24 (Reuters) - Turkish Airlines, Europe's
fourth-biggest carrier, does not have enough airplanes to meet
its expansion plans and may acquire double-deck aircraft,
Chairman Hamdi Topcu told Star newspaper on Friday.

The Istanbul-based airline is looking at the feasibility of
both the Airbus 380 or Boeing's planned partial double-deck
aircraft, Topcu told the newspaper.

Read more at www.forexyard.com
 

Midair Disaster Averted At MSP Airport

This is some scary shiznit. The passenger plane, was following the ATC instructions, but not the cargo plane.

Amplify’d from www.startribune.com

The two airplanes passed so close to each other that the captain of one immediately declared over the radio: "We just heard the guy go by."

In early morning clouds, a US Airways Airbus 320 and a small cargo plane flew within 50 to 100 feet of each other, barely avoiding a collision over two busy highways bordered by south Minneapolis neighborhoods, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said Thursday.

After takeoff, the airport tower instructed the airliner to turn left and head west. The cargo plane also was supposed to turn, but didn't, according to radio transmissions recorded by liveATC.net.

Moments later, the airliner almost collided with the cargo plane about a half-mile past the end of the runway, the NTSB said. The planes were about 1,500 feet above the intersection of Hwys. 62 and 77.

Read more at www.startribune.com
 

Friday, September 17, 2010

Dreamlifter and B-25 Mitchell

Taken at Future of Flight museum by @airlinereporter


New Seats and Amenities Coming To Delta's Jumbos

I really love the Boeing 747. I've never flown one, but I love them anyway.

Amplify’d from www.jaunted.com

When Delta gobbled up Northwest Airlines, the airline gained quite a bit. They have new hubs in places like Detroit and Minneapolis, the title of the world’s largest airline, and they also got some new-to-them 747s. Although the Boeing 747 is big and beautiful, the plane has certainly been around the globe a few too many times, and that’s why Delta has announced that they’re spending some serious cash to upgrade their jumbo jet fleet.


Delta is tearing apart all 16 of their Boeing 747-400 aircraft and installing more than just new carpets and in-flight magazines. Sure they are spending a lot of money up front in the BusinessElite cabins to add lay flat seats, but we’re most excited that they’re actually thinking about people like us who fly in the back of the bus.






The economy section is getting an additional inch and a half of space thanks to new slimline seating options. We don’t know if that means that the seat cushion will be less comfy, but at least we’ll have a little bit more room to stretch out our legs. After all, DVT is no way to start off a vacation. The seats also allow for a little more space underneath, so you can stash even more candy bars and chips in your carryon without the bag invading your personal space.


The old overhead in-flight entertainment will be heading to the landfill, as on-demand entertainment will be an option at every single seat. Seatbacks in coach will have nine-inch touch screen displays where you can watch movies and TV shows. There will also be in-flight game options and access to all kinds of music. Best of all, there will be USB ports so you can charge all of your iThings at 30,000 feet. SCORE.

See more at www.jaunted.com
 

Conviasa Suspends Air Operations

Pending an "internal audit." Essentially, the chavistas that run the airline were skimming money and also fraudulently "buying" parts.



What they were doing was moving parts from one plane to another so the planes would appear to have been repaired. Classic Chavista style. BTW, the below article was auto-translated to English from Spanish.

Amplify’d from economia.eluniversal.com
El Consorcio Venezolano de Industrias Aviation and Air Services, SA Conviasa, under the events of recent days, putting responsibility for the proper destination for users and users of air transport system of the country to any other interest, has decided the temporary suspension of their business.

The said suspension of activities will begin at 0:00 pm on Friday September 17, 2010 and will run until 0:00 pm on October 1, 2010, in order to conduct a comprehensive technical audit and evaluate the protocols and procedures in use.

Users and users who had bought tickets Conviasa, will be reassigned to other companies in a way to reduce losses and delays in shipments, assuming the costs that this generates.

Additionally, during this period, paying particular attention to the emotional health of the airline staff, and especially the members of their crews.

In the course of this audit technique, and as a result of this, we will take steps to ensure optimal service delivery.

In Caracas, on the sixteenth day of September 2010
Press release on the suspension of flights Conviasa
Read more at economia.eluniversal.com
 

Thursday, September 16, 2010

DC-8 Returns From Flying Through Hurricane Earl

I love the quote from the NASA guy:



"Fun flight. Glad to be on solid ground!"




I don't know that I'd consider flying through a hurricane to be "fun," but I can definitely relate to the statement.


Tuesday, September 14, 2010

ATR-42 Crashes in Venezuela

This happened in one of my home towns, just down the street from some of my cousin's house. It's a sad day.



I bet, this will be a maintenance issue.

Amplify’d from www.flightglobal.com
Conviasa ATR crash

Venezuelan rescue sources report that both the captain and the first officer of the aircraft were among 15 occupants killed in the accident.

ATR confirms that the aircraft involved bore serial number 371 and had been delivered in February 1994.

"At this time the reasons for the accident are still unknown," it says.

The airframer says it had conducted more than 27,000 cycles and accumulated over 25,000 flight hours. Conviasa acquired the aircraft in October 2006.

Read more at www.flightglobal.com
 

Monday, September 13, 2010

What Livery Is This?

Can any of y'all tell me?


Meigs Field To Re-Open?

I, personally, do not have a dog in this fight. I will however say, that I think it'd be cool if Meigs field reopens.



I hate the whole story of the bulldozers in the middle of the night thing.



Besides, I'd love to fly into it some day, wouldn't that be cool?

Amplify’d from www.aopa.org
Meigs

Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, made infamous in March 2003 when he ordered huge trenches dug across Meigs Field in the middle of the night, announced Sept. 7 that he will not seek re-election. Although the airport was closed and turned into a park, AOPA President Craig Fuller has pledged to seek every opportunity to bring back Meigs Field.

“More than seven years have passed since Chicago’s Meigs Field was bulldozed under cover of darkness, but the airport has not been forgotten,” Fuller said. “Grassroots support for Meigs is still alive and many in the aviation community view Mayor Richard Daley’s decision not to run for re-election as a hopeful sign that the field could be restored.

“Reopening Meigs Field, with its easy access to Chicago’s Loop, would make businesses in ‘the city that works’—as Mayor Daley’s father liked to refer to Chicago—work even more efficiently,” said Fuller. “AOPA fought hard first to prevent the closure of Meigs Field and then to pressure the mayor to reopen it. With new leadership coming to Chicago, we will work just as diligently to explore every opportunity that may bring Meigs back.”

Read more at www.aopa.org
 

No Charges For Women That Tried To Board Plane With Dead Man

I don't understand what kind of evidence they needed, nor what they were trying to charge them with. It seems to me, that they definitely tried to get on the plane with a dead guy.



They never even tried to deny that they tried to board the plane with the corpse. Weekend at Bernie's seems much more feasible now.

Amplify’d from www.digitaljournal.com
Two German women who tried to take a dead relative on a plane at John Lennon Airport, in Liverpool, will not be charged. Prosectution service decided there was insufficient evidence to prosecute.
Gitta Jarant, 66, and her step-daughter Anke Anusic, 41, wanted to take the older woman’s 91-year -old husband, Curt Willi Jarant, to Berlin in April.

They took a 45-minute taxi ride to the airport with him, and then tried to board an easyJet flight to Berlin with the man they claimed was asleep in a wheelchair.

The Telegraph reported that, even though the women has placed sunglasses on the man, suspicious airport staff checked for a pulse and found he was dead.

The women were charged with suspicion of failing to give notification of death, but on September 3 it was announced that the Crown Prosecution Service had determined that was not enough evidence to warrant charges against the women.

Two post mortems were performed on the body. One said he had been dead more than 36 hours while the other stated it was less than 12 hours. Both concluded he died of natural causes.
Read more at www.digitaljournal.com
 

Friday, September 3, 2010

50-Seat Jets `Nobody Wants'

Think about this, the aluminum in your the next can of beer or soft drink, may have come from 50 seat regional jet that got scrapped.

Amplify’d from www.bloomberg.com

The 50-seat jets once prized by
carriers such as Delta Air Lines Inc. are being culled from U.S.
fleets as higher fuel and maintenance bills make them too
expensive to fly.


By 2015, U.S. airlines will have about 200 jets with 50 or
fewer seats, down from about 1,200, said Michael Boyd, president
of consultant Boyd Group International Inc. in Evergreen,
Colorado. More than 80 have been scrapped in 2010, he said.


“These are litters of aluminum kittens -- nobody wants
them,” Boyd said. Their only value is for recycled metal, he
said. “The next stop is the Budweiser factory because that’s
all they’re good for.”

Read more at www.bloomberg.com
 

Virtual Airlines: The Story Behind the Yichun Plane Crash

This is somewhat disturbing. The fact is, the plane crashed short of the runway. The variable is, why did it crash.

Amplify’d from www.eeo.com.cn



While other airlines had already cancelled evening services from Harbin to Yichun, an airline captain from Henan Airlines attempted to fly the route for the first time on August 24. The plane ended up crashing as it attempted to land at Yichun's small Lindu airport, the crash claimed the lives of 42 passengers and another 54 were injured.


Although responsibility for the crash is being placed at the feet of Henan Airlines, we should also scrutinize the involvement of the "Heilongjiang Virtual Regional Airline" (黑龙江支线模拟航空公司 Hēilóngjiāng Zhīxiàn Mónǐ Hángkōnggōngsī), a company backed by the Heilongjiang Airport Group, the provincial government of Heilongjiang and several city-level governments, including the Yichun Municipal government.

The Crash

The fateful Henan Airlines flight VD8387 that took off from Harbin that evening, was only the seventh evening flight that the airline had flown from the capital of Heilongjiang to Yichun. The airline only began flying the route on August 10 and offered services on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.


China Southern Airlines was the first airline to offer an Harbin-Yichun service, including evening flights, but after flying the route for a period of time, the airline changed all evening flights to day flights for safety reasons.


According to a security report of the Heilongjiang branch of Southern Airlines released in August 2009, due to seasonal weather conditions and the location of the newly-constructed Yichun Lindu Airport, they concluded that it was not safe to offer night flights along the route. Southern Airlines decided that, as of September 1 that year, they would no longer fly the route at night.


However, at 20:51 on August 24, Qi Quanjun, a pilot with Henan Airlines took off in an E-190 aircraft, this was Qi's first flight along the route. When coming in to land at the Yichun airport at about 9.30pm in poor conditions that reduced visibility to less than 300 meters, the plane crashed 690 meters short of the runway. According to the official government report, 42 passengers died and another 54 were injured in the crash. The pilot was badly injured but did not die. Many of the original media reports stated that 43 passengers had died, but authorities have since confirmed that only 42 people died in the crash.


The day after the accident, all of Henan Airlines' fleet of E-190 aircraft were grounded and the general manager of the company was removed from his position.

A "Virtual" Regional Airline

What role did the "Heilongjiang Virtual Regional Airline" play in the crash? This "virtual" airline is not a regular airline, but something more akin to a charter company whose investors include the Heilongjiang Airport Group, the provincial government of Heilongjiang and several city-level governments, including the Yichun Municipal government. All the routes flown by the "virtual" airline are minor routes that the company has designed and mapped out for themselves, they also rent aircraft and crew to service the routes.


The plane that crashed on the evening of August 24 had been rented by this "virtual" airline to fly the Harbin-Mohe and Harbin-Yichun routes.


The "virtual" Heilongjiang Regional Airline is responsible for designing routes, marketing and renting airplanes. Cooperative airline companies provide and maintain the airplanes and crew.


An anonymous source from Heilongjiang Airport Group compared the process to renting cars. "Whether you want airlines to Yichun or to Russia, I will pay for them. I am responsible for nothing else."


The "virtual" airline company pays a rental fee to the airlines in order to guarantee that the airline company will make a profit from flying these less commercially viable routes. Sometimes they also draft a contract that divides up any profits made from ticket sales according to a settled ratio.

Read more at www.eeo.com.cn
 

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Boeing Not Interested In Re-Engining The 737

I've been reading up on this elsewhere, and Boeing is claiming that there isn't much customer interest in a re-engined B737. I'm inclined to believe that.



I think another "nail in the coffin" of a re-engined B737 is that Bombardier received 0 orders for their new C-Series at Farnborough. I would imagine had Bombardier gotten a few orders for their new C-Series that there would have been more interest in re-engining.



At the end of the day, I think that Boeing will probably launch a new aircraft model, rather than re-engine the 737.



What are your thoughts?

Amplify’d from www.aerocontact.com
Prospects for repowering the 737 seem to depart. The President of Boeing CFO James Bell Corporate and said Aug. 31 that a change of engine single-aisle was unlikely. He spoke in a conference organized by Morgan Stanley in New York.



James Bell explained that the American manufacturer customers seemed uninterested in all the prospect of a repowering.
In addition, it would not offer a potential gain of consumption sufficient to justify a modification of 737.




While Pratt & Whitney and CFM International promised gains of up to 16%, respectively, and their PurePower PW1000G LeapX, Boeing believes that the improvement in consumption would be more of a cipher.




James Bell, however, recalled that the final decision was not taken.
She will be at the end of the year.
See more at www.aerocontact.com
 

Sukhoi Superjet Goes Transatlantic

This is another article that was translated from French to English, so the grammar is not quite there. In any case, it's interesting to see a California based leasing company buying 6 Sukhoi jets.



I'd love to see an American airline operating these jets, but methinks these will probably go to an overseas customer.

Amplify’d from www.aerocontact.com
The Superjet crosses the Atlantic. Sukhoi announced Sept. 2 that the California company leasing reactors Willis Lease Finance Corporation had signed an agreement to purchase six copies of its regional aircraft.



The contract includes six 100-95LR FS, in a version with extended range, and comes with options for four additional aircraft.
It is estimated at 300 million dollars.




Deliveries should begin in September 2012.
The aircraft will be equipped with 98-seat single class configuration.




The Superjet is currently undergoing certification campaign.
The fielding of the first aircraft to Aeroflot is set in the fourth quarter of 2010.

See more at www.aerocontact.com
 

Monday, August 30, 2010

The Twitter aviation Daily of Rafael Marquez


Male international airport, Maldives

Male international airport, Maldives. Runway is 3,200m long. From my favorite twittering astronaut @Astro_Zoichi


Couple Held At Gun Point Because Of Bureaucratic Mistake

This is an interesting tale of government agencies working with each other, towards the correct goal, but with incorrect information. I disagree with the writer that had the report been of a stolen car that the police would've checked their facts.



Having had a car stolen, I can assure you, that the police does nothing to try and find your car.



In my opinion, the only reason that the police bothered to do something in this case, was because EPIC gave them the tip off and the Santa Barbara Police Department thought that they'd nab a big time drug trafficker. Fortunately, the SBPD didn't think to plant evidence in the plane.



What do you think?

Amplify’d from www.aero-news.net
On Saturday, August 28 at the Santa Barbara Airport, Martha
and I were held at gunpoint, ordered from our Cessna 172,
handcuffed and detained in the back of two separate police
cars.
Later, the Santa Barbara Police told us that a "private
company" had called them and reported that N50545 had been stolen
and was on its way to Santa Barbara Airport. In fact, the airplane
that had been stolen (8 years ago) was a 1968 C150J and the
registration for that airplane had been cancelled by the FAA in
September of 2005. The registration number was then re-assigned
four years later by the FAA to the airplane we were flying, a 2009
Cessna 172S owned by Cessna Aircraft Corporation. It would have
taken less than 60 seconds on the FAA website to reveal these
facts.
Apparently the Santa Barbara Police took the word of a
company they were not familiar with, failed to make even
rudimentary checks on the web, confused a 2009 Cessna 172S with a
1968 150J, and on that basis, put us at grave risk by creating a
situation that could have been lethal.
The "private company" that supposedly had called the Santa
Barbara Police was the El Paso Intel Center (EPIC). In reality this
"private company" is shown on the web as a program of the
DEA.
The concerning issue to us, as it should be for all pilots,
is that apparently nobody is bothering to remove a registration
number from the stolen aircraft list when a registration number has
been re-assigned. As a result, completely innocent citizens wind up
being detained at gunpoint. It appears that there is no system in
place to prevent this from happening repeatedly.
We had flown up IFR, utilizing a system in which we gave the
FAA our name, address and contact information and announced to the
world that we were going to Santa Barbara-hardly, it seems, the way
someone flying a stolen airplane would behave.
In many ways the Santa Barbara Police Department could feel
set up for this failure, by a system that falsely reported the
aircraft as stolen. Had it been a reportedly stolen automobile,
they would have verified their facts with the DMV before they took
action. But they don't know anything about aircraft. One officer
asked me where he could find the vehicle identification number
(VIN) for the aircraft. When I said that aircraft don't have a VIN
the officer said to me, "Yes they do." I finally realized he wanted
to know where to find the aircraft serial number.
Read more at www.aero-news.net
 

Friday, August 20, 2010

JASDF Boeing KC-767J Take off at Komaki

Japan Air Self Defense Force KC-767J military aerial refueling taking off from

Nagoya - Komaki Airport


Airbus Should Launch All-New A320 If Boeing Does The Same With The 737 - GLG News


Moscow Delivers A Nuclear Submarine To India

So, this has nothing to do with aviation, but I found it interesting nonetheless.



This article was originally printed in French and was auto-translated to English.

Amplify’d from www.aerocontact.com

MOSCOW, Aug. 20 (Reuters) - Russia has delivered to the Indian Navy a submarine with nuclear propulsion, the NERP, leased for ten years to force New Delhi, reported Friday, Russian news agencies.

In November 2008, an accident had twenty deaths on board the NERP, which was conducting tests in the Pacific Ocean.

The submarine, with an Indian crew, left the base this week on the Russian Pacific coast to India, says agency Interfax quoted a source within the Russian military-industrial complex.

The RIA news agency, she said, citing a source in the Pacific Fleet, wrote that the crew consists of Russian and Indian seamen and that the submarine conducts tests and has still not been officially handed over to India .

Neither the Russian Ministry of Defence nor the staff of the navy could not be contacted immediately. The press service of the Pacific Fleet gave no details.

The NERP, the last built submarines of the class "Akula", according to the name of NATO, entered service in late 2009.

In initial trials Wed, November 8, 2008, three soldiers and 17 civilians were killed and 21 others injured in an accident related to the inadvertent fire suppression system based on freon, a highly toxic gas.

The submarine has eight torpedo launchers of 533 mm and 650 mm. Its draft is 8140-12770 tons, maximum speed of 30 knots, maximum depth of immersion of 600 meters. Its range is 100 days and its crew of 73 people. (Dmitry Solovyov, Guy Kerivel for the French service)

Read more at www.aerocontact.com
 

Russia To Buy French Made Helicopter Carriers?

If this isn't a sign of the apocalypse, I don't know what is. Russia is looking to buy 2 helicopter carriers, and the company that is considered the front runner is French.



Since when does Russia buy western military hardware?



For the record, the article I clipped was auto-translated from French-English.

Amplify’d from www.aerocontact.com


YEREVAN, August 20 (Reuters) - Russia will launch an international tender for the purchase of two helicopter carriers for its navy said Friday that the Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov.

The latter said that the Russian Defense planned to choose the manufacturer of these ships by the end of the year.

"We are talking of two vessels for the moment," he told reporters in the Armenian capital where he was accompanying Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

Yet Russia has discussed for months with France on the acquisition of buildings and projection command (PCB) type Mistral.

President Nicolas Sarkozy had also assured last month that the sale to Russia of ships Mistral, which can carry helicopters, was acquired.

A leader of the shipyards had also said that the agreement should be finalized by the end of the year.

However, the Russian Minister of Defense said in May that Moscow also discussed this issue with Spain and the Netherlands.

Anatoly Serdyukov said Friday that the French shipyard DCN, including the specialist defense electronics Thales shareholder, were welcome if they wanted to participate in international bidding.

PRESSURES ON PARIS?

The announcement came a day after an article published by the Russian business daily Kommersant referring to the launch of such a tender, citing Roman Trofimenko, president of the United Shipbuilding Corporation public group.

On Thursday, the Elysee had expressed his confidence on the outcome of ongoing negotiations with Moscow.

"France sees no reason to worry about current developments. Conversations are continuing normally in a good background," he then said the French presidency.

Some analysts believe that Moscow is seeking with its tender to put pressure on Paris to obtain better conditions for the acquisition of vessels Mistral.

"It should not be excluded that the holding of such a tender could be aimed at obtaining a better price, better terms, (transaction) and, finally, transfer of technology ( by France to Russia), "said Konstantin Makiyenko, deputy director of the Center for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies, a Moscow think tank.

He estimated that the acquisition of two ships to France Mistral cost up to 800 million euros.

(With Dmitry Solovyov in Moscow, Catherine and Alexander Monin Boksenbaum-Granier for the French service, edited by Gwénaëlle Barzic)

Read more at www.aerocontact.com