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NAS Daily 14 FEB 14

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 14 Feb 14, 09:57Post
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News

Commercial

Thousands Of US Flights Cancelled As Storm Moves North
A winter storm that froze the US southeast pushed north on Thursday, with driving winds and heavy snow snarling travel and closing many schools from Washington to Connecticut, creating havoc for winter-weary parents. More than 700,000 people, including residents of Georgia and South Carolina hit by a heavy blast of ice a day earlier, were without power as the storm made its way up the coast, closing much of Washington and threatening to drop up to 18 inches (45 cm) of snow in some areas. About 6,349 US flights were cancelled and another 2,396 were delayed, said flight-tracker FlightAware.
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Bombardier Reports Q4 Profit, But CSeries Costs Rise
Bombardier reported a quarterly profit on Thursday, but cut its 2014 earnings forecast as it spends heavily on developing its new CSeries airliner. The company reported net income of USD$97 million for the quarter ended December 31. In the year-before quarter it posted a loss of USD$4 million, mainly due to a charge of USD$119 million related to a plant closure and job cuts in its rail business. Bombardier's fourth-quarter revenue rose 15 percent to USD$5.32 billion.
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IAG, Pilots Agree To Link Wages With Profits
International Airlines Group has reached a deal with Spanish pilots to link salary rises to group profitability from 2015, helping to ensure the viability of local carrier Iberia. IAG, which groups British Airways and Spanish carriers Iberia and Vueling, said in a statement on Thursday that Spanish pilots union SEPLA had agreed that wages would be frozen until 2015, and also agreed to productivity improvements. Luis Gallego, Iberia's executive chairman, called the deal "groundbreaking". "A strong and profitable Iberia can protect jobs in the long term and boost tourism, which is a key driver in Barajas (airport) and Spain's economic recovery," he said in a statement.
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Airbus confirms Aerolineas A330 purchase
Aerolineas Argentinas has signed for four Airbus A330-200s as part of a fleet modernization plan. The purchase agreement follows a tentative deal for four 272-seat twinjets reached towards the end of last year. Aerolineas has yet to disclose an engine selection for the aircraft. It had originally said it intended to take delivery of two in early 2015, and complete deliveries in 2016, but Airbus has not given a delivery schedule.
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American to look beyond Envoy for an E-175 operator
American Airlines Group will begin searching for a regional carrier to operate the 60 Embraer 175s that it has on order, following the rejection of an agreement in principle to operate the aircraft by the pilot’s union at its regional subsidiary Envoy. The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) American Eagle – soon to be renamed Envoy – master executive council rejected the 10-year agreement in a vote late on 12 February, according to a statement. The agreement included 90 E-175s, a minimum operating fleet of 170 aircraft and improved flow through options to mainline in exchange for a pilot pay freeze through 2018 at the regional carrier.
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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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Silver Gulch sampling on Alaska Air Q400 flights
Passengers aboard Alaska Airlines Q400 flights will get a taste of Alaska next month when a sampling of craft brews produced by Fairbanks-based Silver Gulch Brewing & Bottling is part of the flight experience. "Silver Gulch is a successful local business based in the Fairbanks area, and we're excited to offer their beer on our Q400 flights within Alaska," said Marilyn Romano, Alaska Airlines' regional vice president – Alaska. Travelers will get to sip the company's Old 55 Pale Ale, which the airline says will arrive fresh daily.
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Airbus: Asian carriers will fly wide-body aircraft on local routes
Airbus predicts carriers in Asia will turn to larger passenger aircraft to fly shorter routes because of rapid growth in the Asia-Pacific airline industry. "We believe a widebody on local routes up to 2,000 nautical miles [3,700 kilometers] has a huge potential, particularly in China," said Fabrice Brégier, CEO of Airbus.
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At least 3 airlines seek A380 services to India
Airbus Group NV said India’s easing of rules that banned its A380 superjumbos operating into the country may prompt several carriers to start services with the plane this year to the world’s second-most populous nation. At least three carriers have sought India’s permission to operate the A380, Kiran Rao, an executive vice president at Airbus, said in an interview today. Flights with the world’s biggest passenger jet to the country may start by end of this year, he said, without naming any airline. Emirates and Deutsche Lufthansa AG are among carriers that are interested in operating the double-decker aircraft to India where passenger numbers are forecast to triple to 452 million by 2020. Airlines will be allowed to fly the plane to the nation’s four airports, including New Delhi and Mumbai, the Aviation Ministry said last month.
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CBP should reduce lengthy waits at U.S. airports first
Although a Customs and Border Protection (CBP) pre-clearance facility has opened at the Abu Dhabi airport in the United Arab Emirates, the U.S. aviation industry said the move is misguided. Airlines for America President and CEO Nicholas Calio said the agency should focus on reducing lengthy wait times for passengers entering the U.S. before opening additional sites overseas.
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Miami gets TSA PreCheck for international flights
Passengers making international connections through Miami International Airport may be able to clear security faster through the new Transportation Security Administration PreCheck lane opening this week at the airport. Passengers selected by the TSA will get to pass through the line without removing shoes or taking liquids and computers from bags.
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House halts FAA weight-test plan
The House voted Tuesday to slow down the Federal Aviation Administration's effort to start testing overweight pilots and air-traffic controllers for sleep disorders. The legislation approved by voice vote aims to block FAA from immediately requiring tests for sleep disorders based on a pilot's weight or neck size, as the agency announced in November. Instead, the FAA could adopt the standard as part of a formal rulemaking process, which could take months or years. The Senate must still consider the legislation.
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Airport traffic increased 4% across the globe in 2013
Passenger traffic at airports around the world rose by 4% in 2013, according to the Airports Council International. Asia-Pacific airports reported growth of more than 7% for 2013, while European airports reported growth of 2.6% for the year. Meanwhile, North American airports reported modest growth of 1.3% for 2013.
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Military

Kuwait receives uniquely-liveried C-17
Kuwait has received its first of an expected two Boeing C-17 strategic transports, with the airlifter sporting a special livery for the Gulf state. Boeing, which delivered the aircraft on 13 February, says the asset “will expand the Kuwait air force’s capabilities in military and civilian operations, including humanitarian aid and disaster relief.”
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Algerian C-130 crashed short of ILS intercept
Military authorities have confirmed that there was a sole survivor among the 74 passengers and four crew on board an Algerian air force Lockheed Martin C-130 Hercules transport (7T-WHM) that crashed in poor weather on approach to Constantine airport in the mountainous northeastern province of Oum el-Bouaghi. The aircraft was flying a routine transport service from Tamanrasset in the far south of Algeria to Constantine via Ouargla. Contact with the aircraft was lost at 11:37 local time on 11 February. A statement from the Algerian defence ministry said “adverse weather conditions prevailed in the region”, including lightning and snow.
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Aviation Quote
My Luftwaffe is invincible. . . . And so now we turn to England. How long will this one last — two, three weeks?
— Hermann Goering, German Air Force Minister, June 1940.




On This Date

---In 1894... Venus is both a morning star and evening star.

---In 1914... An official American nonstop duration and distance record is made when Lt. Townsend Dodd and Sgt. Herbert Marcus fly the U.S. Signal Corps Burgess H tractor biplane. (S.C. No. 26) 244.8 mi. in 4 hours 43 minutes. Although it established a record for two people in one airplane, it also exceeded the previous single-seat record.

---In 1932... Ruth Nichols flies her Lockheed Vega from Floyd Bennett Field, New York to an altitude of 19,928 feet, a new world record for diesel-engined airplanes.

---In 1946…Philippine Airlines resumes service after a 5-year hiatus during World War II.

---In 1955…First flight of the Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-2, prototype of the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21

---In 1963…The Indian Air Force receives its first batch of Soviet fighters, Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21s.

---In 1963…U.S. launches communications satellite Syncom 1.

---In 1972…Luna 20 - USSR Lunar Lander launched. Landed on the moon and returned samples to the Earth. Landed on February 21, 1972 at Apollonius highlands located at latitude 3°32' N and longitude 56°33' E. 30 grams of lunar samples were returned to the Earth.

---In 1978…First flight of the Cessna 303.

---In 1980... Japan Air Lines begins commercial operations with the highest-capacity airliner ever put into scheduled service, conducting the inaugural flight of eight Boeing 747SR. The aircraft has seating for 550 passengers, 45 in the upper deck.

---In 1980…U.S. launches Solar Maximum Mission Observatory to study solar flares.

---In 1984…First flight of the Cessna Citation S/II.

---In 1989…The first of 24 Global Positioning System satellites is placed into orbit.

---In 1990…Space probe Voyager 1 takes photograph of entire solar system.

---In 1996…China launches a Long March 3 rocket, carrying the Intelsat 708 satellite. The rocket flies off course 3 seconds after liftoff and crashes into a rural village due to an engineering defect. The number of fatalities is unconfirmed.

---In 2001…Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft becomes first vehicle to land on an asteroid (433 Eros)

---In 2008... Belavia Flight 1834, a Bombardier CRJ-100ER (EW-101PJ), crashes on takeoff in Yerevan, Armenia. The left winghad accumulated frost on the wing due to difference in temperature between the air and fuel inside the wing’s tanks, resulting in immediately stall as the aircraft became airborne. All 21 on-board survived, mostly as a result of the 50-second response time of the rescue team.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice







Humor
What just happened here?
A military cargo plane, flying over a populated area, suddenly loses power and starts to nose down. The pilot tries to pull up, but with all their cargo, the plane is too heavy. So he yells to the soldiers in back to throw things out to make the plane lighter. They throw out a pistol. "Throw out more!" shouts the pilot. So they throw out a rifle. "More!" he cries again. They heave out a missile, and the pilot regains control.

He pulls out of the dive and lands safely at an airport. They get into a jeep and drive off. Pretty soon they meet a boy on the side of the road who's crying. They ask him why he's crying and he says "A pistol hit me on the head!"

They drive more and meet another boy who's crying even harder. Again they ask why and the boy says, "A rifle hit me on the head!"

They apologize and keep driving. They meet a boy on the sidewalk who's laughing hysterically. They ask him, "Kid, what's so funny?" The boy replies, "I sneezed and a house blew up!"





Trivia

Google Airports

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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 14 Feb 14, 15:36Post
1. SYD
2. SVO
3. STN
4. SIN
New airlines, new routes, new countries... back in the air
ShanwickOceanic (netAirspace FAA) 17 Feb 14, 11:37Post
5 is OUL.
My friend and I applied for airline jobs in Australia, but they didn't Qantas.
miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 17 Feb 14, 11:39Post
ANSWERS:

1. SYD, Sydney, Australia
2. SVO, Moscow, Russia
3. STN, Stanstead, London, UK
4. SIN, Singapore,
5. OUL, Oulu, Finland
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
 

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