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NAS Daily 20 JAN 14

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 20 Jan 14, 10:08Post
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News

Commercial

Bomb Scare Causes Brief Brazilian Airport Closure
A bomb threat left in a Brazilian airport caused a TAM Airlines flight to make an emergency landing and briefly closed the airport in the Amazonian city of Manaus on Saturday, five months before the country hosts the World Cup tournament. A note that said a bomb was onboard TAM flight 3540 was found in a bathroom at Brasilia's Juscelino Kubitschek airport, airport officials said. That flight, which had already left Brasilia bound for Boa Vista, evacuated passengers via emergency slides when it landed on the runway at Eduardo Gomes airport in Manaus.
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Southwest Pilots Confused By Lights Of Wrong Airport
The pilots of the Southwest Airlines plane that landed at the wrong airport in Missouri last week told investigators they mistook the bright runway lights of a smaller airport for their intended destination at Branson Airport, the National Transportation Safety Board said. The pilots told NTSB investigators they did not realize they were at the wrong airport until they had landed, which required heavy braking to get the Boeing 737-700 with 124 passengers aboard stopped on the shorter-than-expected runway, the NTSB said in a statement. Southwest has suspended the two pilots from flying. The jet landed at Clark Downtown Airport instead of at Branson Airport, the main commercial air strip near Branson, which has a much longer runway. The airports are about 7 miles (11 km) apart.
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Mega-Merger Restores Air Finance Crown
Twenty years after the spectacular collapse of Irish tycoon Tony Ryan's plane leasing business, Ireland has restored its grip on the world's aircraft fleet with a mega-merger that could pave the way for a wave of multi-billion dollar IPOs. The USD$5 billion takeover of US leasing giant ILFC by AerCap, a firm that emerged from the ruins of Ryan's pioneering Guinness Peat Aviation (GPA), is set to send ownership of its fleet of 1,000 jets to Shannon, in the west of Ireland where GPA pioneered the plane leasing industry in the 1980s. A disastrous bet on an airline boom that was cut short by the Gulf War led to GPA's effective collapse in 1993 and an exodus from Shannon.
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Norwegian unconcerned by fresh 787 battery problems
Norwegian’s chief executive Bjorn Kjos says he is unconcerned by the recent battery problems experienced by Japan Airlines on one of its Boeing 787s and says no contingency plans have been drawn up should his fleet of Dreamliners need to be grounded. “Even with the 737 now and again you have these battery failures, I don’t think you would have heard this incident if it had not been for the earlier battery problem. But it worked out as it should do, it vented on board and it was during a technical test,” he told Flightglobal during the RunwaysUK conference in London.
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American’s Washington National slots auctioned in four bundles
The slots that American Airlines is divesting at Ronald Reagan Washington National airport will be auctioned in four bundles, according to the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority (MWAA). The US Department of Justice (DOJ) has split the available 44 slot pairs into two bundles of 14 pairs, one bundle of 12 pairs and one bundle of four pairs, said MWAA chief operating officer Margaret McKeough in a presentation to the airport authority’s board on 14 January. JetBlue Airways will retain eight slot pairs that it already leases from Fort Worth, Texas-based American.
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Brazil To Add 1,973 Flights For World Cup
Brazil's aviation regulator ANAC said it will likely grant airlines' requests to add 1,973 new flights to deal with the demand expected during World Cup soccer matches in June and July. Although the expansion in flights and routes represents only 1 percent of the existing system in Brazil, the number of requests exceeded the 1,500 new flights that had previously been expected. "We will grant all the requests. The system has the capacity to handle those new flights," ANAC's head, Marcelo Guaranys, told reporters in Brasilia.
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Beluga a whale of a transport aircraft for large cargo
The unique appearance of the Airbus A300-600ST has earned the freighter aircraft the nickname of "Beluga." The humpbacked Beluga has been modified to transport large cargo, such as aircraft parts, and cargo can be loaded and unloaded through the front of the aircraft. Airbus is considering building a Beluga XL, which could be based on the A330 and travel longer distances.
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United expects Q4 financial results to include $158M in special charges
United Continental Holdings expects its fourth-quarter financial report to include $158 million in special charges for personnel and integration costs.
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Survey: Business travelers fly Delta most often
Delta Air Lines was the airline listed on the most expense reports by business travelers in 2013, according to a survey from Certify. The survey also found that business travelers spent 22.5% of their travel budget on meals, and 15.7% on airfare.
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Southwest extends partnership with DISH
Southwest Airlines has extended its agreement with DISH that provides travelers using Internet-ready devices with free access to live TV channels and on-demand shows. The arrangement now runs through Dec. 31. "Southwest is in the business of providing exemplary customer service and this partnership with DISH has been very popular with our customers," said Kevin Krone, chief marketing officer for Southwest. "Free is a great thing for customers in this industry and having DISH providing this amenity through 2014 will continue to make our onboard experience even more entertaining this year."
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Omnibus spending bill includes $7.3B for FAA staffing
The House of Representatives and Senate passed the $1.1 trillion omnibus spending bill this week, and the bill includes $7.3 billion for staffing at the Federal Aviation Administration, which will make furloughs unnecessary. The bill also recommends funding the agency's aircraft certification service and transitioning to unleaded fuel in piston aircraft.
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TSA opens PreCheck processing center in Tenn. airport
The Transportation Security Administration celebrated the grand opening of a PreCheck processing center at the airport in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday. "TSA PreCheck is enabling us to move away from a one-size-fits-all approach to transportation security, as we look for more opportunities to provide the most effective security in the most efficient way," said John Pistole, TSA administrator.
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Military

RAF takes delivery of first three Chinook HC6s
The UK Royal Air Force has taken delivery of the first three Boeing CH-47 Chinook HC6 helicopters from an order for 14 of the heavy-lift transport type. Based at RAF Odiham in Hampshire, the aircraft arrived on 19 December 2013, says the UK Ministry of Defense. They will enter service with the RAF in early 2014 with the start of training activities, it says. The remainder of the Chinooks "are on schedule to be delivered by the end of 2015", adds the ministry.
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US Army to acquire 20 more Lakotas
A US spending bill expected to become law will provide the US Army with funds to acquire 20 Airbus Helicopters UH-72A Lakotas, the company says. The aircraft will be used by both the US Army and the Army National Guard, and will be delivered between September 2014 and July 2015, Airbus said.
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Despite reports, Sikorsky CRH contract is not done deal
The future of US Air Force’s next-generation combat rescue helicopter (CRH) programme remains uncertain despite an expected injection of more than $300 million in fiscal year 2014. That’s because, contrary to some reports, sources say current-year funding isn’t enough to guarantee a contract for Sikorsky, the only company to bid to build CRH. Both Sikorsky and the USAF have said a contract depends on funding projections for future years, information that likely won’t be available until President Barack Obama releases the fiscal year 2015 budget request.
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Bolivia seals order for six AS332s for drug enforcement role
Bolivia's air force has ordered six Airbus Helicopters AS332c1e rotorcraft to perform civil protection and drug enforcement missions. The deal will see an initial two helicopters handed over this year, with the remainder arriving by 2016.
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Aviation Quote

It is not possible . . . to concentrate enough military planes with military loads over a modern city to destroy that city.

— US Colonel John W. Thomason Jr., November 1937.




On This Date

---In 1913... Attempting to establish a new women’s altitude record, Bernetta Miller is covered with oil and temporarily blinded when her oil flow indicator smashes. She makes a safe emergency landing in New York.

---In 1932... Imperial Airways’ Handley Page H.P.42 Helena leaves Croydon, England, for Paris on the first leg of the company’s new mail service to Cape Town.

---In 1941…The Brazilian Air Force is created by the amalgamation of the Brazilian Army and Brazilian Navy air arms.

---In 1959…First flight of the Vickers Vanguard.

---In 1965…JPL proposes modified Apollo flight to fly around Mars and return.

---In 1966…The Short Belfast enters service with No. 53 Squadron RAF.

---In 1971…First flight of the Grumman E-2C Hawkeye.

---In 1971…The McDonnell Douglas RF-4E Phantom II enters operational service with the Luftwaffe.

---In 1974…First flight of the General Dynamics YF-16 72-01567.

--- In 1975... A Boeing 707, commandeered by three terrorists and flown by a crew of Air France volunteers, lands in Baghdad, Iraq. The terrorists forced the French airline to fly them out of Paris by taking ten travelers hostage yesterday, at Orly airport.

---In 1990… North American Airlines began operations.

---In 1990…US 64th manned space mission STS 32 (Columbia 10) returns from space.

---In 1992… An Air Inter Airbus A320 (Flight 148), crashes on landing at Strasbourg, killing eighty-seven of the 96 people on board.

---In 1997…Comet Hale-Bopp crosses Mars' orbit.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Humor

ATC

A Pan Am 727 Flight Engineer waiting for start clearance in Munich, Germany. He was listening to the radio since he was the junior crew member. This was the conversation he overheard:

Lufthansa (In German): "Ground, what is our start clearance time?"

Ground (In English): "If you want an answer you must speak English."

Lufthansa (In English): "I am a German, flying a German airplane, in Germany. Why must I speak English?"

Beautiful English Accent (before ground could answer): "Because you lost the bloody war!"




Trivia

TAM Airlines Destination Scramble

1. AARAAARURQ
2. CBABAHMOAC
3. BAODRCO
4. KNRFRFAUT
5. MUANAS
6. ETEDVOIOMN
7. IANNOCSU
8. UHZIRC
9. AACSACR
10. SORANILLOPFIO
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
FlyingAce (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 20 Jan 14, 15:41Post
1. ?
2. Cochabamba
3. Córdoba
4. Frankfurt
5. Manaus
6. Montevideo
7. Asuncion
8. Zurich
9. Caracas
10. Florianopolis
Money can't buy happiness; but it can get you flying, which is pretty much the same.
JLAmber (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 20 Jan 14, 17:00Post
No. 1 has to be Araraquara
A million great ideas...
miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 21 Jan 14, 09:19Post
Answers:

1. AQA, Araraquara, Brazil
2. CBB, Cochabamba, Bolivia
3. COR, Córdoba, Argentina
4. FRA, Frankfurt, Germany
5. MAO, Manaus, Brazil
6. MVD, Montevideo, Uruguay
7. ASU, Asunción, Paraguay
8. ZRH, Zurich, Switzerland
9. CCS, Caracas, Venezuela
10. FLN, Florianópolis, Brazil
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
 

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