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

NAS Daily 16 SEPT 13

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 16 Sep 13, 08:59Post
Image

News

Bombardier Targets Monday For CSeries First Flight
Bombardier is targeting Monday for the first flight of its new CSeries jet, weather permitting, the plane maker said on Friday. Rain, cloudy weather and poor wind conditions in Mirabel, Quebec, where the plane will take off, have caused delays to the final stages of pre-flight tests, heightening suspense over the maiden flight, which has already been delayed three times since late last year. Monday's flight will be a huge milestone for the USD$3.4 billion, five-year project that Bombardier hopes will position it to compete against industry leaders Boeing and Airbus. The single-aisle CSeries, the company's largest aircraft family, is Bombardier's bet on the lucrative 100- to 149-seat segment, one it eventually hopes to command with a 50 percent market share.
Link

Boeing delivered last USAF C-17
Boeing delivered the last C-17 Globemaster III strategic airlifter destined for the US Air Force on 12 September at its plant in Long Beach, California. The aircraft is the last of 223 examples ordered with the service, but production continues for foreign orders of the aircraft. “We are continuing the legacy by building C-17s for our partner nations, and we will continue to work with the U.S. Air Force to ensure their aircraft deliver top performance into the future,” says Nan Bouchard, Boeing’s C-17 program manager.
Link

Lufthansa Close To Airbus, Boeing Jet Order
Lufthansa's board of directors and supervisory board are expected to approve in mid-September an order for about 50 wide-body jets worth more than USD$10 billion at list prices, according to two people familiar with the matter. The German airline previously said it expected to place such an order in the second half of 2013. Lufthansa is evaluating Boeing's 787 Dreamliner, Boeing's still-to-be-launched 777X, and Airbus's A350, which made its first flight in June. Final approval of the order is expected at Lufthansa's September 18 supervisory board meeting, after the airline's executive board makes a preliminary decision, the sources said.
Link

Avianca Cancels Some Domestic Flights
Colombian airline Avianca has cancelled 160 domestic flights until next Wednesday after pilots demanding higher pay refused to work overtime, the company said. Around 1,000 pilots are demanding a 15 percent pay increase from the airline controlled by Avianca Holdings, which also controls El Salvador's Taca. Taca pilots are not involved in the dispute.
Link

Embraer Says Strong Q4 Helps 2013 Target
Strong deliveries of regional E-Jets in the fourth quarter should help Embraer meet its 2013 goal, a senior executive of the company said on Friday. "We expect a large number of deliveries in the last quarter (of the year). We have very good visibility of hitting our target for this year," Paulo Cesar de Souza e Silva, the head of Embraer's commercial aviation unit, told journalists at an event at the company's headquarters.
Link

Rise In ATC Errors Linked To Better Tracking
New procedures to better identify air traffic controller errors showed a jump in incidents of aircraft flying too close to each other in the skies over the United States, according to data just released. There were 4,394 such instances for the year to September 30, 2012, more than double the level of the previous year, the Federal Aviation Administration said. Of the total, 1,271 were termed "risk analysis events," or incidents serious enough to warrant further review because aircraft had flown more than 34 percent closer together than FAA regulations allow, and 41 were termed "high risk events."
Link

Judge approves American Airlines restructuring
Judge Sean Lane approved American Airlines' reorganization plan in bankruptcy court on Thursday. "This is yet another important milestone in completing one of the most successful turnarounds in commercial aviation," said American spokesman Mike Trevino in a statement. "We are focused on the antitrust case and will show that our planned merger with US Airways is good for consumers and competition."
Link

JetBlue reports increase in August traffic
JetBlue Airways reported a 6.2% rise in traffic for August on a year-over-year basis. JetBlue boosted capacity by 7.2% for the month, and passenger revenue per available seat mile rose 3% for August.
Link

Southwest changes no-show policy
Southwest Airlines is changing its no-show policies. Customers must cancel their flight before takeoff in order to use the value of their ticket toward another flight. "There is no loss of funds if customers cancel or change their reservation before departure," Southwest spokesman Brad Hawkins said.
Link

FAA report: Collaboration improves reporting
The Federal Aviation Administration said “[c]ollaboration is now the rule, not the exception” regarding the reporting of incidents. “We’ve gone from counting errors to identifying and mitigating safety risk,” said David Grizzle, chief operating officer of the FAA’s Air Traffic Organization, in a report.
Link

ANA considers Boeing 777X, Airbus A350 for aircraft order
Japan's ANA Holdings plans to make a decision soon on whether to order 25 aircraft from Boeing or Airbus. "The key will be what plane matches our needs best," said Shinichiro Ito, president of ANA. The carrier is considering the Boeing 777X model or the Airbus A350.
Link

Lawmaker advocates privatizing airport security screeners
Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., said he is developing a new law that would mandate airports must use private screeners instead of Transportation Security Administration agents. "We need to get the government out of the personnel business," Mica said. "It's failed in almost every instance to stop people known to have terrorist credentials." Recently a team from Orlando International Airport went to San Francisco to see how private screeners operate the hub.
Link

Trinidad to end subsidies for jet fuel for Caribbean Airlines
Trinidad announced it will discontinue a $500 million annual subsidy for jet fuel to its national carrier of Caribbean Airlines. Airlines for America had raised objections to the subsidy with the Department of Transportation, saying it provided an unfair advantage.
Link

OnAir Play promises live news, content in the skies
OnAir has launched OnAir Play, a new in-flight entertainment platform offering real-time content and e-commerce capabilities. The content streams directly to passengers' devices.
Link

Foreign airlines offer child-free zones, child care
Some airlines are taking steps to address the needs of children on planes by offering nannies for child care, as well as child-free zones for other travelers. "Getting choice means you are satisfying both sets of people," said Azran Osman Rani, CEO of AirAsia X.
Link




Aviation Quote

In my experience flying search-and-rescue missions, the greatest single variable contributing to successful rescues was the preparedness and expertise of the person(s) in distress.

— Dr. Tom Gross, United States Coast Guard.




On This Date

---In 1908... The 1st fatality in a powered airplane occurs when Lieutenant Thomas Selfridge is killed while flying with Orville Wright at Fort Meyer, Virginia.

---In 1946…Scandinavian Air System (SAS) commences flight operations.

---In 1947…The United States Army Air Forces are separated from the United States Army and become an independent armed service, the United States Air Force.

---In 1959... The North American X-15 rocket plane makes its 1st powered flight at Edwards Air Force Base in California.

---In 1960…East African Airways launches jet service between Nairobi and London.

---In 1976…NASA unveils the Space Shuttle Enterprise, the first space shuttle orbiter. Though not constructed to enter space (it was not built with engines or a proper heat shield), it was used for approach and landing tests Dryden Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base. The Enterprise currently resides as a museum piece at the Steve F. Udvar-Hazy Museum outside Dulles International Airport.

---In 1993…The F/A-18 Hornet logs its 2 millionth flying hour - achieved in only ten years of operations.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Humor

Sergeant’s Methods

A group of Sergeants and a group of Air Force Officers take a train to a conference. Each Officer holds a ticket. But the entire group of Sergeants has bought only one ticket for a single passenger. The Officers are just shaking their heads and are secretly pleased that the arrogant Sergeants will finally get what they deserve.

Suddenly one of the Sergeants calls out: “The conductor is coming!”. At once, all the Sergeants jump up and squeeze into one of the toilets. The conductor checks the tickets of the Officers. When he notices that the toilet is occupied he knocks on the door and says: “Ticket, please!” One of the Sergeants slides the single ticket under the doors and the conductor continues merrily on his round.

For the return trip the Officers decide to use the same trick. They buy only one ticket for the entire group but they are baffled as they realize that the Sergeants didn’t buy any tickets at all. After a while one of the Sergeants announces again: “The conductor is coming!” Immediately all the Officers race to a toilet and lock themselves in.

All the Sergeants leisurely walk to the other toilet. Before the last Sergeant enters the toilet, he knocks on the toilet occupied by the Officers and says: “Ticket, please!”
And the moral of the story?

Officers like to use the methods of the Sergeants, but they don’t really understand them.




Trivia

World Airlines

1. What is the oldest airline still operating under its original name?

KLM
Northwest Airlines
Deutsche Lufthansa
Qantas

2. What airline carried the most passengers in 2005?

British Airways
American Airlines
United Airlines
Japan Airlines

3. Which of these low-cost airlines is not based in India?

Air Blue
Go Air
SpiceJet
Paramount Airways

4. What colour is associated with EasyJet?

Dark Blue
Purple
Orange
Maroon

5. Which of these is not an international airline?

Continental Airlines
Southwest Airlines
Northwest Airlines
Delta Air Lines

6. Which of these European Airlines is not operating?

SABENA
Air Dolomiti
Eurowings
Luxair

7. Which of these is a French airline?

GB Airways
Air Scotland
Brit Air
Aurigny Air Services

8. MALEV was the flag-carrier of what country?

Czech Republic
Lithuania
Iceland
Hungary

9. Which of these is not a Japanese Airline?

Skymark Airlines
All Nippon Airways
Asiana Airlines
Hokkaido International Airlines

10. Which of these is a Mexican Airline?

Aero California
Mesaba Airlines
Frontier Airlines
Chautauqua Airlines
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
vikkyvik 16 Sep 13, 15:17Post
1. What is the oldest airline still operating under its original name?

KLM?


2. What airline carried the most passengers in 2005?

American Airlines?


3. Which of these low-cost airlines is not based in India?

Air Blue?


4. What colour is associated with EasyJet?

Orange


5. Which of these is not an international airline?

Southwest Airlines AND Northwest Airlines :))


6. Which of these European Airlines is not operating?

SABENA


7. Which of these is a French airline?

Brit Air?


8. MALEV was the flag-carrier of what country?

Hungary


9. Which of these is not a Japanese Airline?

Asiana Airlines


10. Which of these is a Mexican Airline?

Aero California
FlyingAce (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 16 Sep 13, 15:26Post
1. KLM
2. Guessing - American?
3. Air Blue
4. Orange
5. Southwest
6. Sabena
7. Brit Air
8. Hungary
9. Asiana
10. None (though Aero California used to be one ;) )


vikkyvik wrote:5. Which of these is not an international airline?

Southwest Airlines AND Northwest Airlines :))

Continental hasn't been flying much lately, either :))
Money can't buy happiness; but it can get you flying, which is pretty much the same.
vikkyvik 16 Sep 13, 17:01Post
FlyingAce wrote:Continental hasn't been flying much lately, either :))


Ahhhh, silly me.
miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 17 Sep 13, 07:58Post
Answers:

1. What is the oldest airline still operating under its original name?

KLM.

Qantas was set up in 1920, Northwest and Lufthansa were both set up in 1926 and KLM (Koninklijke Luchtvaart Maatschappij) was set up on October 7, 1919. KLM is now a subsidiary of the Air France-KLM Group after being bought by Air France in 2004, however it is still operating under its own name.

2. What airline carried the most passengers in 2005?

American Airlines
American Airlines carried 98 million passengers in 2005 with second placed Delta carrying only 86 million. Source: IATA World Air Transport Statistics 2006.

3. Which of these low-cost airlines is not based in India?


Air Blue.

Air Blue is based in Pakistan and was established in 2003. It has been very successful, handling its millionth passenger in March 2006.

4. What colour is associated with EasyJet?

Orange
EasyJet was one of the first low-cost carriers, set up in 1995 by Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou. The orange colour is a distinctive part of the branding for this airline. Sir Stelios is a holder of Greek and British passports and he was knighted in 2006 for services to entrepreneurship. EasyJet has grown very quickly in its first 11 years and operates over 200 routes between more than 65 European airports.

5. Which of these is not an international airline?

Southwest Airlines
Southwest is one of the largest airlines in the world yet only flies within the United States. It pioneered the low-cost business model for airlines which has been copied by many of the newer airlines.

6. Which of these European Airlines is not operating?

SABENA
SABENA was the national carrier of Belgium. It was established in 1923 but went bankrupt in 2001 following a very unsuccessful linkup with SwissAir and the recession in the airline market that followed the September 11 terrorist acts.

7. Which of these is a French airline?

Brit Air
All are British based carriers apart from Brit Air which is based in Brittany in France. It was established in 1973 and operates mainly as a franchise for Air France.

8. MALEV the flag-carrier of what country?

Hungary
MALEV Hungarian Airlines was founded in 1946.

9. Which of these is not a Japanese Airline?

Asiana Airlines
Asiana Airlines is based in South Korea. It is an international airline and was established in 1988. All the other airlines operate from Japan. All Nippon is a large domestic and international carrier, second only to Japan Airlines. Hokkaido International Airlines is a low-cost domestic carrier. Skymark Airlines is another mainly domestic Japanese carrier.

10. Which of these is a Mexican Airline?

Aero California
Aero California is an airline based in La Paz, Mexico and was established in 1960. All the others are based in the United States.
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
 

Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests

LEFT

RIGHT
CONTENT