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NAS Daily 02 OCT 12

The latest aviation news, brought to you by miamiair every weekday.

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 02 Oct 12, 09:34Post
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News

Boeing Engineers Reject Contract Offer
In a widely expected show of force Boeing engineers and technical workers rejected a pay offer on Monday, setting the stage for talks to resume Tuesday for agreements covering 23,000 workers.
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Kingfisher Locks Out Some Staff After Unrest
India's Kingfisher Airlines said it would submit a revival plan to regulators and clear pending salary dues in the coming days, after staff unrest prompted the carrier to declare a partial lockout and cancel all flights for three days.
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American Grounds Eight Planes After Loose Seats
American Airlines said on Monday it has temporarily grounded eight planes to evaluate them after seats became loose on two flights in the last few days -- incidents which have also prompted safety regulators to look into the matter.
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Gol To Order 60 Boeing 737 MAX
Gol Linhas Aéreas, Latin America's largest low-fare airline, plans to order 60 737 MAX jets with improved fuel efficiency from Boeing after soaring jet fuel prices triggered a year of heavy losses.
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EADS/BAE Shareholder Demands Intensify
EADS and BAE Systems battled to save their USD$45 billion merger plan from the crossfire of competing interests on Monday as governments and shareholders staked out positions in talks aimed at creating the world's biggest aerospace and arms firm.
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Qatar Airways discusses A330 deal in wake of 787 delay
Frustrated by endless delays to its Boeing 787 delivery schedule, Qatar Airways is understood to have initiated discussions with Airbus about a major A330 deal. Chief executive Akbar Al Baker has been vocal about being "failed by Boeing" over 787 deliveries, which were due to begin in late August but still have not started as a result of unspecified technical issues.
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Airbus: A380 2012 targets in doubt as wing cracks issue slows production
Airbus said its A380 sales targets are becoming harder to reach this year because of the issue of wing cracks issue discovered in January on in-service aircraft.
Speaking on the sidelines of Thai Airways’ first A380 delivery in Toulouse last week, Airbus VP-marketing Bob Lange said it has been a tough year, with little time left to meet its sales target of 30 of the type for 2012. As of Sept. 26, four A380s had been sold.
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Philippine Airlines orders 10 more A330s
Philippine Airlines (PAL) has placed a firm order with Airbus for an additional 10 A330-300s. The new order follows a deal announced in August for 44 A321s and 10 A330s under the carrier’s fleet modernization program.
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ICAO sees EU ETS as regional issue
ICAO has insisted the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) is a regional issue despite being given a mandate to come up with a global approach to paying for aviation emissions. EU ETS is a market-based measure, designed to financially reward airlines with the best green credentials and penalize polluters. However, the scheme has stirred up major international tension because critics say Europe is using the ETS to charge for emissions beyond its jurisdiction.
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Lockheed Martin wins $1.85bn contract to upgrade Taiwan's F-16s
The US government has awarded Lockheed Martin a contract worth up to $1.85 billion to upgrade the avionics of 145 Taiwanese F-16A/B combat aircraft. "This retrofit program will include the addition of an active electronically scanned array [AESA] radar, embedded global positioning, as well as upgrades to the electronic warfare and other avionics systems of Taiwan's F-16s," says Lockheed. The company, however, did not state the provider of the AESA radar. The contenders for the sensor upgrade are Northrop Grumman's Scalable Agile Beam Radar and the Raytheon Advanced Combat Radar.
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US Navy works through F-35C air-ship integration issues
The Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) is working hard to integrate the Lockheed Martin F-35C Joint Strike Fighter onto the carrier deck, but challenges remain. Aircraft carriers, by virtue of their huge size and capability, are adaptable overtime, says Rear Admiral Thomas Moore, the US Navy's program executive officer for carriers. An individual carrier will repeatedly adapt new aircraft over the course of its lifetime and the F-35C will be no different.
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NASA awards risk reduction for advanced boosters
NASA has awarded three contracts for risk reduction on potential new boosters for the space launch system (SLS), the launch vehicle meant to launch a new wave of space exploration. Dynetics, which is cooperating with Rocketdyne to build a modernized version of the powerful F-1, will "demonstrate the use of modern manufacturing techniques" on portions of the rocket engine, including the power pack and cryogenics tanks.
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Delta refinancing deal with Barclays totals nearly $2 billion
Delta Air Lines has secured refinancing loans amounting to $1.7 billion in specified financing and $250 million more in unspecified financing, a company filing shows. The loans will refinance the existing senior secured notes on Delta's Pacific routes.
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AMR pilot union tells pilots to stop any deliberate delay tactics
AMR's pilots' union has issued a memo to pilots instructing them to stop using tactics to delay or cancel flights. American Airlines and the Allied Pilots Association have not been able to negotiate a labor agreement as part of AMR's bankruptcy restructuring.
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Boeing 787-9 development benefits from 787-8 experiences
Boeing is set to begin development of its 787-9 jet in the coming months, and the company is projecting an easier time with the 787-9 based on its experiences with the 787-8. Production on the 787-8 is now coming up to speed after many delays put the jet-maker behind schedule, and the company remains cautiously optimistic about the future of the 787-9. "From a production standpoint, all the major structural pieces are in initial build. In a lot of cases, we're early. It's a significantly different spot we're in than we were with the -8," said Mike Sinnett, Boeing vice president and chief project engineer for the 787.
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What happened to Delta's Comair?
Comair flew its last flight over the weekend. The airline was a subsidiary of Delta Air Lines under the Delta Connection brand. Rising fuel prices and hefty labor costs contributed to the airline's downfall because they made it too expensive for the carrier to compete, this feature says.
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Airlines target corporate travelers with special perks
Corporate travelers have become a prime target for U.S. carriers trying to combat rising fuel costs and stiffer competition. Some airlines have invested in bedlike seats, extra legroom and Wi-Fi connections to attract discerning business travelers.
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LAX project makes way for bigger jets, more routes
A major modernization project at Los Angeles International Airport is under way. It will increase concourse and taxiway sizes, up the number of gates available and heighten the airport's capacity for bigger jets. The project will cost $4.1 billion and allow the airport to increase the number of routes it can facilitate. LAX considers itself the third-busiest airport in the U.S. and the sixth-busiest in the world.
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Other News

IATA has revised its 2012 financial forecast upward, predicting the world’s airlines will earn a $4.1 billion profit for the year compared to $3 billion forecast in June. But profits will still be less than half the $8.4 billion airlines earned in 2011. Announcing the revised forecast from Singapore Oct. 1, IATA DG and CEO Tony Tyler said the fall in profitability this year will not be as bad as previously expected, “but we should not get too excited.”

Russian and Czech aviation authorities have signed a new air service agreement (ASA) and added one more designated carrier from each country on the Moscow-Prague route. According to a memorandum of understanding concluded by the countries' aviation authorities this September the new document will be signed in 2013. It was decided that from the date of signature of the new ASA each country may designate a second airline to operate scheduled services on the Moscow-Prague route with up to seven weekly frequencies. Now only Russian Aeroflot and Czech Airlines can perform the flights between these cities. Both of the carriers are SkyTeam alliance members.

Ras Al Khaimah International Airport in the UAE has awarded ARINC a multi-million dollar, 10-year contract to design, supply and install passenger processing and airport operational systems. These will include ARINC’s common use passenger processing systems, airport operational database , flight information display system, and what ARINC claims to be the first off-site hotel check-in and bag drop in the region. The contract was announced at the 18th World Route Development Forum (World Routes) in Abu Dhabi.

AllegiantTravel Co., parent of Allegiant Air (G4), has formed a mobile technology joint venture (JV) with airline technology consultant AvIntel and mobile data product developer Lixar IT. The JV, called Allegiant Systems, will provide mobile technology services to the commercial aviation industry.

Airbus has delivered the 100th A320 family aircraft assembled at its final assembly line in China. The A320 was delivered to Air China and will be deployed on domestic routes.

Eznis Airways leased one Bombardier Q400 from Nordic Aviation Capital.

GECAS opened a distribution warehouse in Singapore for its asset management services business.

LAN Airlines placed an order with Airbus for its Space-Flex PRM lavatory to equip new A320 aircraft.




Aviation Quote

It's just like being in a knife fight in a dirt-floor bar. If you want to fix a fella, the best way to do it is to get behind him and stick him in the back. It's the same in an air fight. If you want to kill that guy, the best thing to do is get around behind him where he can't see you . . . . and shoot him.

— Captain William O'Brian, 357th Fighter Group, USAAF.



On This Date

---In 1910…History’s first mid-air collision takes place near Milan, Italy. One pilot is injured, but both survive.

---In 1918... The Kettering Bug pilotless airplane being developed by Charles F. Kettering makes its first successful unmanned flight test, albeit for only nine seconds.

---In 1941…German pilot Heini Dittmar sets an airspeed record of 1,004 km/h (624 mph) flying a Messerschmitt Me 163A. Due to the secret nature of the program, however, the record is unofficial.

---In 1948…The Bukken Bruse disaster takes place in Norway as the Short S.25 Sandringham 5 flying boat (registration LN-IAW) flips over while landing in bad weather, killing 19 of the 43 people on board.

---In 1969…The Hawker-Siddeley Nimrod enters servie with the Royal Navy.

---In 1970…A Martin 4-0-4 (registered N464M), carrying the Wichita State University football team, crashes into a mountain near Silver Plume, Colorado, killing 31 of the 40 on-board. The crash was attributed to poor pre-flight planning after the co-pilot chose a more scenic route without considering terrain limitations.

---In 1972…An Aeroflot IL-18 crashes on takeoff in Adler, Russia, killing 109 people.

---In 1980…A Westland Sea King helicopter rescues 22 passengers from the Swedish ship Finneagle in the North Sea.

---In 1981…President Ronald Reagan announces the order of 100 Rockwell B-1B Lancer strategic bombers, re-starting the stalled program.

---In 1984…McDonnell Douglas is awarded a $438 million contract to develop the T-45 Goshawk jet trainer.

---In 1990…Xiamen Airlines Flight 8301 (registration B-2510), hijacked by a man seeking political asylum, collides with two aircraft on the ground while landing in Hong Kong, killing a total of 128 people. The hijacker wanted to go to Taiwan, but the aircraft did not have enough fuel, and he agreed to go to Hong Kong instead. On approach, the hijacker took control of the aircraft and landed at a high rate of speed, crashing into a China Southern 757-200 (Registered B-2812) and a China Southwest 707-300 (registered B-2402). Aboard the three aircraft, 96 people survive.

---In 1996…Aeroperu Flight 603, a 757-200 (registered N52AW), crashes into the Pacific Ocean killing all 70 on board. The aircraft had been giving erratic and erroneous aircraft speed and altitude information during the night flight, and not knowing their true altitude, the crew clipped the water and crashed after a struggle to recover. The crash was attributed to tape left over a static port after aircraft cleaning.

---In 2001…Once known as the “Flying Bank” thanks to its exemplary financial stability, Swissair grounds its fleet after running out of cash. The failure is the culmination of a series of bad investments combined with the sales downturn following the September 11th attacks. Most of its routes and planes would eventually be taken over by Swiss.




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Humor

Flight Deck Visit

The charter flight home had been a long one. The passengers had got a bit bored over the second half and cockpit visits were taking place.
After a while the crew were getting tired of this, so when the steward asked for "just one more", the captain told him to show the passenger the cockpit himself and then they were going to descend.

As they went through the plates, the crew heard something like, "So this is the captain on the left - the sexual adviser on the right and the flight engineer here behind. Now, these instruments in the middle are.." "excuse me, what did you say the man on the right was?" asked the passenger. "The sexual adviser." answered the steward "Now - these levers here are..."

"I am sorry to interrupt again" said the pax but do mean to tell me that you carry a sexual adviser on your crews?" The steward looked blankly at him. "Well I presumed so!" he answered - "At least, every time he opens his mouth, the captain says 'When I need your F---ing Advice, I'll ask you for it!




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And let's get one thing straight. There's a big difference between a pilot and an aviator. One is a technician; the other is an artist in love with flight. — E. B. Jeppesen
helvknight (Founding Member) 02 Oct 12, 11:08Post
1. American Airlines
2. Alitalia
3. Gulf Air
4. Iberia
5. Kingfisher
6. Air Egypt
7. Olympic
8. Pakistan International
9. United Old
10. United last tail before the merger
Hire Engineers to drive the vision and execute a plan. Hire MBAs to shuffle the papers and work in sales. Hire Accountants to manage your staff working a viable livable wage, and never have either an Accountant or an MBA run your company. - Steve Jobs
 

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