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NAS Daily 06 JUN 14

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 06 Jun 14, 09:11Post
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News

Commercial

Mitsubishi Aircraft unveils first P&W engine
Japanese airframer Mitsubishi Aircraft has published an image of the first Pratt & Whitney PW1200G geared turbofan engine for its MRJ regional jet. The engine, which was delivered this week, was unveiled at the final assembly factory in Aichi Prefecture, and will be mounted on the first MRJ test aircraft, says Mitsubishi Aircraft.
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China Eastern retires A300-600s
China Eastern Airlines retired its last Airbus A300-600 aircraft after a final flight on 31 May. The type’s last flight was operated by aircraft registered B-2330 (MSN763) on the Shenzhen-Shanghai Hongqiao route, says the carrier. China Eastern received its first A300 in 1989, and operated as many as 18 around 2006, becoming the largest operator of the A300 and A310 family aircraft in China at that time.
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El Al flight diverted after passenger disturbance
Pilots of an El Al Boeing 737 which took off from Ben-Gurion airport in Tel Aviv for Munich on the morning of 5 June were forced to make an emergency landing in Bulgarian capital Sofia after a passenger caused a disturbance and attacked a cabin crew member. The Israeli airline says the young German passenger behaved rudely to other passengers after the flight took off, and at one point hit the purser in the back. One unconfirmed report suggests the passenger shouted “terrorists” while he attacked the cabin crew member.
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Searchers given 300 days to find lost 777
Search teams will be given 300 days to conduct a hunt for Malaysia Airlines’ missing Boeing 777 under the terms of an Australian government tender to find flight MH370. The tender document states that the effort must cover at least 5,000km2 every 25 days and a total area of 60,000km2 over the course of the program. Payments will be partially withheld if this search rate is not achieved but the government will also pay an agreed minimum fee if MH370 is discovered early. Successful bidders must begin the search within a month of signing a contract for the work. Bids are due by 30 June.
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Alitalia Expected To Give Initial Nod To Etihad Tie-Up
Alitalia is expected to give an initial green light to a tie-up with Etihad Airways at a board meeting on Friday in a last-ditch attempt to save an airline that many in the industry have regarded as a lost cause. Alitalia has made an annual profit only a few times in its 68-year history and received numerous state handouts before being privatized in 2008. It was kept afloat by a government-engineered EUR€500 million (USD$680 million) rescue package last year but risks having to ground its planes unless a deal can be struck with cash-rich Etihad to allow it to revamp its flight network.
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No Big Impact Seen From CSeries Engine Failure
The failure of a Pratt & Whitney jet engine during testing on a Bombardier CSeries test aircraft last week is unlikely to have a significant impact on Bombardier's testing schedule, according to an executive at P&W parent United Technologies. "We're working now with Bombardier on a plan to resume testing here in the next few weeks," United Tech Chief Financial Officer Greg Hayes told an investor conference. The engine failure had raised concern about potential further delays for Bombardier's CSeries jet, which is already 18 to 24 months behind schedule. Hayes' comments confirmed cautious optimism in the industry that the fallout from the May 29 incident would be limited.
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Odyssey Sees Gap In Transatlantic Business Market
Odyssey Airlines will not be the first new airline to have attempted to break into the lucrative London-New York business travel market, one of the most profitable routes in the world, but this time it will be different, says its founder. There is a graveyard of carriers who have failed to make the concept work. In 2008 Silverjet became the third business class-only transatlantic airline to go out of business, a month after US rival Eos stopped flying and less than five months after the failure of MAXjet as the financial crisis worsened. "They were flying the wrong aircraft to the wrong airports," Odyssey's founder and chief executive Adam Scott told Reuters. Odyssey, which will not begin flying until 2016, is in the proceeds of trying to raise an initial GBP£5 million (USD$8 million) through crowd-funding websites, with a view to seeking a further USD$100 million of financing in the first half of 2015.
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American Airlines announces plan for new operations center
American Airlines Group announced plans to construct an operations center near its corporate headquarters in Fort Worth, Texas. "It became apparent that the best long-term solution is a new, state-of-the-art facility that can house all of our team members and the technology needed for our daily demands," said American executives in a letter to employees. The center will be built by late 2015. Meanwhile, American also inked an agreement with Fareportal to sell ancillary services through the online travel agency's sites.
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Delta, Travelport revised agreement in May
Delta Air Lines and Travelport restructured their agreement last month for technical services. As part of the revised agreement, 175 employees of Travelport will join the Delta workforce on July 1. Meanwhile, Delta also added additional amenities to its Economy Comfort seats.
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United CEO aims to strengthen earnings, reduce debt
Jeff Smisek, the CEO of United Continental Holdings, said the carrier plans to reduce debt and boost earnings before issuing dividends to shareholders. Smisek spoke at a Deutsche Bank conference, and also commented on pilot rest rules and air service to smaller markets.
Link

Airbus in discussions with suppliers over A320neo upgrades
Airbus Group NV (AIR) is moving to upgrade its A320neo jetliner even before the revamped narrow-body plane’s scheduled commercial debut in 2015. In committing to the Neo in 2010, Airbus gambled by offering airlines a simple overhaul of the top-selling A320 that focused on fuel-saving new engines while Boeing Co. studied an extensive redesign of its 737. Now, Airbus is in talks with suppliers including Cedar Rapids, Iowa-based Rockwell Collins Inc. (COL) about improvements in avionics and other systems. “Post Neo or Neo Plus, as some people are calling it,” Rockwell Collins Chief Executive Officer Kelly Ortberg said in an interview yesterday in Chicago. “They’re looking at technology insertion opportunities to continue to upgrade the airplane,” such as information-management updates.
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Several hundred DC-3s still flying decades after debut
James Bond piloted a Douglas DC-3 airliner. Indiana Jones hopped a ride on one for his last crusade. This aviation icon even stars in a reality TV show. Almost 80 years after its introduction, a few hundred DC-3s are estimated to still be flying worldwide. That's kind of unbelievable in an age when dozens of younger types of airliners have already retired to aviation boneyards. "When we take them to air shows I watch people gravitate toward (them)," says Joe McBryan, co-star of History Channel's "Ice Pilots." McBryan owns Canada's Buffalo Airways and its six operating DC-3s. "People always have a story. They say their dad or grand-dad flew one ... or they flew on one when they were young."
Link

TSA plans new technology to tailor bag inspections
The Transportation Security Administration's strategic investment plan includes funding a baggage-check system that will electronically connect luggage with passengers, allowing agents to focus on the bags of travelers deemed higher risk.
Link

Number of properly-handled bags sharply increases
The number of bags delayed, damaged or lost by airlines has fallen by more than half since the industry hit a low point for lost luggage six years ago. It's happened thanks to a concerted effort world-wide by airlines and airports to fix a major inconvenience for travelers. Airlines last year mishandled 21.8 million bags, or 6.96 per 1,000 passengers, according to SITA, an aviation communications and technology company that tracks baggage performance each year. That's well less than half the rate in 2007, when airlines world-wide mishandled 46.9 million bags, or 18.88 per 1,000 passengers, SITA said.
Link

Aviation innovations on horizon include transparent cabins
The disruptive days of thunderous, fuel-guzzling planes hovering in our skies could be a thing of the past. So too could the tortuous queues and endless boarding process, if futuristic flight concepts become reality. Since the first commercial passenger flight in 1914, 65 billion passengers have taken to the skies and another 65 billion are expected to do the same before 2030. And experts say efficient, greener performance is what will steer aviation into the next century.
Link

Non-hub airports look to non-aeronautical revenue
Knoxville's airport rents out land to office complexes, car dealers and the U.S. Postal Service. Huntsville International Airport receives revenue from a golf course and cotton farmers. And several other airports, especially the one in Albuquerque, are seeing increasing savings and tax credits from solar panels. American non-hub airports increasingly are turning to non-aeronautical budget enhancers as they face uncertainty in shaping long-term capital plans. "Non-aeronautical revenue represents a good opportunity for architects, engineers, contractors and investors to participate in the changing aviation environment," says Allan Shapiro, senior management consultant with Ross & Baruzzini.
Link

United unveils posh lounges at Heathrow airport
United Airlines moves into London-Heathrow’s spiffy new Terminal 2 (The Queen’s Terminal) today and will open up its posh new business and first class lounges to passengers for the first time. Last month United invited a small group of media folks (including TravelSkills!) to London for a preview of its brand new United Global First Lounge and a United Club. United is the first airline to operate from Terminal 2. Starting today it will finally bringing its 17 daily Heathrow flights – currently split between Terminals 1 and 4 – “under one roof.” Later this year, the operations of United’s 22 Star Alliance partners at Heathrow will progressively move to Terminal 2, the alliance’s new home at the airport. The airport is moving airlines in slowly at T2– it does not want a repeat of the fiasco that occurred when British Airways moved into the massive Terminal 5 overnight.
Link

Boeing is eyeing Kan. location for Dreamlifter operations
Boeing is considering building a Dreamlifter Operations Center at the airport in Wichita, Kan., which is home to supplier Spirit AeroSystems. The center would modify 747s with 787 forward fuselages built by Spirit. "We want to keep the production of the 787 fuselage in Wichita at Spirit by providing them a home for the operation," said Victor White, director of airports for Wichita Airport Authority.
Link

Formula One air races debut in Europe
Formula One air racing debuted in Lleida, Spain, last weekend with three days of airshow events and racing. The event was attended by 14 pilots in two classes. French pilot Christian Guille took first place in the Gold Class, with a winning speed of 238 mph, while the Silver Class was won by U.K. pilot Des Hart flying at 182 mph.
Link



Military

Pentagon report highlights China's airpower development
A US Department of Defence report has underlined China’s determination to develop its airpower capabilities. In its Annual Report to Congress about China’s military, the DoD notes that Beijing continues to develop its anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) capabilities. These capabilities are mainly designed to deter US intervention in a conflict. The report also highlights key shortcomings in Chinese aerospace technologies, such as engines and avionics, that the country hopes to redress through the crossover of commercial aerospace technologies to the military sphere. Key technologies where China’s defence sector has benefited from close ties to the commercial sector include hot section technologies for engines, avionics, and flight controls.
Link

Iraq regains fighter power with F-16IQ delivery
The Iraqi Air Force can list a fighter aircraft in the inventory for the first time in more than a decade on 5 June with the delivery of the first of 36 Lockheed Martin F-16IQ Block 52 aircraft on order. Iraqi ambassador Lukman Faily formally received the two-seat, Pratt & Whitney F100-PW-229-powered F-16IQ during a ceremony at Lockheed’s factory in Fort Worth, Texas, becoming the 28th country to take delivery of a the 40-year-old F-16.
Link

RAC MiG boss eyes fifth-generation fighter
RAC MiG is contemplating building a fifth-generation fighter which would use its current MiG-35 platform as a "foundation" for the introduction of new technologies. Sergey Korotkov, general director of the Russian firm, says concepts for a new aircraft have already been worked on by company engineers. "I know this is one of the ideas, one of the directions, that is in the pockets of the design bureau," he says, speaking through an interpreter. "I do hope that we shall stick to this direction more seriously very soon."
Link



Space

Airbus spaceplane concept aces 3,000ft drop test
Airbus Defense & Space has released pictures and video from the drop test of a runway take-off and landing suborbital spaceplane, which is now moving into an advanced concept stage. The 1-4 May test campaign, conducted 54nm (100km) off the coast of Singapore, featured a quarter-scale model with active flight control surfaces lifted to 3,000ft by an Airbus Helicopters AS350 B3e Ecureuil helicopter. The model was piloted from one of seven support ships, validating dynamic conditions for the end-of-flight phase of a return from space, before being retrieved from the sea. Program head Stéphane Latieule says the next step is for an early-2015 drop from 30km (19 miles) by stratospheric balloon, to test supersonic flight. Airbus, he says, sees the program as a way to develop key technologies for three promising markets – commercial human spaceflight (so-called space tourism), scientific exploitation of suborbital microgravity and the launch to low Earth orbit of small satellites via second and/or third stage rockets that would be released at altitude.
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General Aviation

Diamond's top-of-the-range DA52 becomes DA62
Diamond Aircraft has renamed the DA52 top-of-the-range piston twin it is developing as the DA62, to help to distinguish it from its DA42 stablemate. The move, incidentally, is more in keeping with the nomenclature of the Austrian airframer’s piston-engined family, which also consists of the DA20 and DA40 singles. “We are renaming the DA52 to improve differentiation from our DA42 series that continues indefinitely in parallel production,” says Diamond Aircraft chief executive Christian Dries. “The DA62 series builds on the strengths of the DA42, with increased performance, payload, cabin volume and utility,” he adds.
Link




Aviation Quote

"Are you ever afraid when you fly?"
"That's a good question. Yeah. I'm always a little afraid when I fly. That's what makes me so damn good. I've seen pilots who weren't afraid of anything, who would forget about checking their instruments, who flew by instinct as though they were immortal. I've pissed on the graves of those poor bastards too. The pilot who isn't a little bit afraid always screws up and when you screw up bad in a jet, you get a corporal playing taps at the expense of the government."


— Lieutenant Colonel Bull Meecham, USMC, in Pat Conroy's book, 'The Great Santini.' I've also got Pat's eulogy to his dad, Colonel Don Conroy, online for all those that have read the book and want to know more.




On This Date

---In 1903... After several stationary stability trials, Ferdinand Ferber makes the first full trial of his glider No.6. It fails to take off in Nice, France.

---In 1910... Robert Martinet wins the first cross-country air race, between Angers and Saumur, France (27 miles), in a Farman; he takes 31 minutes and 35 seconds.

---In 1944... A huge airborne armada, nine planes wide and 200 miles long, carries American and British troops across the British Channel for the D-Day invasion of Europe.

---In 1944…Alaska Airlines commences operations.

---In 1964... Silver City Airways (British) announces that it has recorded the one-millionth car it has flown between the UK cross-Channel car ferry by air in 1948.
---In 1964… A U.S. Navy RF-8A Crusader photographic reconnaissance aircraft is shot down over Laos, becoming the first U.S. Navy aircraft and first American fixed-wing aircraft lost over Indochina in the Vietnam War era.

---In 1971… Soyuz 11 takes 3 cosmonauts to Salyut 1 space station.

---In 1985… Soyuz T-13 carries 2 cosmonauts to Salyut 7 space station.

---In 2004… Alaska Airlines starts service between Denver and Anchorage and discontinues service between San Jose and Tucson.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Humor

Announcements

The captain of a Vueling Airlines flight greeted passengers to Madrid this way: "We have a safety problem with the door at the front. Don't worry, it's just a safety problem."

While showing the use of the oxygen mask: "If you are seated next to a child or someone acting like one, please assist them in putting on the breathing apparatus. (thanks to Addison St. Onge-May)

A Southwest flight attendant said this as the door was opened: "OK, now I'm going to tell you exactly what my Mama told me on my 18th birthday. GET OUTTA HERE." (thanks to Fred)

"Hello Everyone, we have a first time flyer on board today - and it is also their 50th birthday!" After everybody cheers, the flight attendant continues, "Will everyone please wish the captain a Happy Birthday!?"

The pilot dropped out of the fog at Spokane Washington and discovered he was half way down the runway and slammed the plane down onto the ground. The flight attendant announced, "Ladies and gentlemen, we just dropped into Spokane."

"Welcome to Las Vegas, Nevada. We'd like to thank you for flying Southwest Airlines, and on behalf of the flight deck we'd also like to extend a very special and very happy 101st Birthday to a gentleman seated near the front of the aircraft." *scattered applause* "So, if you happen to see the Captain on the way out, mind his walker, shake his hand, and wish him well with another 100 years working here at Southwest Airlines."

"If you smoke, please wait until you arrive at a designated smoking area to light up, which (in California) would be outside."

"Please use caution when opening the overhead compartments as shift happens!"




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 06 Jun 14, 11:15Post
7. MSP
New airlines, new routes, new countries... back in the air
ORFflyer (Founding Member) 06 Jun 14, 11:43Post
#6 - HNL
#7 - MSP
Rack-em'. I'm getting a beer.
Queso (netAirspace ATC Tower Chief & Founding Member) 06 Jun 14, 14:07Post
I feel like I should know #5, it looks like my part of the world but I don't recognize it at the moment.
Slider... <sniff, sniff>... you stink.
Tom in NO 06 Jun 14, 14:31Post
3 looks a dated photo of MEX.
"Tramps like us"-Bruce Springsteen
FlyingAce (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 06 Jun 14, 15:25Post
I could spot #2 from a mile away :)) (it's GUA before 2006)

3. MEX
4. TGU
Money can't buy happiness; but it can get you flying, which is pretty much the same.
airtrainer 06 Jun 14, 22:54Post
1. Howard AFB, Panama
New airlines, new routes, new countries... back in the air
Boris (Founding Member) 06 Jun 14, 23:38Post
Queso wrote:I feel like I should know #5, it looks like my part of the world but I don't recognize it at the moment.


Must be Timbuktu (TOM)... {laugh}
The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers...
 

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