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NAS Daily 05 DEC 13

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 05 Dec 13, 10:09Post
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News

Commercial Aviation

Air Canada To Begin Flying 787s In Spring 2014
Air Canada will take delivery of the first of 37 Boeing 787 Dreamliners in the spring of 2014, as it continues to renew its fleet of wide-body aircraft. As the planes are gradually introduced into its fleet, the airline will offer a preview of its new 787 service on some domestic and trans-Atlantic flights on a temporary basis this spring, Air Canada said.
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Air Canada reveals new 787 interior
Air Canada’s new Boeing 787-8s will feature three cabins with 251 seats, the carrier revealed today. The aircraft will be divided into international business class, premium economy and economy cabins in a colour scheme based on grey and neutral colours accented with red and blue. The new interior product will be featured on Air Canada's 787-8s entering the fleet in 2014 and the larger 787-9s that it will start to receive in 2015. Seating capacity for the latter variant has not yet been revealed.
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Iraqi Airways firms up CS300 order
Iraqi Airways has signed a firm order to acquire up to 16 Bombardier CS300s, following a letter of intent signed for the order at the Dubai air show in November. The deal includes firm orders for five CS300s and options on another 11. The firm orders are worth $387 million at list prices, says Bombardier. If the options are converted, the order will be worth $1.26 billion.
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Russian probe: Aircraft age unrelated to safety
Russian legislation aimed at limiting the age of Western-built aircraft in the country appears to counter the position of investigators probing the Tatarstan Boeing 737-500 crash. The 737-500 involved in the fatal 17 November accident at Kazan was 23 years old, while the legislative proposal would seek to impose a 15-year restriction. But Russia’s Interstate Aviation Committee, which is inquiring into the accident, had previously dismissed the relevance of the aircraft’s age.
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Comac and Bombardier discuss next phase of collaboration
Senior executives from Bombardier and Comac have met to evaluate the progress of their collaboration on the CSeries and C919 and to discuss the next phase of their joint efforts. The meeting reviewed and summarised the progress of the second phase of the airframers' collaboration in areas such as supply chain services, flight training, flight-test support and sales and marketing, says Comac. Both parties also discussed the next phase of their collaboration on exploring commonalities between the C919 and CSeries. C919's chief designer Wu Guanghui says much have been achieved in the year of working with Bombardier and Comac hopes to deepen the partnership to bring mutual benefits. He did not, however, specify the commonalities that have been achieved on the aircraft program.
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LAM leases 737 temporarily after E-190 crash
Mozambique's LAM has leased a Boeing 737 to operate its flight schedule following the fatal crash of an Embraer 190 on 29 November in Namibia. Recovery teams, including experts from US-based emergency services provider Kenyon International, were at the incident site today to retrieve the personal belongings of the 27 passengers and six crew members who died in the crash. The airline has leased a 737 from a South African charter company to avoid disruptions to its flight schedule while it looks to acquire a replacement aircraft, says LAM.
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Delta predicts uptick in passenger revenue for Dec.
Delta Air Lines anticipates a 7% to 9% jump in December passenger revenue. The carrier attributed the positive outlook to a late Thanksgiving that fell on Nov. 28, meaning more passengers returned home in December.
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Indigo closes on acquisition of Frontier Airlines
Indigo Partners has completed its purchase of Frontier Airlines. Indigo plans to transform the Denver-based airline into an ultra-low-cost carrier. William Franke, the former chairman of Spirit Airlines, runs Indigo.
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American Airlines Group to trade with 756M common shares
AMR Corporation (OTCQB: AAMRQ) and US Airways Group, Inc. (NYSE: LCC) are providing details over the course of the equity distribution period that investors and creditors may find useful, corresponding to each of the key equity distribution dates under AMR’s Plan of Reorganization (Plan) and the companies’ Agreement and Plan of Merger (Merger Agreement).
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Analysts: Boeing's best bet could still be Wash. for 777X
Although Boeing is soliciting bids from 15 locations for building its 777X, analysts say the best choice could reside in Everett, Wash. "To meet customer requirements and minimize risk, Everett (WA) is the logical and best location -– new IAM contract or not," analyst Scott Hamilton writes.
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Additional carriers could benefit from AA-US Airways merger
Columnist Jonathan Yates says that low-cost carriers may benefit from the US Airways-American Airlines merger if airfares rise. “Mergers and acquisitions in any industry always benefit the companies that are well managed, and two of the best passenger air carriers are Southwest and Spirit Airlines,” Yates writes.
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TSA to widen enrollment for PreCheck program
The Transportation Security Administration is opening its PreCheck program to the general public. The TSA is launching a registration program on its website and this week is opening an enrollment center at Indianapolis International Airport -- the first of a planned 300. "This new application process will greatly increase the availability of TSA Pre-check benefits to a broader population of travelers nationwide," TSA Administrator John Pistole said in a statement.
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Gogo moves forward with plan for international service
Gogo has received a Supplemental Type Certificate to install its satellite technology for in-flight Internet service on Boeing 747-400 aircraft. "This is a major milestone for Gogo as a company as it is a big step in clearing the way for international service," said Michael Small, Gogo CEO and president. Several airlines fly the 747-400s on international routes.
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U.S. Supreme Court hears passenger complaint case
When Northwest Airlines dropped Rabbi Binyomin Ginsberg from its WorldPerks frequent-flier program, it provoked a Supreme Court test Tuesday of whether airlines need any reason for breaking up with their best customers. Ginsberg became a WorldPerks Platinum Elite member as a lecturer who crisscrossed the country about 75 times per year from his Minnesota home. But after he complained 24 times in eight months about the airline bumping him on flights and seeking compensation the airline called "over and above" its guidelines, Northwest, which has since become part of Delta Air Lines, dumped him in June 2008.
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Rotary Wing News

EC175 deliveries slip into late 2014
Deliveries of the new Eurocopter EC175 to initial customers appear to have drifted into the second half of 2014, despite certification still being scheduled for “early” next year. The Marseille-headquartered airframer on 18 November said it was still targeting approval from the European Aviation Safety Agency in early 2014. Deliveries to three operators – Belgian company Noordzee Helikopters Vlaanderen (NHV), Russia’s UTair and Héli-Union of France – are pegged for “later” in 2014, without committing to a definite timeframe.
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UAV News

UAV air taxi concept reveals clear thinking about VTOL efficiency
An Austrian unmanned air systems entrepreneur with a novel take on the problem of combining vertical lift with fast horizontal flight has unveiled a fully automated air taxi concept that promises fly-anywhere capability and 6-10h endurance from a heavy fuel engine. According to Johannes Reiter – an agricultural and later aerospace engineer who founded aerospace firm Aerie in 2011 – the JETI manned concept (pictured) could be suitable for home-to-office travel.
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Military

US Air Force gets final QF-4 aerial target
BAE Systems has delivered its last of more than 300 McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantoms to have been modified for use as aerial targets by the US Air Force. The final adapted QF-4 touched down at Tyndall AFB in Florida on 19 November, after being flown to the site by a BAE pilot. The company supplied a total of 314 examples over a 16-year period, with each having taken around six months to adapt at its Mojave site in California. Its final Phantom had previously spent more than 20 years in desert storage at Davis-Monthan AFB in Arizona.
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Spain to operate fewer A400Ms, but seek tanker purchase
Spain’s air force expects to be able to employ only around half of the A400M tactical transports on order from Airbus Military, but hopes to widen its fleet renewal effort to also introduce a new fleet of A330-based tankers. “We will receive 27 [A400M] aircraft, but due to budget restrictions we plan to operate and maintain only 14,” Brig Gen Miguel Angel Martin Perez, chief of the service’s planning branch, told SMi’s Military Airlift conference in Seville on 3 December.
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Aviation Quote

"The question to ask is whether the risk of traveling to space is worth the benefit. The answer is an unequivocal yes, but not only for the reasons that are usually touted by the space community: the need to explore, the scientific return, and the possibility of commercial profit. The most compelling reason, a very long-term one, is the necessity of using space to protect Earth and guarantee the survival of humanity."

William E. Burrows, The Wall Street Journal, 2003




On This Date

---In 1909... George Taylor makes the first manned glider flight in Australia in a glider of his own design. He eventually makes a total of 29 flights at Narrabeen Beach in New South Wales.

---In 1919…Avianca commences operations as SCADTA.

---In 1921... Western Australia Airways opens the first scheduled regular airline service in the country.

---In 1945…Flight 19 departs from Ft. Lauderdale NAS, and disappears into the Bermuda Triangle.




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Humor

The Pearly Gates

It seems a 727 crew had a bad day out and the poor buggers slogged into a paddy and bit the big one. The Captain F/O and S/O were, subsequent to the crash, walking up to the pearly gates to discuss their fate with the Guardian At the Gate.

The Captain, being from the old school and not well versed in CRM told his mates to wait where they were for a blink while he sorted things out with the angel at the gate. The captain, discusses the situation for awhile and comes back to the two and tells them that he's got a little good news and a little bad news. The F/O and S/O both insist on the bad news first.

"Well" he says, "the bad news is that any extra marital affairs we have had bar our entry into paradise." The F/O and the S/O start to walk away quite upset and wondering what an eternity in Hades is going to be like. The captain says "wait a minute mates don't you want to hear the good news?"

"Layovers, don't count."




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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
airtrainer 05 Dec 13, 11:52Post
1. Tu-95
2. Tu-144
5. Tu-154
6. Tu-114
New airlines, new routes, new countries... back in the air
 

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