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NAS Daily 14 DEC 16

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 14 Dec 16, 01:14Post
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News

Airlines

Air Tanzania revealed as Boeing 787-8 customer
Dar-es-Salaam-based Air Tanzania has been revealed as the previously unidentified customer for a single Boeing 787-8, valued at $224.6 million at list prices. “The 787 will offer increased frequency to the country, significantly increase passenger numbers feeding on to its domestic flights thereby boosting overall tourism to Tanzania,” Boeing Commercial Airplanes VP sales-Latin America, Africa & Caribbean Van Rex Gallard said.
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Aurora Airline relaxes onboard device restrictions
Russia’s Aurora Airline has relaxed restrictions on the use of smartphones and tablets on takeoff and landing. The policy change, which took effect Dec. 12, allows passengers to use electronic devices, but they must disable wireless access and Bluetooth, according to Aurora.
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Emirates’ first Trent 900-powered A380 nears service entry
Dubai-based Emirates Airline is expected to take delivery of its first Rolls-Royce Trent 900-powered Airbus A380 later this week following what the carrier is referring to as a last-minute technical glitch with the engine. Emirates president Tim Clark said last month that the airline was not prepared to accept the aircraft until unspecified technical issues with the engine were resolved.
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Lufthansa pilot strikes cost $106 million in 4Q
The latest round of pilot strikes by the Vereinigung Cockpit (VC) union has affected Lufthansa Group earnings by €100 million ($106 million) in the fourth quarter, the company said in a statement. However, despite the strikes, Lufthansa said it transported 7.6 million passengers in November, up 5.9% compared to the previous year, when there was a seven-day strike by the flight attendants’ union UFO, which also led to significant flight cancellations. ASKs were up 9.3% and load factor increased 0.5% to 75.8%.
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MH370 search down to one ship
The Chinese search ship Dong Hai Jiu 101 will return to Shanghai after spending most of 2016 searching for MH370 in the southern reaches of the Indian Ocean. In a statement, Australian minister for infrastructure and transport Darren Chester thanked Beijing for supplying the vessel, which has assisted the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines 777-200ER since February 2016.
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Pakistan International Airlines chairman resigns amid crash probe
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) chairman Muhammad Azam Saigol has resigned as fallout from last week’s fatal ATR 42-500 crash continues. Saigol, who became PIA’s chairman just six months ago, stepped down for “personal reasons,” PIA said, making no further comment.
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Q400 and 777 in loss of separation incident over Sydney airport
An investigation is underway into a loss off separation incident that involved a QantasLink-operated Bombardier Q400 and an Air New Zealand Boeing 777-200ER over Sydney airport on 9 December. The Australian Transport Safety Bureau says on its investigations website that the Q400, registered VH-LQG, was departing Sydney on a flight to Tamworth when it “climbed above its assigned level resulting in a loss of separation with the inbound Boeing 777 on a crossing track.”
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Qatar CEO Al Baker considers upgauging Airbus order
Qatar Airways is considering switching at least some of its current order for Airbus A320neos to the larger A321neo model, the Gulf carrier has confirmed. CEO Akbar Al Baker made the comments during a press conference in Doha Dec. 12.
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SAS posts $142 million full-year profit
SAS Scandinavian Airlines reported a full-year net income of SEK1.3 billion ($142 million), up 38.2% from a SEK 956 million profit in the year-ago period. “During the autumn, market conditions have become more demanding and the industry continues its rapid pace of change.
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Southwest targets 100%-Wi-Fi equipped fleet by the end of 2017
Southwest Airlines plans to have a fully Wi-Fi-equipped fleet by the end of 2017, and has entered into agreements with inflight connectivity providers to significantly increase the speed of its onboard Wi-Fi services starting next year. Southwest said Dec. 13 that it has extended its agreement with longtime Wi-Fi provider Global Eagle Entertainment and signed a new agreement with Panasonic Avionics. Panasonic will equip new Southwest aircraft with its Global Communications Services offering, including the Boeing 737 MAX 8s scheduled to join the Dallas-based carrier’s fleet starting next year.
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CRJ crash: Display behaviour absent from operator manuals
Swedish investigators have found that operating manuals used by West Atlantic did not describe crucial aspects of the behaviour of primary cockpit displays in the event of an in-flight upset. The inquiry into the fatal accident involving a Bombardier CRJ200 freighter in northern Sweden, during a night flight on 8 January, indicates that the captain was startled by an indication of a sharp nose-up pitch on his display – an indication which was false.
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Airports

Jacobs Engineering to help plot Heathrow's sustainable expansion
Jacobs Engineering Group has been awarded a four-year contract by London Heathrow to provide airport planning and engineering services to support its sustainable expansion. It joins Heathrow’s new Integrated Design Team (IDT) of seven aviation planning and design organisations selected to develop plans for the airport’s expansion. The team will collaborate to help deliver one of the most complex airport developments in the world.
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Military

First two F-35s delivered to Israel
The first two Lockheed Martin F-35Is for the Israeli air force landed on at Nevatim air force base on 12 December, delivered on schedule despite temporary delays caused by the weather. The take-off from Italy, the last stop for the pair’s five-day transfer flight from the US, was postponed by some 6h because of heavy fog, but still arrived in the country on time.
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New A400M variant delivered to German air force
The German air force has received its sixth Airbus Defence & Space A400M transport, featuring a new baseline tactical configuration to allow the aircraft to operate in more contested environments. Airbus has incorporated a number of upgrades onto Berlin’s latest example, including the ability to operate from unprepared grass runways, act as an aerial refuelling tanker, and take off in temperatures of up to 55°C (131°F).
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Aviation Quote

Air battle is not decided in a few great clashes but over a long period of time when attrition and discouragement eventually cause one side to avoid the invading air force.

- Dale O. Smith


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Editor's Choice



Trivia

General Trivia

1. What airplane produced by a well-known aircraft manufacturer was rejected by the U.S. Army in 1973 because it could be brought down by bow and arrow?

2. What is the largest, post-World War II, piston-powered, twin-engine airplane designed from scratch and produced exclusively as a general aviation airplane?

3. Why should every dedicated pilot fly at least once to KFFA?

4. Several types of liaison airplanes served the U.S. military during World War II. Best known of these were the first five, the L-1, L-2, L-3, L-4, and L-5. Can you identify these utilitarian “L-birds?”

5. Almost everyone has heard of the Lockheed P-38 Lightning, but what is the Lightning II?

6. U.S. military flight-crew positions often have nicknames. What are the official positions of a boomer, a GAFO (pronounced GAY-fo), a raven, a GIB (pronounced gib), and a whizzo?

7. The Pratt & Whitney J58 (JT11D) engines that powered the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird use JP-7 fuel so inert that it could not be ignited with spark or ignition plugs. How was this exotic fuel ignited during engine start?

8. On November 13, 1942, and after having survived in a life raft in the western Pacific for 23 days, Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, Col. Hans Adamson, and Pvt. John Bartek were found by the pilot of a Vought-Sikorsky Kingfisher, a U.S. Navy seaplane. What was so unusual about the subsequent rescue?
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
CO777ER (Database Editor & Founding Member) 14 Dec 16, 15:59Post
3) First flight (Kittyhawk)
Zak (netAirspace FAA) 15 Dec 16, 11:15Post
ANSWERS

1. The Goodyear Inflatoplane was the world’s first inflatable airplane, needed only eight pounds of air pressure, and was powered by a two-stroke, 40-horsepower Nelson engine.

2. The Howard 500 resembles the Twin Beech Model 18 but is much larger, faster, and more powerful. It first flew in 1960 (only 16 were built) and had two Pratt & Whitney R-2800, 2,500-horsepower radial engines.

3. KFFA is First Flight Airport at Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, site of the Wright brothers’ first powered flight. Such a pilgrimage is most memorable if made on December 17.

4. Stinson L-1 Vigilant, Taylorcraft L-2 Grasshopper, Aeronca L-3 Grasshopper, Piper L-4 Grasshopper, and Stinson L-5 Sentinel.

5. The Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II is a stealth-capable, joint strike fighter that first flew on December 15, 2006.

6. A boomer is a refueling boom operator; a GAFO is a gear-and-flaps operator (co-pilot); a raven is an electronic warfare operator; a GIB is a “guy in back,” and a whizzo is a weapons system operator (WSO).

7. Triethylborane (TEB) ignites upon contact with air. The JP-7 fuel-air mixture ignites as soon as TEB is added. TEB also is used to light the afterburners.

8. The two-place airplane was too small to accommodate three survivors. With Rickenbacker and an aircraft crewmember lashed to the wings, Lt. William Eadie water-taxied his airplane across 40 miles of open sea to his ship.
Ideology: The mistaken belief that your beliefs are neither beliefs nor mistaken.
 

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