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

NAS Daily 01 FEB 18

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 31 Jan 18, 23:25Post
Image

News

Air Belgium to start long-haul services from Charleroi
Air Belgium plans to begin long-haul flights from its Brussels Charleroi base this summer, starting with a Hong Kong service. The start-up says its first aircraft, an Airbus A340-400, will arrive at Charleroi in mid-February, and that the flights to Hong Kong will begin in March. Services to other destinations in China and elsewhere in Asia are also planned.
Link

Vistara eyes regional route for first international destination
Indian carrier Vistara has revealed that its first international service will be to a regional destination. Vistara's chief executive officer Leslie Thng made the comment during a televised interview on CNBC TV-18.
Link

Boeing releases strong Q4 earnings, upbeat 2018 outlook
Rising commercial aircraft deliveries and service transactions helped Boeing achieve a 39% jump in operating profit in the fourth quarter, rising to $3.03 billion. Boeing also released an upbeat forecast for this year, predicting a 6-6.8% jump in deliveries, rising from 763 aircraft in 2017 to between 810 and 815 aircraft.
Link

A321LR departs on maiden flight
Airbus has commenced the maiden flight of its new long-range A321LR, the aircraft having lifted off from Finkenwerder airfield in Hamburg at 11:08 local time. It took off from the German plant's runway 23 as weather conditions, including an overcast sky and rain, cleared sufficiently for the test.
Link

Short A321LR test campaign to focus on long-range operation
Airbus expects to need only 100h of flights to certify the A321LR, with the campaign centred on the aircraft's long-range capabilities. The initial A321LR – MSN7877 – has returned to Hamburg Finkenwerder, where it performed a low pass before circling for touchdown. Its landing at 13:42 followed a maiden flight, with a crew of six, which took the twinjet over the North Sea to the north of the Dutch coast.
Link

Air Canada to add nonstop domestic regional flights in July
Air Canada announced that new, nonstop domestic regional flights will be added beginning July 2. The routes include offerings in Alberta and Calgary. "With the continued growth at several communities on Vancouver Island and in the BC Okanagan, we see the opportunity to add new nonstop services and provide additional convenient travel options," said Air Canada executive Benjamin Smith.
Link

Air Canada wants to make loyalty program more personalized
Air Canada is looking to start its own frequent flier rewards program when its current contract with Aimia expires in 2020. With the new program, Air Canada hopes to improve the customer experience and offer more consumers more personalized rewards, says Mark Nasr, Air Canada's vice president for loyalty and e-commerce.
Link

Airbus eyes further A321neo stretch
Airbus has confirmed it is looking at a further stretch of the A320neo family, but is unlikely to make a fast decision. “We are looking at further opportunities,” A320 family head Klaus Roewe said on the sidelines of the A321LR first flight event in Hamburg.
Link

Ryanair closes in on Aer Lingus flight connections
Ryanair is hopeful of having its much-discussed feeder connection with Irish flag carrier Aer Lingus operational this year, Ryanair head of marketing Kenny Jacobs said Jan. 31.
Link

French Blue changes name after US LCC JetBlue objects
French low-cost, long-haul carrier French Blue is changing its name to French Bee to avoid legal problems after objections about its name from US LCC JetBlue Airways.
Link

Flybe making ‘strong progress’ on improvement plan
UK-based regional airline Flybe is feeling the benefits of a renewed focus on operating costs and fleet trimming. In a 3Q trading update of its 2017-18 financial year, the airline reported a 7.4% rise in revenue, to £172.8 million ($244.8 million), up from £160.8 million for the year-ago period.
Link

Spirit appears close to resolving difficult pilot labor situation
Nearly three years of contentious negotiations between ultra-LCC Spirit Airlines and its pilots may be nearing an end as the carrier’s flight deck crew prepares to vote on a tentative agreement (TA) for a new, five-year labor contract. Fort Lauderdale, Florida-based Spirit’s pilots, represented by the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), will vote in February on a TA endorsed by leaders of Spirit’s ALPA unit. The contract would include “significant pay raises, job security provisions and improvements in retirement and insurance benefits,” ALPA said in a statement. The contract would last until March 1, 2023, according to ALPA.
Link

Volotea sees passenger loads leap 42% in 2017
Spanish LCC Volotea recorded a 42% jump in passenger numbers in 2017, reaching 4.8 million, up from 3.4 million in 2016, beating the Barcelona-based airline’s predictions. The privately owned airline said revenues increased 22% in 2017 to more than €300 million ($374 million), but did not release profit or loss figures and did not respond to a request for additional details.
Link

Fate of Hemisphere project hinges on Silvercrest fix, CEO says
Textron has put the future of the largest Cessna-branded business jet on hold until it knows whether Safran can resolve a problem detected in October with the Silvercrest engine during high-altitude testing. Textron Aviation launched the 12-passenger Cessna Citation Hemisphere with 4,500nm range in 2015, promising to achieve first flight in 2019 with an aircraft powered by two 12,000lb-thrust Silvercrest engines.
Link

Bombardier enters final phase of Global 7000 testing
Bombardier has entered the final phase of a 14-month-old airworthiness campaign after the fifth Global 7000 business jet entered flight testing on 30 January. The debut for flight-test vehicle (FTV) 5 keeps the programme on track for gaining type certification in the second half of this year.
Link

Germany needs in-flight refuelling for future heavy-lift helicopters
Germany has confirmed that its future fleet of heavy-lift helicopters will require in-flight refuelling capability. Berlin in late 2017 gave the go-ahead for its BAAINBw procurement agency to begin the acquisition of around 60 helicopters to replace an existing fleet of 70 elderly Sikorsky CH-53G/GA/GS transports operated by the German air force.
Link

Leonardo extends three-year legal war over US Army helo contracts
A three-year-old saga over a US Army plan to buy more Airbus UH-72A Lakota helicopters opened yet another potentially lengthy chapter after Leonardo filed a new legal challenge just as a federal appellate tribunal rejected the last one. The latest twist in the legal wrangling puts Airbus’ final assembly plant for the UH-72A in Mississippi at risk, despite funded army plans to 51 more Lakotas after the lawsuits are resolved and up to 113 more in the long-term.
Link

NH Industries confident on sealing NH90 orders from Qatar and Spain
NH Industries (NHI) is hopeful that it can finally secure a firm order from Qatar this year for both variants of its NH90 helicopter. Doha four years ago signed a tentative agreement with the three-way consortium for 22 examples of the 11t-class rotorcraft: 12 TTH troop transports and 10 NFH maritime helicopters.
Link

UK begins Gazelle helicopter replacement effort
Initial work is under way to replace the British Army's active fleet of 22 elderly Aérospatiale Gazelle AH1 helicopters, as the venerable type nears retirement. "We do have plans to replace the Gazelle," says Air Cdre Al Smith, capability air manoeuvre at the UK's Joint Helicopter Command. "It hinges on operational outputs so the customer gets the same or better product," he adds, noting: "I think we can probably do better than we do today."
Link

Ethiopian Airlines will launch 3X-weekly Addis Ababa-Kisangani and –Mbuji Maya in the Dominican Republic of the Congo from March.

Turkish Cargo began weekly Istanbul-Miami, Florida Boeing 777-200F service.

Hawaiian Airlines launched daily Portland, Oregon (PDX)-Maui’s Kahului (OGG) Airbus A321neo service. Hawaiian will also begin Oakland, California (OAK)-Lihue (LIH) A321neo service from April 11.

Cyprus-based Cobalt Air will launch daily Larnaca-London Heathrow Airbus A320 service from March 27.

WestJet will move its nonstop seasonal service between Whitehorse, Yukon, and Vancouver, British Columbia, to Calgary International Airport (YYC) in Alberta, effective June 29. For the first time, flights between Whitehorse and Calgary will be available for purchase, from Jan. 29.


Aviation Quote

A top World War II ace once said that fighter pilots fall into two broad categories: those who go out to kill and those who, secretly, desperately, know they are going to get killed—the hunters and the hunted.

- General Nathan F. Twinning, USAF


On This Day

Click Here


Daily Video



Editor's Choice



Trivia

General Trivia

1. A pilot is practicing an on-pylon. He notices during the turn that the pylon is slipping ahead of the wingtip. He should
a. climb and reduce airspeed.
b. climb and increase airspeed.
c. descend and reduce airspeed.
d. descend and increase airspeed.

2. A pilot is practicing an around-pylon in a counterclockwise direction while under the influence of an easterly wind. On which of the following headings will rate of turn be greatest?
a. 090 degrees
b. 180 degrees
c. 270 degrees
d. 360 degrees

3. There are three types of airmets. A phonetic letter names each type. _____ refers to IFR conditions and/or extensive mountain obscurations; _____ is issued for turbulence, high winds, and low-level wind shear; and _____ advises of icing and freezing levels.
a. Airmet Sierra, airmet Tango, airmet Zulu
b. Airmet Tango, airmet Sierra, airmet Uniform
c. Airmet Uniform, airmet Zulu, airmet Sierra
d. Airmet Zulu, airmet Tango, airmet Sierra
4
. A U.S. military fighter pilot broadcasts the word Winchester. What is the significance of this transmission?

5. What was the first type of jet aircraft to fly nonstop across the Atlantic Ocean?

6. In the jargon of flight attendants, what is a thumper?
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
Paul Chandler1 24 Feb 18, 21:22Post
4) out of ammunition
 

Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests

LEFT

RIGHT
CONTENT