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NAS Daily 06 NOV 13

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miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 06 Nov 13, 10:10Post
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News

Civil Aviation

Boeing Working With Air India On 787 Window Crack
Boeing is working with Air India after the cockpit window of a 787 Dreamliner cracked while landing in Australia, the plane maker said on Tuesday. The incident comes just weeks after a body panel fell off a 787 also operated by Air India, a development that Boeing and the airline are still investigating. Indian media reported on Monday that the flight from Delhi, carrying 74 passengers, developed a crack late Sunday while landing in Melbourne.
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Japanese Govt. Sticking To Haneda Slot Allocation
Japan's government said on Tuesday it was sticking to a handout of new landing rights at Tokyo's Haneda airport that Japan Airlines complained was unfair because it gave local rival ANA twice as many slots. Japan's aviation regulators responded to a request from JAL for a review of the allocation submitted a month ago, sticking to its decision to give JAL five new slots compared with 11 for ANA. "It's water under the bridge," Shigenori Hiraoka, director of aviation industries at Japan's Civil Aviation Bureau, told Reuters news agency. The bureau has never revised slot allocations, he said.
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Westjet's Third Quarter Profit Drops
WestJet Airlines, Canada's second-largest carrier, reported a better-than-expected quarterly profit as expenses fell. Net income dropped to CAD$65.1 million in the quarter, from CAD$70.6 million a year earlier. Revenue grew nearly 7 percent to CAD$924.8 million (USD$888.5 million). Load factor fell to 82.8 percent in the third quarter from 84.6 percent a year earlier. Cost per available seat mile (CASM), excluding fuel and employee profit-sharing costs, declined 1.5 percent in the third quarter ended September 30.
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Ryanair Investors Berate O'Leary But Fear His Leaving
When a Ryanair shareholder made a stinging attack on chief executive Michael O'Leary at the airline's annual meeting for scaring off customers with his "bullying" and "macho" style, there was one thing he didn't mention. That O'Leary's leaving was one of his biggest fears. As Ryanair scrambles to reinvent itself and woo customers from higher-cost rivals to fill hundreds of new planes, there are growing concerns about the cost of what O'Leary recently described as his "personal character deformities". But with his heir apparent about to leave - and as a series of profit warnings eat away at O'Leary's air of invincibility - a bigger worry is that Europe's largest airline has left itself over-dependent on a single personality.
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Boeing, IAM submit proposal on 777X assembly for vote
Leaders of Boeing’s largest union agreed to send members a proposal to keep assembly of the 777X and the new carbonfibre composite wing in Washington state in exchange for a package of concessions on retirement benefits. The proposal must still be ratified by a majority vote of the Boeing chapter of the International Association of Machnists and Aerospace Workers (IAM). Meanwhile, Washington Governor Jay Inslee has called a special session of the state legislature to quickly approve a package of major incentives, including an extension of tax incentives for commercial aircraft production, workforce training programs and infrastructure investments.
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US Airways reports 5.1% increase in Oct. traffic
US Airways handled 5.1% more passenger traffic in October on a year-over-year basis, the carrier said. Passenger revenue per available seat mile, a key revenue metric, also grew by 1% for the month.
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American Airlines implements gate-to-gate use of PEDs
American Airlines received approval from the Federal Aviation Administration to allow customers to expand their use of portable electronic devices (PEDs) in flight. "We’re delighted that our customers are now able to use their hand-held portable electronic devices gate to gate," said Jon Snook, American’s senior vice president for customer service.
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Southwest to offer TSA PreCheck by mid-November
By the middle of this month, fliers on Southwest Airlines will be able to take advantage of the Transportation Security Administration's PreCheck program.
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Delta reports increase in key revenue metric for Oct.[/b]
Delta Air Lines reported a 2% increase in consolidated passenger unit revenue in October on a year-over-year basis. Consolidated traffic at the carrier also rose by 1.4% for the month.
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FAA: NextGen needs more stable funding
The Federal Aviation Administration said the implementation of NextGen is vulnerable to the political nature of its funding. "We remain committed to NextGen in its current schedule, but we need greater fiscal certainty this year and beyond," said FAA Deputy Administrator Michael Whitaker.
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Boeing says 737 Max will save even more fuel
Boeing has revised the fuel-burn savings for its 737 Max up to 14% as compared with its 737-800NG version. "Fundamentally we’re really pleased with the market response to the Max and we can only see this adding to it," said Keith Leverkuhn, program manager for the 737 Max.
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Attorney general is open to AA-US Airways settlement
Attorney General Eric Holder said the Justice Department is willing to settle its antitrust case over the proposed merger between US Airways and American Airlines if the airlines make concessions. "What we have tried to focus on is to make sure that any resolution in this case necessarily includes divestitures of facilities at key, constrained airports throughout the United States," Holder said.
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DOT announces new policies for airline websites
The Department of Transportation announced new policies for airline websites, which will make it easier for disabled customers to access information. Airlines have several years to implement the changes and must also give disabled customers Web-based discounts if they cannot access the websites.
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Military

Taiwan receives first batch of AH-64E Apaches
Taiwan has received six Boeing AH-64E Apache helicopters, the first instalment of a 30 aircraft contract signed in June 2011. The aircraft arrived by ship and will need their main rotors and radar masts installed, says a source familiar with the program. Media reports in Taiwan, quoting defence minister Yen Ming, say the second batch will arrive in late December, and all thirty examples are expected to arrive by the end of 2014. The deal was conducted under the US government’s Foreign Military Sales (FMS) mechanism.
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US military completes OV-10 tests, keeps aircraft for now
US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) will keep two borrowed North American Rockwell OV-10G+ Broncos until early next year, when the results of the recently completed Combat Dragon II evaluation are in. What happens to the aircraft afterwards depends on the Department of Defense. “If DoD has no further interest in the OV-10s, then the aircraft will be de-militarised and given back to NASA,” says US Navy Lt Cmdr Li Cohen, a SOCOM spokesperson. Cohen declines to say what other military uses the turboprops might have. NASA loaned both aircraft to SOCOM to be modified for a light air support experiment, raising the possibility of reviving the venerable Vietnam-era platform for modern battlefields.
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Space

India's Mars mission clears launch hurdle
India’s first interplanetary mission began its 299-day journey to Mars at 09:08 GMT this morning with the 25th successful launch of the country’s PSLV rocket, from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota on the east coast. The Mangalyaan Mars orbiter is expected to reach the Red Planet about 21 September 2014, where it will conduct atmospheric research with a special emphasis on examining whether methane exists in the Martian atmosphere in significant quantities, which might be indicative that life was once present on the planet. The Indian Space Research Organization’s mission plan depends on building momentum in a series of ever-higher elliptical orbits around Earth before a final rocket burn pushes the spacecraft towards Mars. In Mangalyaan’s case, this Hohmann transfer orbit technique began with a 247 x 23,566km Earth orbit that will be raised in six firings to 600 x 215,000km before the final burn to Mars.
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Aviation Quote

I hate to shoot a Hun down without him seeing me, for although this method is in accordance with my doctrine, it is against what little sporting instincts I have left.

— James McCudden, VC, RFC, 1917.




On This Date

--- In 1915... The 1st catapult launching of an airplane from a moving ship is made from the USS North Carolina in Pensacola, Florida.

---In 1945... The 1st jet plane to land on an aircraft carrier is a Ryan FR-1 piloted by U.S. Navy Ensign Jake West.

---In 2002… National Airlines, already operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy, permanently ceases operations.

---In 2007…China’s first lunar satellite Chang’e1 enters lunar orbit.




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Editor’s Choice





Humor

Parachute Joke

An airplane was about to crash; there were 4 passengers on board but only 3 parachutes.

The first passenger said, I'm Kobe Bryant, the best NBA Basketball player. The Lakers need me, I can't afford to die.." So he took the first parachute and left the plane.

The second passenger, Hillary Clinton, said, "I am the wife of the former President of the United States; I am the most ambitious woman in the world. I am also a New York Senator, a potential future President and, above all, the cleverest woman in the world." She just grabbed the second parachute and jumped out of the plane.

The third passenger, The Pope, says to the fourth passenger, a 10year-old school boy, "I am old and frail and I don't have many years left. As a Christian I will sacrifice my life and let you have the last parachute."

The boy said, "It's Ok, there's still a parachute left for you. America's cleverest woman took my school backpack.




Trivia

General Trivia

1. How long should a pilot wait after refueling to drain the tank(s) to check for the possible presence of water contamination?
a. 5 minutes per foot of tank depth
b. 10 minutes per foot of tank depth
c. 15 minutes per foot of tank depth
d. 20 minutes per foot of tank depth

2. True or false; Robin Hood Airport is near Sherwood Forest and serves Nottingham.

3. True or false; The first successful man-carrying balloon flight was made on November 21, 1783, and was particularly hazardous because buoyancy was generated by fire and the balloon was made of paper.

4. True or false; Tropical storms become hurricanes when their steady-state winds reach 74 mph or greater. This is the minimum wind speed required for a discernible eye to develop.

5. True or false; Like Gulfstream IVs and Vs, space shuttle orbiters are not equipped with a standby magnetic ("whiskey") compass.

6. True or false; SpaceShipOne's two historic space flights on September 29 and October 4, 2004, reached sufficient altitude to qualify its pilots, Mike Melvill and Brian Binnie, as astronauts, but neither flight achieved the altitude reached by Maj. Robert M. White on July 17, 1962, in the rocket-powered North American X-15.
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
HT-ETNW 06 Nov 13, 11:23Post
2. True or false; Robin Hood Airport is near Sherwood Forest and serves Nottingham.

"False" by U.K.-standards. Itis near / serves Doncaster and Sheffield (and surroundings) hence its IATA-code "DSA".

6. True or false; SpaceShipOne's two historic space flights on September 29 and October 4, 2004, reached sufficient altitude to qualify its pilots, Mike Melvill and Brian Binnie, as astronauts, but neither flight achieved the altitude reached by Maj. Robert M. White on July 17, 1962, in the rocket-powered North American X-15.

I had to look this up, as I was too curious about it.
The answer is "True and False".
Both mentioned flights of Space Ship One topped the 100 kilometer limit set by Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, (at 102.93 km and 112.014 km) as did flight #15 on 21-JUN-2004 at 100.124 by Mike Melvill, so they both are "Astronauts".
With a top height of 112.014 km flight #17 was at a greater height than flight #91 of the X-15 of 22-AUG-1963 which topped off at 107.8 km. Flight #62 if 17-JUL-1962, which was the requested comparison, "only" reached 95.9 km of height.
Source of information: Wikipedia
-HT
Use your time wisely; remember that today is the first day of the rest of your life.
 

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