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

NAS Daily 19 JAN 16

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 19 Jan 16, 10:53Post
Image

News

Commercial

Airlines Enjoy Cheap Fuel, Other Costs A Focus
Airlines can look forward to continuing low oil prices for at least this year, helping to boost profits and drive demand for travel, but need to be wary of a swift rebound and focus on staff costs, the Airline Economics conference heard. Low oil brings non-fuel costs at airlines into the spotlight, and highlights the difference between legacy carriers such as Lufthansa and Air France-KLM and low-cost airlines such as Ryanair and easyJet.
Link



Airlines

Air Astana more than doubles its profits
Kazakhstan’s national carrier Air Astana has reported a jump in net profit to $47.4million in 2015, up from $19.3 million the previous year. “A sharp fall in revenue was more than compensated for by significant cost savings, including, though not limited to, jet fuel savings,” president & CEO, Peter Foster said, announcing Air Astana's 13th consecutive year of profitability.
Link

Air France offers “balanced compromises” on Perform 2020
Air France is proposing to add seven aircraft to its long-haul operation and expand Transavia France’s fleet to 40 aircraft, but is calling for further unit cost savings, under its revised Perform 2020 strategic plan for 2017-20. In October, Air France threatened to cut 2,900 jobs, scale back its long-haul fleet by 14 aircraft and close five routes by summer 2017 after failing to reach a productivity agreement with its flight crew unions.
Link

American to offer nonstop service between Chicago, Sacramento
American Airlines plans to offer service between Sacramento, Calif., and Chicago O'Hare starting in June. The carrier will offer two daily nonstop flights during the summer, and one daily nonstop flight after mid-August.
Link

Will ANA go large on A380?
If All Nippon Airways is confirmed as the unidentified customer behind an order for three Airbus A380s, it could be the start of something much larger for the Japanese carrier. Airbus confirmed that it took an order for three A380s in late 2015, with ANA widely reported to be behind it.
Link

British Airways Hopes To Add Tehran Soon
British Airways hopes to start flying to Tehran in the near future, after the lifting of sanctions against Iran. "We are very interested in flying to Tehran and we are hopeful that it will form part of BA's network in the very near future," IAG chief executive Willie Walsh told a conference in Dublin.
Link

Gulf Air plans ‘major aircraft announcements’ on Jan. 21
Bahrain national carrier Gulf Air is planning “some major aircraft announcements” on Jan. 21, the opening day of the three-day Bahrain International Air Show (BIAS). “As the national carrier of the Kingdom of Bahrain and a key national infrastructure asset it is integral for us to be involved in this significant, biennial event,” Gulf Air’s acting CEO Maher Salman Al Musallam said. “Gulf Air will have some very exciting aircraft announcements to make at BIAS 2016.”
Link

Hawaiian Airlines Celebrates Five Years of Service to ICN
awaiian Airlines this month celebrates its fifth anniversary of successful service between O'ahu's Honolulu International Airport (HNL) and its first destination on the Asian continent: Seoul, South Korea.
Link

Hong Kong Airlines Celebrates the Launch of Additional Flight to Tianjin
Hong Kong Airlines added frequency for its Tianjin route from one to two flights daily, commencing 16 January 2016. To commemorate the additional flight, a launching ceremony and press conference was held at the St. Regis Hotel Tianjin.
Link

IAG Interested In Second-hand A380s
British Airways owner IAG has held talks on the possibility of purchasing second-hand Airbus A380s as it says the existing options it holds for new aircraft are too expensive. "We have options on A380s… but we are not going to exercise them because they are too expensive," chief executive Willie Walsh said at a conference in Dublin.
Link

JetBlue to launch nonstop service between Palm Springs, NYC
JetBlue Airways plans to debut nonstop service between Palm Springs, Calif., and John F. Kennedy International Airport. The carrier will deploy Airbus A320 aircraft, which seat 150 passengers, for the route.
Link



Airports

BNA handled record passengers in 2015
The Nashville International Airport in Tennessee served 11.6 million passengers in 2015, setting a new record. Compared to 2014, the airport handled 6% more passengers.
Link



Military

It takes commitment, dedication to keep old warbirds flying
As chief pilot for the Collings Foundation and Lone Star Flight Museum in Texas, Rick Sharpe knows what it takes to keep Cold War-era aircraft like the Douglas TA-4J Skyhawk and the F-100F Super Sabre in the air. "It takes a certain amount of commitment and a certain amount of dedication to keep these things going," he says
Link

Bell to test new blades for V-22 Osprey
Bell Helicopter will, in 2017, fly a V-22 tiltrotor equipped with new prop rotor blades designed to reduce manufacturing costs on the type. The modification is the latest in a series of trials under the manufacturer's Advanced Technology Tiltrotor (ATTR) effort; a risk-reduction exercise for the Osprey's US Marine Corps and US Air Force customers.
Link



General Aviation

Cirrus pushes back first deliveries of SF50 Vision jet
Cirrus Aircraft now says the first deliveries of its new SF50 Vision jet will take place in the first half of 2016. The company is still working toward certification of the airplane and has a few technical problems that remain to be solved.
Link

French aerobatic champ set to be first female pilot in Red Bull Air Race
Five-time French aerobatic champion Melanie Astles is set to be the first woman to compete in the Red Bull Air Race when she takes off in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. She is one of three new pilots to join the race.
Link




Aviation Quote

It's hard to replace the gray matter that is inherent in every human being. No computer can do it quite that well yet.

— General John P. Jumper, USAF Chief of Staff, 'Air Line Pilot' magazine, April 2007




[i]On This Date

Click Here




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Trivia

General Aircraft Knowledge

1. Cessna Aircraft has used the prefix Sky in naming eight models of its aircraft. Can you name them?

2. During a hard landing, the wings of an airplane tend to flex downward. At such a time, a G-meter in the airplane indicates:
(a) More than +1 G.
(b) Between 0 and +1 G.
(c) Between 0 and -1 G.
(d) More than -1 G.

3. What is the difference between a hazard and a risk.

4. What is the only airplane in which additional cruise speed results in decreased fuel consumption?

5. True or false; a batted baseball travels farther in humid air than in dry air.
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
JLAmber (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 19 Jan 16, 15:55Post
1. Skyhawk, Skylark, Skywagon, Skylane, Skycatcher.....

3. Hazard is an overrated Belgian footballer, Risk is a terrible 1980s board game.

5. True. The Magnus Effect is increased in damp air giving the ball more spin and making it travel further.
A million great ideas...
 

Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 16 guests

LEFT

RIGHT
CONTENT