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NAS Daily 09 MAY 14

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 09 May 14, 08:40Post
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News

Commercial

ILFC becomes largest customer for 787-9
ILFC confirms that is has recently converted firm orders for eight Boeing 787-8s to the larger 787-9 model, making the lessor the single largest customer of the type. The adjustment was revealed on 8 May in Boeing’s monthly update of the 787-9 order backlog. ILFC placed multiple orders for the 787 from 2005 to 2007, resulting in orders for 74 aircraft overall that were previously split between 41 787-9 and 33 787-8s. But Boeing’s latest update shows that ILFC’s 787-9 order has increased to 49 and the 787-8 order has declined to 25 aircraft.
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Singapore Airlines Hit By Q4 Operating Loss
Operating losses at Singapore Airlines widened in the fourth-quarter as it cited persistently weak pricing power and flagged a challenging outlook. Singapore Air said operating loss widened to SGD$60.3 million (USD$48.3 million) in the quarter ended March from SGD$44.2 million a year earlier. The airline, 56-percent owned by state investor Temasek Holdings, said the operating environment was challenging and the cargo sector was suffering from overcapacity.
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Emirates' 2013 Profit Jumps On Higher Sales
Emirates reported a 43 percent jump in 2013 net profit, helped by higher revenue and lower fuel costs. Emirates posted a profit of AED3.3 billion dirhams (USD$898.4 million) for the year to March 31 up from AED2.3 billion a year earlier, it said in a statement. It said profit for the wider Emirates Group, which includes airline services arm Dnata, rose 32 percent to AED4.1 billion dirhams. "It's been a good year. There was growth in our business all round and fuel costs fell by about 4 percent last year, which helped," Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, chairman of Emirates, told a news conference.
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Saudi Arabia Plans New Pilgrimage Airport At Taif
Saudi Arabia is planning to build a new airport to serve pilgrims to Mecca in the nearby city of Taif, its General Authority for Civil Aviation (GACA) said on Thursday. GACA is preparing a tender and will ask consortia of local and international companies to bid to develop the airport, and aims to award a contract in the first half of 2015, a spokesman said. He said it will be developed on a build-operate-transfer basis, in which a developer finances the construction and recoups its investment by operating the airport.
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SAS Trims Outlook, Blames Weak Q2 Yield
SAS on Thursday trimmed its forecast for the full year, blaming competition in its home Scandinavian markets for pushing down yields. SAS said rival airlines had shifted capacity to Scandinavia in the last six months and that meant that unit revenues had been weaker than expected during the second quarter.
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Qantas To Cut Debt By More Than AUD$1 Bln
Australia's Qantas Airways said on Thursday it plans to cut debt by over AUD$1 billion (USD$935 million) by fiscal 2015 to achieve positive free cash flow. Qantas, which has been hit by fierce competition, plans to reduce debt by simplifying its fleet, scaling back investment and selling assets.
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American reports record operations results for April
Scott Kirby, the president of American Airlines, said the newly merged carrier posted record operations results in April. "The month of April is arguable the best operating month at legacy American Airlines," Kirby said. The carrier's mainline completion factor of 99.7% was its best ever, while mainline on-time departures improved to the best level in seven years.
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United Airlines to debut Embraer 175 this month
United Airlines plans to retire its 50-seat regional jets as it rolls out a fleet of 76-seat Embraer 175s. Charles Hobart, a United spokesman, said the Embraer jets offer "more personal space and wider seats and aisles than other regional jets." The 175s also feature a first-class cabin and more spacious overhead bins. The first 175 will start service on May 17.
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Hawaiian carried 1.7% more passengers in April
Hawaiian Airlines transported 1.7% more passengers in April on a year-over-year basis. The carrier flew 785,254 passengers for the month, compared to 772,346 passengers in the same month of the prior year. Meanwhile, Hawaiian's load factor and capacity both dipped 1.1% in April.
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JetBlue upgrades premium seating options with Mint
JetBlue's new Mint cabin section -- the airline's first effort in differentiated seating -- will serve up tapas and Wi-Fi when the new premium service debuts next month. "Mint is a product that is clearly designed to really focus on two markets in particular with terrific paid premium demand," said Mark Powers, JetBlue's chief financial officer.
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Boeing 777X improvements start with engines
The Boeing 777X features several design improvements from the 777 model. The 777X uses GE9X engines, which boast a 10% lower rate of fuel consumption. The 777X also uses composites for the wing design, and focuses on the passenger experience with larger windows and a more comfortable interior.
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Airbus reports net orders for 142 aircraft through April
Airbus said it received net orders for 142 aircraft so far this year through the end of April, trailing Boeing's net orders for 288 aircraft in the same period. American Airlines converted 30 of its orders for Airbus from the A321neo to the A321ceo. The conversion is part of an order the carrier placed in 2011 for 260 Airbus aircraft.
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Dallas city manager to award Love Field gates this week
Dallas officials will decide this week which airline should get two Love Field gates American Airlines relinquished when it merged with US Airways. Southwest Airlines, the dominant carrier at Love Field, says it will create more jobs if awarded the gates, citing a study by L.E.K. Consultants. "We agree with the consultant's study that we would bring the most benefit in terms of flights, low fares, customers and economic benefits for the city of Dallas," said Southwest CEO Gary Kelly.
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Rotary Wing

Company releases helicopter-ambulance test flight video
Advanced Tactics, a small aerospace company based in El Segundo, California, has released a video of its first test flight of the Black Knight Transformer, an unmanned vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) vehicle that morphs into an ambulance in order to evacuate wounded troops from an urban battlefield. The test flight of the boxy, 1,810kg (4,000lb) Black Knight Transformer demonstrator featured in the video was the first in a series that took place in late March on a small, prepared landing zone in the Anza-Borrego Desert, northeast of San Diego, says Rustom “Rusty” Jehangir, chief engineer at Advanced Tactics. “We did a number of short flights,” Jehangir says. “They were all under 10 feet above ground level.” Though the VTOL was controlled and stabilized by onboard computer, the test included a backup remote pilot on the ground to correct for any flight errors. “There was also an electrical tether that was attached to a kill switch” which, if pressed, could shut off all of the vehicle’s eight fixed-pitch propeller-driven engines, he adds.
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Northrop partners with Yamaha to fly unmanned helicopter
Northrop Grumman has announced completing the first flight of the Rotary Bat (R-Bat) unmanned helicopter, a new version of the Yamaha Motor RMAX dedicated for military reconnaissance. Yamaha has supplied small unmanned helicopters to Japanese farmers for decades for use as cropdusters in rice paddies. The RMAX – listed on Yamaha Motor’s website as a 61lb aircraft with a 246cc, 2-stroke engine –has operated in that role since 1998.
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Sikorsky wins US presidential helicopter contract
Sikorsky has been picked to build the next fleet of US presidential helicopters. The news was announced on 7 May by the US Navy, which says it awarded the Connecticut-based company a $1.24 billion contract to build six aircraft. Sikorsky says its design is based on the company’s S-92; a twin-engined, medium-lift model that it says is used as a head of state transport by 10 countries.
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Military

First flight achieved by an F-16 for Iraq
Lockheed Martin announces that the first F-16 Fighting Falcon destined for the Iraq Air Force has achieved first flight. The aircraft is one of 36 Block 52 F-16s ordered for Iraq through the Department of Defense, says Lockheed in a 7 May media release. The company says the Iraq order will sustain its F-16 production line through 2017.
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Aviation Quote

Hereafter, if you should observe an occasion to give your officers and friends a little more praise than is their due, and confess more fault than you can justly be charged with, you will only become the sooner for it, a great captain.

— Benjamin Franklin, advice to John Paul Jones, 1780.




On This Date

---In 1926... The first airplane flight over the North Pole is made by Americans Lt. Cdr. Richard E. Byrd and Floyd Bennett in a Fokker F-VII/3m. Their total distance from Spitzbergen, Norway is 1,600 miles (2,575 km).

---In 1932... U.S. Army Air Corps Captain A. F. Hegenberger has become the first pilot in the world to make a “blind” landing using instruments alone, with no back-up co-pilot on board in Dayton, Ohio.

---In 1936... The German airship Hindenburg lands at Lakehurst, New Jersey after its first scheduled transatlantic flight.

---In 1961… Senator Robert S. Kerr, chairman of the Senate Aeronautical and Space Sciences Committee, told a group at the National Radio and Television Convention that President Kennedy accepted the views of NASA and congressional leaders in approving the manned Mercury-Redstone flight of May 5.

---In 1962… First flight of the Sikorsky CH-54 Tahre (SkyCrane).

---In 1983... The first all-woman flight crew to fly a round trip across the Atlantic is the Air France C-141 crew form the 18th Military Airlift Squadron, McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey.

---In 2004… Southwest Airlines begins service to Philadelphia International Airport.

---In 2005…Kingfisher Airlines commences operations at Bengaluru International Airport.

---In 2012… A Sukhoi SSJ-100 crashes in Indonesia with 44 people on board.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Humor

The Attack Pilot
An A-6 pilot walks into Frederick's of Hollywood to purchase some sheer lingerie for his wife. He is shown several possibilities that range from $250 to $500 in price, the more sheer, the higher the price. He opts for the most sheer item, pays the $500 and takes the lingerie home.

He presents it to his wife and asks her to go upstairs, put it on and model it for him.

Upstairs, the wife thinks, "I have an idea. It's so sheer that it might as well be nothing. I won't put it on, do the modeling naked, return it tomorrow and keep the $500 refund for myself.

So she appears naked on the balcony and strikes a pose. The attack pilot says, "Good Lord! You'd think that for $500, they'd at least iron it!"

He never heard the shot.

Funeral services are pending.




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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 12 May 14, 10:55Post
6. MSP
9. NCE

Thought about Mirabel for #5 but no...
New airlines, new routes, new countries... back in the air
 

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