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NAS Daily 26 JUN 14

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 26 Jun 14, 08:54Post
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News

Commercial

MH370 search to shift south along “southern arc”
Australia, Malaysia, and China have established the priority search area for MH370, the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777-200ER aircraft that disappeared on 8 March. The revised undersea search area is south of where an aerial and accoustic search took place in March and April, but is still along the “seventh arc”, where the aircraft transmitted its final communication, says Australian Minister for Infrastructure and Regional Development Warren Truss. The total area is 60,000 square kilimoters, and it is expected to take 12 months to search it throughly. This element of the search will commence in August, following a bathymetric (seafloor mapping) survey that is now underway.
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Mitsubishi mounts engines on first MRJ flight test aircraft
Mitsubishi Aircraft has mounted the Pratt & Whitney PW1200G engines onto its first MRJ regional jet flight test aircraft. This comes shortly after the Japanese airframer completed the wing-body join of the regional jet.
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Azul receives first A330
Brazil's Azul has received its first Airbus A330-200, which landed at Belo Horizonte Confins International airport today. The aircraft, registered PR-AIZ, had departed from Lake Charles, Louisiana, where MRO provider AAR had repainted the aircraft in Azul's livery. Named "America Azul", the aircraft will enable the airline to launch its first international flights to the USA from as early as December 2014.
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Air France to extend cabin upgrade to A330s and A380s
Air France will extend a cabin revamp to its long-haul Airbus A330s and A380s, as part of a €1 billion ($1.36 billion) investment in upgrading the carrier's product. The SkyTeam airline had earlier announced the revamp for its Boeing 777s, and is in the midst of retrofitting 44 777s in a project to be completed by mid-2016. Air France executives announced in an event in New York today that the carrier will spend €300 million to retrofit 15 A330s and 10 A380s with the refurbished cabin as well.
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What do new bribery laws mean for hospitality?
Depending on who you are and what your principal interest is in the Farnborough air show, you might adopt any number of euphemisms to describe the chalets and exhibition halls of the world’s foremost aerospace event. You might hear the sound of cash registers ringing up sales if your focus is on breaking the record $72 billion in orders and commitments signed at Farnborough 2012. Your ear might be more attuned to the pop of the 3,500 or so champagne and wine corks, or the sizzle of choice cuts of beef if you are a caterer – or indeed a guest in one of these cocoons of warmth and welcome.
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Etihad Agrees Terms For 49 Pct Of Alitalia
Etihad Airways said on Wednesday it had agreed principal terms and conditions to buy a 49 percent stake in Alitalia in a last-ditch attempt to save the loss-making Italian carrier. The two airlines will now finalize the deal as soon as possible, subject to regulatory approvals, they said in a joint statement without elaborating on the terms of the deal. Alitalia has made an annual profit only a few times in its 68-year history and received numerous state handouts before being privatized in 2008. It was kept afloat by a government-engineered EUR€500 million (USD$680 million) rescue package last year but risks having to ground its planes unless a deal can be struck with Etihad to allow it to revamp its flight network.
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Wizz Air To Maintain Passenger Growth Without IPO
Wizz Air will maintain its current passenger growth rate, chief executive Jozsef Varadi said, despite scrapping plans to raise EUR€200 million (USD$272 million) on the London stock market this month. Varadi said the airline, central eastern Europe's largest, will fund expansion with its own cash but declined to say how much the business generates. A decade after Varadi started Wizz, it made a net profit of EUR€89 million last year on EUR€1 billion of revenue, carrying nearly 14 million passengers while national airlines in the region have struggled.
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Virgin America Flight Attendants To Hold Union Vote
Flight attendants at Virgin America are due to begin voting next month on whether to join a union, which would be the first at the California-based airline. The balloting by about 850 eligible flight attendants on whether to be represented by the Transport Workers Union (TWU) will be between July 16 and August 16, the union and the National Mediation Board said. Virgin America remains the last non-union airline among US carriers after JetBlue pilots voted in April to organize.
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NTSB Proposes Review Of 777 Flight Controls
The US NTSB said Boeing should consider modifying flight controls on the 777 in response to an Asiana crash in San Francisco last July that killed three people and injured more than 180. The National Transportation Safety Board accepted 30 findings following an 11-month investigation into the July 6, 2013 crash and made more than two dozen recommendations to the FAA, Asiana, Boeing, firefighters and San Francisco city and county. The NTSB said its investigation did not find any failures in the auto-throttle system or any other flight control or warning system. The pilots committed 20 or 30 errors in the final 14 miles of approach, the NTSB said, and it cited "mismanagement" by the pilots as the probable cause of the crash. The pilots, though experienced, didn't understand exactly how the auto throttle functioned and that it would not maintain minimum air speed in all circumstances. That complexity, and flight training manuals that did not clearly describe how the controls would operate, contributed to the crash of flight 214, the NTSB investigation found.
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Emirates president: We could still order Airbus A350s
Tim Clark, the president of Emirates, plans to reconsider ordering Airbus A350 aircraft. Earlier this month, Emirates had said the carrier would cancel an order for 70 A350s. "At the end of this year, beginning of next year, we will re-engage with Airbus on this airplane [the A350]. We will also engage with Boeing [on the Dreamliner]," he said.
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Sources comment on Boeing 787 production line
Last Thursday, Boeing Co. paid out big bonuses to its South Carolina workforce for meeting an early May deadline to significantly reduce the amount of unfinished 787 Dreamliner work traveling to Everett, Wash. But an unusual production mishap on the 787 assembly line in Everett, two days earlier reveals a continued problem with incomplete fuselage sections from South Carolina, according to employees with knowledge of what happened. And a day after that incident, production of the jet suffered another blow. In an accident unrelated to the South Carolina work, an Everett mechanic on the same 787 assembly line was seriously injured. The first mishap was traced to work done inside the Everett factory by a team from Boeing's plant in South Carolina.
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FAA bars model planes within 5 miles of airports
The Federal Aviation Administration is restricting model planes, which it defines as aircraft that weigh 55 pounds or less, from flying within five miles of airports without permission from air traffic controllers. The FAA also says unmanned aircraft must fly below 400 feet and can't be used for commercial purposes.
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FAA: Amazon's drone scheme is a no-go
The Federal Aviation Administration has published a drone policy document for public comment and among the drone uses it's banning for now are delivery of goods -- the plan proposed by Amazon Prime Air. "If an individual offers free shipping in association with a purchase or other offer, FAA would construe the shipping to be in furtherance of a business purpose," the FAA document says, "and thus, the operation would not fall within the statutory requirement of recreation or hobby purpose."
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Judge rules on no-fly list
A federal judge has ruled that the U.S. government's management of the no-fly list is unconstitutional because people on the list don't have access to a fair appeals process.
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Military

BAE commences KF-16 upgrade work in Fort Worth
BAE Systems has commenced the upgrade program for 134 Lockheed Martin F-16 C/D aircraft operated by South Korea. Two aircraft recently arrived at BAE’s facility at Alliance Airport in Fort Worth, Texas, says BAE. The aircraft will be upgraded with new weapons, imporved avionics, new mission computers, new cockpit displays, and the Raytheon Advanced Combat Radar (RACR). “The work is part of a Foreign Military Sales program for the Republic of Korea’s fleet of KF-16C/D Block 52 aircraft over several years,” adds BAE.
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Boeing proposes high-speed Apache, heavier Chinook
As the US Department of Defense pursues a family of high-speed rotorcraft, Boeing officials say two stalwarts of the current fleet – the AH-64 Apache and CH-47 Chinook – must be kept viable for decades to come. The AH-64E entered service last year, but an F-model is already on the drawing boards. Some upgrades – the 3,000shp turboshaft in development under the army’s improved turbine engine program (ITEP) – have been openly discussed. Boeing officials also believe high-speed capabilities can be added to the 40-year-old Apache design. Possibilities include adding a retractable landing gear, wingstubs to offload lift from a single main rotor in high-speed cruise and a tail rotor that articulates 90° to provide forward thrust.
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Eurofighter: new aerodynamics set for 2014 test flight
Eurofighter will by year-end make is final proof-of-concept test flight on an aerodynamic modification kit that promises to improve the combat aircraft’s subsonic turn rate by 15%. Adding leading edge root extensions and extended trailing edge flaps, and reshaping the side-of-cockpit ILS antennae covers as 70° delta strakes should improve the aircraft’s agility for close-quarters combat. Laurie Hilditch, head of future capabilities at Eurofighter, says the modification kit should give the aircraft the sort of “knife-fight in a phone box” turning capability enjoyed by rivals such as Boeing’s F/A-18E/F or the Lockheed Martin F-16, without sacrificing the transonic and supersonic high-energy agility inherent to its delta wing-canard configuration.
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Boeing plots hybrid Super Hornet/Growler future
Boeing is formulating a concept for a hybrid variant of the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet equipped with the electronic signal detection capabilities of the EA-18G Growler as it seeks to attract orders for new aircraft and upgrades to older models. The resulting aircraft would resemble an E/A-18G that lacks ALQ-99 jamming pods for electronic attack, preserves the ALQ-218 electronic receiver and adds weapons now only carried by the F/A-18E/F, says Boeing vice-president Mike Gibbons. “That hybrid just starts with the simple notion of take the sensor suite of the Growler and move it to a basically strike platform and then you grow that platform to take advantage of the fact that you can now see anybody that’s emitting,” Gibbons says.
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Pilot error caused Swiss Hornet crash, report concludes
An accident investigation into the fatal crash of a Swiss air force Boeing F/A-18D Hornet late last year has concluded that pilot error was to blame for the incident. Both people on board the training aircraft – including a doctor from the service’s Dübendorf aeromedical institute, who was on a familiarisation flight – died when it hit a mountainside near Alpnach on 23 October 2013. The aircraft was one of two which had taken off from Meiringen air base at 13:35 local time for a training sortie, along with a single-seat F/A-18C.
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Corporate

Bombardier asks for Challenger engine exemption
Bombardier has appealed to the US Federal Aviation Administration for an exemption for its latest Challenger 350 business jets from the need to meet existing regulations on protection against uncontrollable high engine thrust, on the grounds that such an event is “extremely improbable”. An “uncontrollable high thrust” (UHT) event refers to an incident in which the full authority digital engine control system fails, allowing the thrust, rotational speed (rpm) and internal engine temperatures to increase above the normal upper limits, and then fails to respond to power lever commands to reduce thrust. The only protection is shutting off the fuel supply to the affected engine, and the risk is potential engine mechanical failure: contained or uncontained.
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Aviation Quote

I hope you either take up parachute jumping or stay out of single motored airplanes at night.

— Charles A. Lindbergh, to Wiley Post, 1931.




On This Date

---In 1869... Largest hydrogen balloon ever to make a free (untethered) ascent, makes a short flight from the Champs de Mars in Paris, France. It has a capacity of 424,000 cubic feet (c. 130,000 cubic meters).

---In 1909... The first commercial sale of an airplane in the United States is made as Glenn H. Curtiss sells one of his planes to the Aeronautic Society of New York for $7,500. This action spurs the Wright brothers to begin a patent suit to prevent him from selling airplanes without a license.

---In 1911... As spectators watch in amazement, Lincoln Beachey flies his Curtiss pusher biplane over Horseshoe Falls, the most spectacular of the Niagara Falls.

--- In 1936... The first flight of the first practical helicopter with two side-by-side rotors is made in Germany. Designed by Henrich Focke, the Focke-Achgelis FW-61 makes many flights, the longest being one hour and 20 minutes.

---In 1942…First flight of the Grumman XF6F Hellcat.

---In 1946... The U.S. Army Air Force and Navy adopt the “knot” and “nautical mile” as standard aeronautical units for speed and distance. A nautical mile is about 6.080 ft. (1,853 m), and knot is the equivalent of one nautical mile per hour.

---In 1948…the Berlin Airlift begins, with USAF, Royal Air Force, and British civil transport aircraft carrying supplies into West Berlin.

---In 1988…Air France Flight 296, Airbus A320-111 (registration F-GFKC) crashed near Mulhouse-Habsheim Airport, in the Franco-German border region of Alsace. The accident occurred during an airshow while the flight deck crew was performing a flypast at low height and speed. The aircraft overflew the airfield in good weather. Seconds later the aircraft struck treetops behind the runway and crashed into a forest, as a result of flying too low and too slowly. Three passengers died and about 50 were injured




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Editor’s Choice





Humor

Innovation

During the heat of the space race in the 1960s, the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration decided it needed a ball point pen to write with in the zero gravity confines of its space capsules. After considerable research and development, the Astronaut Pen was developed at a cost of about US $1 million. The pen worked and also enjoyed some modest success as a novelty item back here on earth.

The Soviet Union, faced with the same problem, used a pencil.




Trivia

RAF, RN & Coastal Command

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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
JLAmber (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 26 Jun 14, 20:25Post
From the days when there were engineering shops all over the UK making real interesting stuff:

1. Blackburn Beverley
2. Hawker Hurricane
3. Fairey Swordfish
4. Hawker Typhoon
5. Vickers Wellington
6. Avro Lancaster
7. Supermarine Spitfire
8. Gloster Gladiator
9. Short Bros Sunderland
10. Short Belfast
11. Avro Shackleton
12. Hawker Tempest
13. DeHavilland Mosquito
14. Westland Lysander
15. Handley Page Halifax
A million great ideas...
 

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