You are at netAirspace : Forum : Air and Space Forums : netAirspace Daily News

NAS Daily 01 MAY 13

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 01 May 13, 08:45Post
Image

News

Republic Air Says Still Working To Shed Frontier
Republic Airways said on Tuesday it still plans to shed its Frontier unit by June or July, depending on whether a sale agreement is reached. Indianapolis-based Republic, which operates regional carriers Republic Airlines and Chautauqua Airlines, has been looking to divest itself of Frontier since late 2011. It bought Frontier out of bankruptcy in 2009.
Link

Air Cargo Recovery Stalls In March - IATA
International air freight traffic fell by 2.1 percent in March from the same month a year ago on lower demand from Asian Pacific carriers, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) said on Tuesday. "The March decline in air cargo is most likely a temporary stall. The fundamentals for a sustained improvement in air cargo volumes are in place," said IATA Director General Tony Tyler.
Link

Russia Bans Airlines From Flying Over Syria
Russia has banned its airlines from flying over Syria, the country's aviation agency said on Tuesday, after an aircraft with 160 passengers detoured to avoid danger from fighting on the ground. Syria's spreading civil war has largely halted airline traffic to and from the country. The Rosaviatsiya agency said most Russian airlines had heeded a recommendation issued in February not to cross Syrian territory but some had ignored the risk and continued to do so on flights to and from Egypt, among other destinations.
Link

787 Grounding Cost JAL, ANA USD$110 Mln
All Nippon Airways and Japan Airlines, which together operate nearly half the world's fleet of 787 Dreamliners, estimate the jet's three-month grounding will shave a combined USD$110 million off operating profit, an expense they may ask Boeing to shoulder. ANA estimates the revenue loss from mid-January up to the end of May from being unable to sell flights on its 787s at JPY¥12.5 billion (USD$127.36 million), with the subsequent operating profit loss at around half that level or around JPY¥6.5 billion. The 787 squeeze on its earnings may have been enough to push ANA into a JPY¥3.6 billion loss in the three months ended March 31, Kiyoshi Tonomoto, a vice president at the airline, said at a briefing in Tokyo.
Link

Video captures Bagram 747 crash sequence
The fatal departure of a National Air Cargo Boeing 747-400F from Bagram air base on 29 April has been caught on amateur video. This is what the video shows: The first sight of the aircraft on film shows it in an apparently steady climb through about 200ft (60m) above airfield level, just after take-off, but with an extremely high nose-up attitude.
Link

Thomson sets date for first 787 services
UK holiday carrier Thomson Airways is to carry out its first Boeing 787 services in the second week of July, following regulatory for the battery fix on the type. Thomson Airways says the first flights will take place on 8 July on routes to Cancun and Florida. The airline will still be using 767s for services up to 7 July, it says. Thomson had originally implemented a surcharge for passengers wanting to fly on the 787, but says it will repay the fee for travellers whose outbound flights are on the older jets.
Link

US Army OH-58F makes first flight
The US Army's OH-58F Kiowa Warrior made its first flight on 26 April at the Redstone Arsenal in Alabama. The helicopter, which was designed and built by the army itself, will make a formal debut on 30 April. "What you're going to see is the ceremonial first flight of this aircraft," says Col Robert Grigsby, the army's project manager for armed scout helicopters. "The aircraft actually flew on Friday for the first time." Grigsby notes that a "structural test" airframe has already been flying for a few weeks, but that it does not have the avionics found on the F-model aircraft.
Link

Serbia nears new order for MiG-29s
Serbia is close to finalising a deal with Russia for the purchase of military equipment including six RAC MiG-29M/M2 multirole fighters and two Mil Mi-17 helicopters, according to local media reports quoting deputy prime minister and defence minister Aleksandar Vucic and chief of staff Gen Ljubisa Dikovic.
Link

Oman's Skyvan replacement nears flight test
Airbus Military's first of eight C295 medium transport and maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) on order for the Royal Air Force of Oman is due to enter flight testing at the company's San Pablo site near Seville on 14 May. Oman ordered five transports and three MPA in May 2012, as replacements for its aged Shorts Skyvans, with its deal including personnel training. The first of its new aircraft entered the final assembly line in Spain on 27 February.
Link

AA-US Airways merger will require new credit card
American Airlines and US Airways are talking to banks about branded credit cards after the two carriers complete their proposed merger. Currently, Barclays issues credit cards for US Airways, while Citigroup issues credit cards for American Airlines. "As we bring two strong currencies together, we'll have one, stronger currency," said Andrew Nocella, US Airways senior vice president for marketing and planning.
Link

China will approve Boeing 787 next month, exec says
China's regulators are preparing to approve the Boeing 787 in May, according to an executive from Hainan Airlines. China Southern Airlines and Hainan Airlines have ordered 10 Boeing 787s each, while other carriers in the country have ordered 15 of the fuel-efficient aircraft.
Link

2 unions agree to seniority rules for AA-US Airways merger
The Transport Workers Union and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers have agreed on how to calculate seniority for their workers after the American Airlines-US Airways merger. "This agreement was reached ahead of the deadline included in the TWU's Memorandum of Understanding, and represents significant progress as we continue to move toward closing our merger with US Airways," American spokesman Paul Flaningan said.
Link

Boeing: 787 grounding did not have a significant financial impact
Boeing CEO Jim McNerney said the grounding of the 787 Dreamliner did not have a significant financial impact on the aircraft manufacturer. "The customers are very positive," he said. "In fact, we've added orders over the time of the battery incident."
Link

Boeing prepares to launch new 777 model
A drop in the global air-cargo business is hastening the decline of the 747 jumbo jet just as Boeing Co. is preparing to launch a new plane that could ultimately replace it. With its distinctive hump and four big engines, the 747, nicknamed "the queen of the skies," has been a symbol of jet travel for much of the past four decades. But in recent years, as airlines have chosen to fly passengers in more fuel-efficient, two-engine planes, the 747 has increasingly become an aviation packhorse. Most new 747 orders have involved freight carriers, which have been weighed down by two consecutive years of recession in global air cargo.
Link




Aviation Quote

Good habits deteriorate over time.

Anonymous




On This Date

---In 1942... Squadron No. 588 of the Soviet Air Force, an all-woman night-bombing unit equipped with Polikarpov Po-2 biplanes, is formed in the USSR.

---In 1947…Malayan Airways (predecessor to Singapore Airlines) is founded.

---In 1952... Trans World Airways (TWA), British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) and Air France launch the world’s first scheduled tourist-class flights on their transatlantic routes from New York, London and Paris.

---In 1954…The Myasishchev M-4, the first Soviet bomber designed to reach the United States and return to the Soviet Union, is displayed to the public for the first time.

---In 1960... A Lockheed U-2 reconnaissance aircraft, piloted by U.S. Air Force Col. Francis Gary Powers, is shot down over the Soviet Union by a surface-to-air missile (SAM).

---In 1960…Thai Airways International (TG) is founded.

---In 1963... Jacqueline Cochran takes off from Edwards Air Force Base, California, to set a 100-km (62-mile) closed-circuit world speed record for women of 1,203.7mph in a Lockheed Starfighter.

---In 1965… Luna 5, USSR Lunar Soft Lander, launched. The lunar soft-lander failed and impacted the moon.

---In 1982…A Royal Air Force Avro Vulcan bomber based on Ascension Island attacks the airfield at Port Stanley on East Falkland Island. It is the first strike of Operation Black Buck, a series of five very-long-range missions to strike Argentinian positions in the Falkland (Malvinas) Islands. Each mission requires a 16-hour round trip of almost 8,000 nautical miles (9,200 statute miles; 15,000 km); they are the longest bombing missions in world history up to that time, and are not exceeded in distance and duration until the 1991 Gulf War.

---In 1982…BAE Sea Harriers attack Falklands targets for the first time and shoot down two Argentine Mirage III fighters. They are the first air-to-air kills of the Falklands War.

---In 1982…American Airlines launches AAdvantage, the first frequent flyer program in history. United Airlines launches its own program, Mileage Plus, only a week later.

---In 1990…First flight of the McDonnell Douglas MD 520N.

---In 2006…Song (airline) turned down all operations to Delta Air Lines.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Humor

The Chief’s Parrot

The old Chief finally retired from the Navy and got that chicken ranch he always wanted. He took with him his lifelong pet parrot.
First morning at 04:30, the parrot squawked and said, "Off yer hocks and don yer socks. Reveille"

The old chief told the parrot, "We are no longer in the Navy. Go back to sleep."

The next morning, the parrot did the same thing. The old Chief told the parrot, "Look, if you keep this up, I will put you out in the chicken pen."
Again the parrot did it, and true to his word, the Chief put the parrot in the chicken pen. About 06:30, the Chief was awakened by one heck of a ruckus in the chicken pen. He went out to see what was the matter.
The parrot had about 40 white chickens in formation and on the ground lay 3 bruised and beaten brown ones. The parrot was saying, "By God, when I say fall out in dress whites, I don't mean Khakis!




Trivia

General Trivia

1. Why was Kiwi International Air Lines, a U.S. scheduled air carrier from 1992 to 1999, named after a flightless bird (a kiwi)?

2. In fighter-pilot parlance, tallyho means that enemy aircraft have been sighted. It is colloquially used in civil aviation to mean that traffic is in sight. What is the source of this expression?

3. The Century-series fighters began with the North American F-100 Super Sabre, the McDonnell Douglas F-101 Voodoo, the Convair F-102 Delta Dagger, the Lockheed F-104 Starfighter, and so forth. The McDonnell F-110A Spectre became better known as what famous airplane?

4. What is VH and why is it more significant now than it has been in the past?

5. Frequently presented by the president of the United States in a White House ceremony, the Robert J. Collier Trophy probably is aviation's most prestigious award. Who was Robert J. Collier?
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
vikkyvik 01 May 13, 16:50Post
miamiair wrote:4. What is VH and why is it more significant now than it has been in the past?


Van Halen. As for being more significant now than in the past, well, I'd have to strongly disagree.
 

Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests

LEFT

RIGHT
CONTENT