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NAS Daily 19 NOV 13

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 19 Nov 13, 04:55Post
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Commercial

Kazan crash captured on airport cameras
The final moments of the ill-fated Tatarstan Air Boeing 737-500 appear to have been captured on Kazan airport's security cameras. According to Kazan airport authorities, the Tatarstan Air Boeing 737-500 crashed during a go-around manoeuvre following an attempted night approach to runway 29. As they initiated the go-around, the crew told air traffic control they were abandoning the approach because it was "unstabilised", a generic term meaning that the aircraft's speed or the descent profile, or both, were not within acceptable parameters to assure a safe landing. A few moments later security video cameras caught the last two seconds of the aircraft's flight before impact with the surface. It was in an almost vertical descent, and although the night-time view was poor quality, it appears to be in a nose-down dive. There also appear to be one or two small flashes from the aircraft's wing just before impact, when there is a huge explosion and fireball.
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Royal approval for Brunei's 787s
Royal Brunei Airlines’ new Boeing 787-8s have been very well received by passengers on its regional network, so much so that it may revise its plans only to use them on long-haul services. “The feedback on our regional routes is very strong,” says deputy chairman Dermot Mannion, speaking from the Dubai air show where one of its two 787s is on static display. “We didn’t have a plan to operate 787s regionally when we started out, but there is the beginnings of a case to look at operating the 787 on sector lengths of 5-6 hours.”
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Bombardier CSeries Order Drought Continues
Bombardier has failed to announce any sales for its CSeries jet in the opening days of the Dubai Airshow, extending a five-month drought in demand for the new model. Bombardier has struggled to win orders for its CSeries narrow-body against models from Boeing and Airbus. Bombardier instead announced on Monday two conditional deals for up to 12 of its Q400 short-haul turboprops, worth a total of USD$423 million at list prices. "I don't know that there was a high amount of expectation going into this particular show," Stonecap Securities analyst Scott Rattee said. "In terms of the CSeries, I don't know that this was going to be a headline-grabbing show for them."
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Qatar Air To Launch Saudi Domestic Services
Qatar Airways will launch domestic operations in Saudi Arabia in the first half of 2014, the airline's chief executive said on Monday. Akbar Al Baker said the Saudi domestic services carrier will be called Al Maha Airways and will start with the main cities of the kingdom including Riyadh and Jeddah, and then move to the second-tier cities. "We have chosen the name of the Saudi carrier... Al Maha Airways. We hope to start operations in the first half of next year," Al Baker told Reuters news agency at the Dubai Airshow.
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Boeing plans first 777X flight in 2019
Boeing has outlined the development schedule for its 777X program, which is aimed for a service-entry in 2020. Part production for the large twinjet is to begin in 2017, with the first flight scheduled to take place in 2019. After the programme was officially launched at this year’s Dubai air show, top level design for the future 777 derivative is to be finalised by the end of next year.This will be followed by firming up the aircraft’s configuration in 2015 and detailed design due to take place in 2016.
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ATR still waiting to launch 90-seater turboprop
ATR is still awaiting shareholder approval to launch a 90-seat turboprop, which is planned to enter service towards the end of the decade. The airframer’s head of global sales John Moore tells Flightglobal Pro in an interview during the Dubai air show that the company has conducted a number of market and engineering studies for a 90-seater, but it is now up to its shareholders – EADS and Alenia Aermacchi – to decide when the aircraft will launch. “We’ve spent quite a bit of time looking at this market, we’ve got a lot of feedback from our customers and airlines who believe that there is a need for this product,” he says.
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Jet Aviation picks Rockwell's Venue for A340CJ
Jet Aviation Basel has picked Rockwell Collins' Venue cabin management and entertainment system and its Airshow 3D moving map system for an Airbus A340CJ VVIP business jet. “This is a significant milestone as this is the largest aircraft Venue will be installed on to date,” says Greg Irmen, vice president and general manager, cabin systems for Rockwell Collins.
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Reagan slots proved key for AA-US Airways settlement
The settlement of the antitrust lawsuit between the Department of Justice, American Airlines and US Airways primarily hinged on 104 takeoff and landing slots at Reagan National Airport in Washington, D.C. "In antitrust there is no lawsuit that can’t be settled and there is significant risk on both sides that you might lose everything," said Herb Hovenkamp, an antitrust law professor at the University of Iowa. "Once you got movement on Reagan, the rest of it fell into place."
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AA-US Airways selects new ticker symbol
The merged American Airlines-US Airways carrier will be traded under ticker symbol AAL on the NASDAQ, the airlines said. American's former ticker symbol, AMR, and US Airways' former ticker symbol, LCC, will both be canceled. "The combined airline will have a strong financial foundation and is poised to deliver significant value to shareholders as a result of its robust global network," CEO Doug Parker said in an announcement last week. "We are excited about what's ahead for the new American and what we will be able to deliver for our investors, customers, employees and other stakeholders."
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Delta CEO receives award from aviation society
Richard Anderson, the CEO of Delta Air Lines, received an award from the Tony Jannus Distinguished Aviation Society. "The bottom line is, this is an airline which is unsurpassed in America and the world today," said Will Michaels, the co-chairman of the Jannus group. Anderson received his trophy at a ceremony in Tampa, Fla.
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Reps. Meehan, DeFazio introduce bill to block CBP facility at AUH
Legislation introduced in Congress would stop the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency from opening a customs preclearance hub at Abu Dhabi International Airport in the United Arab Emirates. Reps. Patrick Meehan, R-Pa., and Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., introduced the measure on Nov. 14. Airlines for America said the Department of Homeland Security should "use its resources to focus on addressing lengthy wait times at several U.S. gateway airports, which inconvenience U.S. citizens and discourage travel to the United States."
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Column: Other agencies should follow FAA model of relaxing unnecessary regulations
Tyler Cowen, an economics professor at George Mason University, said the Federal Aviation Administration took a step in the right direction by relaxing restrictions on personal electronic devices. He also says government agencies have a habit of over-regulating life in the U.S. "One possible step forward would be to require agencies to submit plans for retiring some fraction of their regulations over the next few years, and to reward these agencies for seeing this process through," he writes.
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Republicans question DOJ involvement in AA-US Airways case
Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., said the Department of Justice was "overcompensating for past omissions" in its antitrust lawsuit against the merger between US Airways and American Airlines. Bachus was speaking at a hearing of the House Judiciary Antitrust Law subcommittee.
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Transport Canada lax on guidance for tech usage during takeoffs, landings
Transport Canada has yet to distribute any rules on the use of mobile devices during takeoffs and landings, which has discouraged most operators from testing the effects of such usage. "Transport Canada will not provide approved guidance. Therefore there is no guarantee that any of the costly and comprehensive testing we would conduct would be accepted," said Brie Ogle, a spokeswoman for WestJet.
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Rotary Wing

EC175 attains time-to-climb milestones
Eurocopter is claiming a pair of time-to-climb records for its developmental EC175 super-medium helicopter as it pursues certification for the type in early 2014. he first milestone saw it climb to an altitude of 6,000m (19,700ft) in 6min 54s and the second involved an ascent to 3,000m in 3min 10s. Both records have been ratified by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, says the Marignane-based manufacturer. It has now submitted the helicopter's flight manual to EASA as part of the certification process, it says. First deliveries to the three launch customers - Noordzee Helikopters Vlaanderen, Héli-Union and UTair - are scheduled for next year.
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Military

Sweden hopes to avoid Swiss referendum on Gripen E
Sweden expects to know by no later than the fourth quarter of 2014 whether the Swiss government will be able to move ahead with its planned acquisition of 22 Saab Gripen E fighters, with its timetable to be driven by a potential public referendum. Opponents to the proposed deal have until January to secure the 50,000 signatures needed to call a referendum that would question the need to replace the Swiss air force’s Northrop F-5 interceptors. “We would expect a referendum in either May or September 2014” should they succeed, says Lt Col Klas Petersson, head of international relations for the Swedish air force’s Air Component Command.
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Boeing reveals low-cost Challenger to own P-8
Boeing has used the Dubai air show to formally launch an offer to supply customers unable to afford its 737-based P-8 surveillance aircraft with a modified Bombardier Challenger 605 business jet instead. Also involving modification specialist Field Aviation, the Boeing-led programme will be ready to deliver a 605-derived maritime surveillance aircraft (MSA) from 2015. Field is currently adapting a Boeing-owned 604-model aircraft as a demonstrator, with this to be flown in early 2014 and to be made swiftly available to support customer evaluations.
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Boeing P-8A makes its international show debut
One of the most sophisticated derivatives of the Boeing 737 ever flown is making its international show debut this week, with the US Navy’s new P-8A being put through its paces during the daily flying display. Derived from the commercial 737-800 and equipped for maritime patrol, anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare roles, the P-8A is in production for the US service under a 117-aircraft program. Twelve have been handed over so far, with initial operating capability scheduled for late this year.
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Aviation Quote

A fighter without a gun . . . is like an airplane without a wing.

— Brigadier General Robin Olds, USAF.




On This Date

---In 1938... Construction begins on a new airport serving the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C. Built in nearby Virginia, this airport will become Ronald Reagan National Airport.

---In 1977… A TAP Air Portugal Boeing 727 overruns the runway at Funchal in the Madeira Islands and explodes, killing 131.

---In 1978…First flight of the Beriev A-50.




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Humor

JFK

New York (CNN): At John F. Kennedy International Airport today, a Caucasian male (later discovered to be a high school mathematics teacher) was arrested trying to board a flight while in possession of a compass, a protractor, and a graphical calculator.

According law enforcement officials, he is believed to have ties to the Al-Gebra network. He will be charged with carrying weapons of math instruction.




Trivia

General Trivia

1. What was the North American T–6 Mosquito?

2. If an airplane flies into an updraft, it most likely will

a) pitch up.
b) pitch down.
c) pitch up or down.
d) not change pitch.

3. What are their first names?

_____ Immelman (a maneuver)

_____ Fahrenheit (measure of temperature)

_____ Kollsman (altimeter setting)

_____ Mercator (map projection)

_____ Jeppesen (IFR charts)

_____ Hobbs (“money” meter)

4. What is the official (ICAO) definition of a broken layer?

5. The missing-man formation is used to pay homage to a person (or persons) who has (have) passed away. What is the origin of this formation?

6. On different occasions, a pilot keys his microphone 3, 5, and 7 times to activate pilot-controlled airport lighting. The runway-edge lights turn on and remain illuminated for _____, _____, and _____ minutes, respectively.

7. From reader John Schmidt: The Rutan Voyager was flown nonstop around the world without refueling by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager in December, 1986. Prior to that historic flight, what was the world distance record for nonstop, unrefueled flight in a piston-powered airplane and in what type of aircraft was that flight made?

8. What World War II pilot with a now-famous name took off from the aircraft carrier Lexington in his Grumman Wildcat and shot down five Japanese bombers in less than five minutes?
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 19 Nov 13, 16:33Post
2. If an airplane flies into an updraft, it most likely will

c) pitch up or down, depending on if the wing stalls or not.
 

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