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NAS Daily 13 FEB 14

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 13 Feb 14, 09:05Post
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News

Commercial

Boeing considers medium-size aircraft to replace 757
Boeing Co. is considering manufacturing a medium-size aircraft to replace its 757 to fly transcontinental routes in the U.S. "It's the niche which has the oldest airplane serving it, and it's the niche that we don't cover with our current offerings," said Scott Fancher, head of aircraft development for Boeing, at the Singapore Airshow.
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Embraer Agrees USD$2.9 Bln Deal With Indian Startup
Embraer clinched its first major Indian deal with an order for 50 E-Jet E2s valued at USD$2.94 billion from start-up Indian domestic carrier Air Costa. Air Costa will become the first customer of the E-Jet E2s in India when it receives its first aircraft in 2018, company officials told a media briefing at the Singapore Airshow on Thursday. It will be the first airline to order and operate a large number of regional jets in India, a market which has seen substantial losses in recent years due to over-capacity and intense price wars among its carriers.
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Norwegian Signs Deal For 4 More Boeing 787s
Norwegian Air has signed a letter of intent that will add four more Boeing 787 Dreamliners to its long-haul fleet, boosting the total to 14, the low-cost airline said on Thursday. The new planes, 787-9s, will be delivered in 2017 and 2018.
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Norwegian Gets Long-haul Expansion Nod
Norwegian Air Shuttle has been awarded an operating license for its new long haul subsidiary by the Irish authorities, part of ambitious expansion plans that have been criticized by rivals. Norwegian this year became the only European budget airline to launch long-haul operations to North America and Asia from the Nordics with new Boeing 787 Dreamliners registered in Ireland using Thai crew and some American staff.
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American Gets JFK Slots In Swap With JetBlue
American Airlines Group has gained control of 24 takeoff and landing rights at New York's Kennedy Airport in a swap with JetBlue Airways. JetBlue, in exchange, received 16 slots at Washington's Reagan National Airport. The carriers had been leasing the slots at JFK and Reagan National from each other since 2010. American Airlines Group, formed when US Airways merged with AMR in December, agreed to divest slots at key airports under a settlement with the US Justice Department, which had challenged the combination.
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Nok Air Confirms Q400 Options
Thai low-cost carrier Nok Air has confirmed options for two Q400 NextGen aircraft from Bombardier and is looking to confirm two more. The aircraft will help Nok Air expand into smaller Thai and regional cities and further orders will depend on how the new destinations work out, Patee Sarasin, chief executive of the airline told a media briefing at the Singapore Airshow.
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Rolls-Royce signs $1 billion agreement for C-130J engines
Rolls-Royce has signed an agreement worth up to $1 billion to provide 600 AE2100 turboprops to power all variants of Lockheed Martin’s C-130J Super Hercules aircraft produced through 2025. The agreement, announced 12 February in a Rolls-Royce media release, marks the continuation of a long-running partnership between Rolls-Royce and Lockheed Martin.
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JetBlue load factor, PRASM on the rise in Jan.
JetBlue Airways projects a 6% increase in passenger revenue per available seat mile for January on a year-over-year basis. The carrier also posted a 1.1% increase in its load factor, while passenger traffic dipped 0.1% for the month.
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US Airways moves to Terminal 3 at LAX today
US Airways is moving from Terminal 1 to Terminal 3 at the Los Angeles International Airport today. "All US Airways ticketing and check-in, aircraft gates, baggage services and customer service will begin operations in Terminal 3 with the airline's first flights from LAX the morning of Feb. 12," the airline said in a statement.
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Airlines reschedule flights, waive fees in response to winter storms
In anticipation of another round of severe winter storms across the Southeast through the Northeast, airlines have been proactively rescheduling flights, waiving fees and relaxing rebooking rules for customers who are expected to be affected and wish to change their travel plans.
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Airbus predicts strong demand for aircraft from Asia-Pacific
Airbus Group forecasts the Asia-Pacific region will acquire 10,940 new planes over the next two decades. The European aircraft manufacturer predicts Asia-Pacific carriers will spend $1.8 trillion on new aircraft over the next 20 years. Meanwhile, Boeing forecast demand for 12,820 jets from Asia-Pacific over the same time period.
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All Nippon Airways to retire Boeing 747s as market shifts
All Nippon Airways plans to retire its Boeing 747s in March, marking the end of an era for the jumbo jet. When the 747 was introduced, its seating capacity of more than 500 seats attracted orders from airlines around the world. However, fuel efficiency has now prompted many airlines to use two-engine aircraft with fewer seats for the same routes that used to be flown by the 747.
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DOT: 2013 was one of the best years for on-time arrivals
According to the latest report from the Department of Transportation's (DOT) Bureau of Transportation Statistics, 78.34% of U.S. airline flights arrived at their destination on time in 2013. This marks the eighth-best on-time arrival rate in the 19 years the DOT has been tracking this data. The number of canceled flights in 2013 was also among the lowest rate in years at 1.51%.
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Baltimore airport served 22.5M passengers in 2013
Baltimore-Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport served almost 22.5 million passengers in 2013. The airport saw its international traffic soar by nearly 20% in 2013, and posted its second-busiest year ever for overall traffic for the year. "Our year-end results confirm that this remains a very robust air travel market," said Paul J. Wiedefeld, CEO of the airport.
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Space

Europe presses on with Ariane 6 feasibility study
The European Space Agency is pressing ahead with its bid to develop a successor to its Ariane 5 heavy launcher by ordering continued feasibility studies, in preparation for a system requirements review in November 2014. The €60 million ($99 million) systems review – to be carried out by Ariane 6 prime contractor Airbus Defence & Space – will come one month before member states’ science ministers meet in Luxembourg. The ministers will decide whether or not to continue with the project, which ESA sees as underpinning Europe’s ambitions to remain a viable contender in the 2020s, in a satellite launch market shaken up by the arrival of US start-up SpaceX and its relatively low-cost Falcon 9.
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Aviation Quote

No enemy bomber can reach the Ruhr. If one reaches the Ruhr, my name is not Goering. You may call me Meyer.

— Hermann Goering, German Air Force Minister, addressing the German Air force, September 1939.




On This Date

---In 1578... Tycho Brahe 1st sketches "Tychonic system" of solar system.

---In 1633…Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei arrived in Rome for trial before Inquisition for professing belief that earth revolves around the Sun.

---In 1913... At the second British Aero Show in London, the world’s first airplane specifically designed to carry a gun, 37-mm cannon on biplane, is displayed for the first time. Called Destroyer and built by Vickers, Sons & Maxim, it is officially called the Experimental Fighting Biplane No.1 (E.F.B.1).

---In 1919... The first post-war French commercial service is established on a route from Paris to Lille for the carriage of food and clothing to France’s northern departments.

---In 1935…Bruno Hauptmann is convicted of murder for the kidnapping and murder of Charles Lindbergh’s 20-month-old son Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr. He would be executed in the New Jersey’s infamous “Old Smokey” electric chair a year later.

---In 1936…London-based Imperial Airways launches airmail service to West Africa.

---In 1943... The Vought F4U Corsair naval fighter makes its operational debut in Solomon Island, escorting PB4Y-1 Liberators (the US Navy’s version of the B-24) raiding Bougainville.

---In 1960… France detonates its first nuclear weapon.

---In 1961…Soviet Union fires a rocket from Sputnik V to Venus.

---In 1963…Pacific Southwest Airlines becomes a public corporation.

---In 1972... The Soviet Union has started to use Cuba as a base from which to spy on the US. The first mission is flown by two Soviet Tu-95, which surveys part of the east coast.

---In 1987…First flight of the Fokker 50.

---In 1995…violent thunderstorm causes $5 million in damage at Miami International Airport. Four airliners and nine air-bridges are seriously damaged.

---In 1997…Discovery captures Hubble Space Telescope.

---In 2002…The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) takes over responsibilities for airport security from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

---In 2002…SkyEurope commences flight operations.

---In 20093…BA CityFlyer Flight 8456, an Avro RJ100, registration G-BXAR, is substantially damaged when the nosewheel collapses on landing at London City Airport. All 71 people on board are successfully evacuated via emergency chutes.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Humor

The Programmer and the Engineer

A programmer and an engineer are sitting next to each other on a long flight from Los Angeles to New York.

The programmer leans over to the engineer and asks if he would like to play a fun game.

The engineer just wants to take a nap, so he politely declines and rolls over to the window to catch a few winks.

The programmer persists and explains that the game is real easy and is a lot of fun. He explains "I ask you a question, and if you don't know the answer, you pay me $5. Then you ask me a question, and if I don't know the answer, I'll pay you $5."

Again, the engineer politely declines and tries to get to sleep.

The programmer, now somewhat agitated, says, "OK, if you don't know the answer you pay me $5, and if I don't know the answer, I'll pay you $100!"

This catches the engineer's attention, and he sees no end to this torment unless he plays, so he agrees to the game.

The programmer asks the first question. "What's the distance from the earth to the moon?" The engineer doesn't say a word, but reaches into his wallet, pulls out a five dollar bill and hands it to the programmer.

Now, it's the engineer's turn. He asks the programmer "What goes up a hill with three legs, and comes down on four?"

The programmer looks up at him with a puzzled look. He takes out his laptop computer and searches all of his references. He taps into the Airphone with his modem and searches the net and the Library of Congress. Frustrated, he sends e-mail to his co-workers--all to no avail.

After about an hour, he wakes the Engineer and hands him $100. The engineer politely takes the $100 and turns away to try to get back to sleep. The programmer, more than a little miffed, shakes the engineer and asks "Well, so what's the answer?" Without a word, the engineer reaches into his wallet, hands the programmer $5, and turns away to get back to sleep.




Trivia

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Sukhoi

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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 13 Feb 14, 10:25Post
TRIVIA

I'm not fan of military aircraft at all, but there's one I know for sure : 8. Su-27. Damn looking aircraft !
New airlines, new routes, new countries... back in the air
Queso (netAirspace ATC Tower Chief & Founding Member) 13 Feb 14, 13:50Post
miamiair wrote:
Commercial

Boeing considers medium-size aircraft to replace 757
Boeing Co. is considering manufacturing a medium-size aircraft to replace its 757 to fly transcontinental routes in the U.S. "It's the niche which has the oldest airplane serving it, and it's the niche that we don't cover with our current offerings," said Scott Fancher, head of aircraft development for Boeing, at the Singapore Airshow.
Link

I can't believe this decade-long oversight in their marketing strategy!

Why don't they just reopen the line? No certification needed, no technology challenges, and the plane is still competitive and in demand. The only thing that can replace a 757 is another 757! :))
Slider... <sniff, sniff>... you stink.
 

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