You are at netAirspace : Forum : Air and Space Forums : netAirspace Daily News

NAS Daily 11 JUL 14

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 11 Jul 14, 09:30Post
Image

News


Commercial

Air India officially joins Star Alliance
Air India has become the 27th member of Star Alliance, greatly increasing the alliance's reach on the sub-continent. The flag carrier’s entry into the alliance adds 400 daily flights and 40 Indian destinations to the Star Alliance network, says Star Alliance in a statement. “This is an important day for us. We have said for many years that we needed a strong home carrier in the Indian market and by welcoming Air India to our Star Alliance family, we have achieved this goal” say Star Alliance chief executive Mark Schwab.
Link

Air New Zealand’s first 787-9 lands in Auckland
Air New Zealand’s first Boeing 787-9 aircraft has arrived in Auckland following a delivery flight from Seattle. “Being on the flight deck on the delivery flight of this magnificent 787-9 aircraft to Air New Zealand has been a career highlight,” says David Morgan, the carrier’s chief flight operations and safety officer. “Like the Boeing 747-400 in the 1980s this aircraft really is a game changer for the airline and our customers.”
Link

Teasing 'A330neo' and 'A350-300' domains reserved
While Airbus has increasingly indicated a leaning towards re-engining the A330, it has yet to give any formal pointers towards a possible designation for the type. But recent Internet domain-registration activity suggests a concerted effort, by unidentified parties, to protect particular names including 'A330neo' and 'A350-300'. On 7 July several top-level domain names associated with the term ‘A330neo’ were reserved by the US-based brand-protection company CSC, Flightglobal has determined.
Link

Why Boeing’s 787-9 is more than just a stretch
When launch customers Air New Zealand, United Airlines and All Nippon Airways introduce their first 787-9s in the coming months, it will mark a watershed for Boeing’s Dreamliner. Seattle will be hoping that after a smooth nine-month flight-test programme on the -9, it can finally put the troubled birth of its smaller sibling behind it. It will at last be able to fully focus on the remarkable technological innovation that this all-new twinjet represents, and move on from the undercurrent of issues that surrounded the program’s early years. The first 787-9 built (ZB001), which was the 126th Dreamliner off the line, made its first flight from Everett on 17 September 2013. At the first flight event, Boeing Commercial Airplanes president and chief executive Ray Conner described the new arrival as “a beautiful machine. It’s going to be the backbone of the 787 fleet, for sure.”
Link

Boeing rejects 'mega-city' case for A380
Boeing is dismissing Airbus’s claim that the emergence of “mega-cities” will drive future demand for high-capacity transports including the A380. Airbus has stated that there are 42 cities handling more than 10,000 daily long-haul passengers – those flying over 2,000nm internationally. It adds that this figure will more than double to 89 by 2032. Airbus has said that the traffic volumes will demand the use of large aircraft such as the A380. But Boeing vice-president of marketing Randy Tinseth, speaking as the airframer detailed its latest 20-year forecast in London, said there was “no data that supports [those] conclusions”.
Link

Boeing studying impact of 737 fuselage derailment
A freak transport error threatens to derail Boeing 737 production temporarily, raising questions once more about supply chain vulnerabilities as commercial aircraft production rates climb ever higher. Boeing was still evaluating as this article went to press the impact of a train derailment in Montana on 3 July that dislodged six 737 fuselages en route to final assembly in Renton, Washington, from the Spirit AeroSystems factory in Wichita, Kansas. Montana Rail Link, the railroad company involved in the derailment, had recovered three fuselages that had slipped down a steep embankment into the churning Clark Fork River. Pictures from the scene showed the three fuselages had sustained severe damage. Boeing was still assessing the extent of the damage and how it will impact a production system that rolls-out six completed 737s every three working days at current rates.
Link

Boeing Forecasts USD$5.2 Trillion Jet Market
Boeing made its most bullish 20-year forecast for airliner demand since 2011, saying the world will need 36,770 new planes worth USD$5.2 trillion by 2033. The company's annual projection is up 4.2 percent from its 2013 forecast, and it predicted beating rival Airbus in the lucrative market for twin-aisle planes. "If Airbus doesn't do something with their product strategy, they're headed to 30-35 percent market share" in deliveries of next-generation twin-aisle aircraft, Randy Tinseth, Boeing's vice president of marketing, told reporters in a briefing. Boeing's 787 and 777X jets already make up 65 percent of all current orders, with the Airbus A350 accounting for the rest, and that gap will widen unless Airbus develops another jet as a competitor, he said.
Link

SMBC Nears Potential USD$10 Bln Airbus Order
Irish leasing company SMBC Aviation Capital is in advanced talks to buy around 100 Airbus aircraft, setting the stage for what could be one of the largest order announcements at next week's Farnborough Airshow, two people familiar with the matter said. The order may include the current generation of A320-family jets and the more fuel-efficient A320neo family and is potentially worth up to USD$10 billion at list prices. Dublin-based SMBC Aviation Capital, owned by Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation and, until 2012, the leasing arm of Royal Bank of Scotland, declined to comment.
Link

Italian PM Urges Compromise On Alitalia Job Cuts
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has urged unions to accept job cuts at Alitalia or be prepared to see the company close. The government and Alitalia are in talks with unions, which want to stop the more than 2,000 redundancies sought by Gulf carrier Etihad as a condition for buying a 49 percent stake in indebted Alitalia, which employs around 14,000 people. "For Alitalia, the choice is not between x-many job cuts or y-many job cuts, but between job cuts and closure," Renzi told reporters after a Cabinet meeting in Rome.
Link

Lufthansa CEO Defends Low-Cost Expansion Plans
Lufthansa's new CEO Carsten Spohr has defended the airline's plans to expand its low-cost services under new brands, after some observers questioned the wisdom of such a move. Spohr, who took over as chief executive in May, presented plans that include expanding low-cost services in Europe and possibly on intercontinental flights, as well as grounding eight planes this winter, to battle competition from Middle Eastern and low-cost carriers. Some analysts said, however, that plans to extend Lufthansa's Eurowings regional carrier could create additional complexity at the group and highlighted how saturated the low-cost market in Europe already was. "The European low-cost market is starting to suffer from a proliferation of operators and this development will only worsen that situation," HSBC analysts wrote in a note.
Link

United reports jump in PRASM for domestic, Pacific routes
United Continental Holdings reported a 3.5% increase in passenger revenue per available seat mile for the second quarter on domestic and Pacific routes. United shares rose 6.7% on the news.
Link

JetBlue set to roll out automatic check-in
JetBlue is testing a new form of check-in: Doing the necessary screening of passenger names and special needs before they arrive at the airport and emailing them a boarding pass. The airline will roll out the new automatic check-in to Extra Space fliers on domestic flights and then introduce it later in the year to additional passengers. "By having the right systems in place, we can… help identify and prevent issues that can hinder customers from fully enjoying their travel experience," said Blair Koch, a vice president for the carrier.
Link

Alaska boosts overhead storage on Boeing 737-900ERs
Alaska Airlines announced the installation of Boeing "Space Bins" on 737-900ER aircraft. The bins allow for 48% more overheard storage. "The additional storage space will allow our customers to keep their personal items with them in the cabin, which we think they will enjoy," said Mark Eliasen, treasurer and vice president of finance for Alaska Airlines, in a statement.
Link

Boeing revises upward its 20-year forecast
The Boeing Co.'s newly released industry forecast calls for 36,770 new airplanes over the next 20 years, a 4.2% increase compared with last year's forecast. Boeing expects 25,680 of those new aircraft to be single-aisle planes. "The single-aisle market is the backbone of the airline system," said Randy Tinseth, the company's vice president of marketing for commercial airplanes.
Link

Tour Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner
Bloomberg TV has a cool video on the B787-9
Link



Rotary Wing

Committee calls for public inquiry into North Sea helicopter safety
Having examined the recent safety performance of oil and gas industry support helicopter operations in the UK sector of the North Sea, the UK parliamentary transport select committee has called for an independent public inquiry. The committee made the call on the grounds that the UK Civil Aviation Authority “did not consider the evidence that commercial pressure impacts on helicopter safety”. In a report, the committee adds that the “role and effectiveness” of the CAA also needs to be independently reviewed. However, the committee does not question the CAA’s technical expertise, nor the Air Accidents Investigation Branch’s conclusions in recent accident investigations. While the report says it welcomes the CAA review of offshore operations published in February, which contained 32 recommendations for improvement – particularly in ditching survivability –the committee says there are areas neither agency has addressed.
Link



Military

F-35 to miss RIAT, show organizer says
The continuation of a grounding order imposed on the Lockheed Martin F-35 fleet on 3 July means the type will not be taking part in the 11-13 July Royal International Air Tattoo (RIAT), the show's organizers confirm. "Unfortunately we've simply run out of time," says Air Tattoo chief executive Tim Prince in a 10 July statement. Three of the US Marine Corps' short take-off and vertical landing F-35Bs are at the US Navy's Patuxent River test site in Maryland, having been prepared to make the type's first transatlantic crossing, but the US Department of Defense has yet to approve the Joint Strike Fighter for a return to flight.
Link

Israeli air force details 'Protective Edge' operation
The Israeli air force has performed hundreds of sorties as part of its "Protective Edge" operation, which is aimed at stopping the rocket barrage from the Gaza Strip. All types of aircraft – including unmanned – are taking part in the huge air campaign. So far some 700t of munitions have been used in the strikes, which have mainly been directed at hidden rocket launchers, storage sites and manufacturing facilities. Hundreds of targets inside the Gaza Strip have been hit by air force fighters since the start of the operation.
Link

Meteor missile validated on board Swedish Gripens
MBDA’s Meteor missile has successfully completed a firing campaign on board the Saab Gripen fighter, marking the complete validation of the integration of the weapon with the aircraft. The testing of the beyond visual range air-to-air missile was conducted in March in collaboration with the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration (FMV), and was the last major milestone the Meteor had to pass before it could enter operational service on board the Swedish air force's Gripen C/Ds.
Link

MBDA signs Indian ASRAAM contract
India’s defense ministry has signed a £250 million ($428 million) contract with MBDA to equip its Sepecat/Hindustan Aeronautics Jaguar strike aircraft with the company’s ASRAAM short-range air-to-air missile. A company source has confirmed the signing, but declined to provide any further specifics. The ASRAAM has been designated as the “new generation close combat missile” (NGCCM) by the Indian air force. MBDA says the weapon “will provide both close combat and near beyond-visual-range capabilities” for the aircraft. “Part of the Jaguar upgrade program involves integrating a HMD [helmet-mounted display], and here ASRAAM can offer proven digital interface and functionality.”
Link

Multiple birdstrike downed Pave Hawk, USAF concludes
A multiple birdstrike caused the 7 January fatal crash of a US Air Force Sikorsky HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter over the UK east coast, accident investigators have determined. The crew and the aircraft belonged to the USAF’s 56th Rescue Squadron, operating from RAF Lakenheath, UK. According to a report into the accident compiled by the service, the crew was on a training sortie described by the USAF as “a night-time rescue scenario of a downed F-16 pilot on grass-covered marshland near Cley-next-the-Sea”. The USAF says it found “clear and convincing evidence” that the aircraft was brought down after sustaining “multiple bird strikes” which rendered “ the pilot and co-pilot unconscious and disabling the trim and flight-path stabilisation system”.
Link

Poland launches attack helicopter acquisition
Poland is continuing its plan to update its army's rotorcraft fleet with the launch of a procurement process covering the acquisition of as many as 40 attack helicopters. Warsaw is already running a keenly-contested competition for a tri-service order of 70 multi-role transport helicopters and this latest move will only intensify airframers' interest in the country. Intended to replace the Polish land force's fleet of 29 Mil Mi-24D/Vs, the attack helicopters were originally scheduled to be delivered from 2020. However, statements from Poland's ministry of national defense issued on 8 July indicate an accelerated timeline, without offering specifics. The procurement – known as the "Raven program" – will be conducted in two phases, the ministry says. Initial scoping work will help define the requirement, before proceeding to a more detailed market study which may include dialogue with bidders.
Link



Space

Angara maiden flight success heralds new era for Russian space launches
with the successful maiden flight of the new Angara launcher – the eventual replacement for the accident-prone Proton-M. The Angara flown from its purpose-built pad at Plesetsk cosmodrome on 2 July – Angara-1.2ML – was a two-stage vehicle with a 1.43t payload mock-up and fairing. A ballistic flightpath saw the payload fairing and first stage dropped as planned into the Barents Sea. The second stage and payload simulation reached the planned target zone in the Kamchatka peninsula after a flight of 21m and 3,080nm (5,700km).
Link




Aviation Quote

There are two kinds of airplanes — those you fly and those that fly you . . . You must have a distinct understanding at the very start as to who is the boss.

— Ernest K. Gann




On This Date

---In 1922... An international convention for the regulation of air navigation begins.

---In 1935... Laura Ingalls arrives in Burbank, California after an 18-hour flight from Floyd Bennett Field, New York, making her the first woman to fly east to west across the United States.

---In 1955... The U.S. Air Force Academy is dedicated at its temporary location, Lowry Air Force Base.

---In 1977…The UK government agrees to fund development of the BAe 146.




Daily Video





Editor’s Choice





Humor

Sniper Feeling

While interviewing a US Army Special Forces soldier in Afghanistan, a Reuters News reporter asked the soldier what he felt when killing Al Qaeda with a sniper rifle.

The soldier thought for a moment and replied, "Recoil."




Trivia

Google Airport

1.
Image

2.
Image

3.
Image

4.
Image

5.
Image

6.
Image

7.
Image

8.
Image

9.
Image

10.
Image
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
mhodgson (ATC & Photo Quality Screener & Founding Member) 11 Jul 14, 09:55Post
2. Prestwick (PIK/EGPK)
4. Cambridge (CBG/EGSC)
8. Berlin Templehof
9. Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW/KDFW)
There's the right way, the wrong way and the railway.
Queso (netAirspace ATC Tower Chief & Founding Member) 11 Jul 14, 13:45Post
6. OAK?

9.

:)
Slider... <sniff, sniff>... you stink.
vikkyvik 11 Jul 14, 17:40Post
1.
2.
3.
4. I think you need to update your pic of PVG ;)
5.
6.
7.
8.
9. DFW
10. RIV
FlyingAce (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 11 Jul 14, 17:56Post
7. AEP
Money can't buy happiness; but it can get you flying, which is pretty much the same.
miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 11 Jul 14, 19:13Post
ANSWERS:
1. ELP, El Paso International, El Paso, TX
2. PIK, Prestwick, Scotland, UK
3. MDE, Jose Maria Cordova, Medellín, Colombia
4. PVG, Pudong International, Shanghai, China
5. CBG, Cambridge, England, UK
6. LPA, Gran Canaria, Islas Canarias, Spain
7. AEP, Aeroparque Jorge Newberry, Buenos Aires, Argentina
8. THF, Tempelhof, Berlin, Germany
9. DFW, Dallas-Fort Worth Internacional, Fort Worth, TX
10. RIV, March AFB, Riverside, CA
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
Queso (netAirspace ATC Tower Chief & Founding Member) 11 Jul 14, 19:21Post
miamiair wrote:ANSWERS:
1. ELP, El Paso International, El Paso, TX

Darnit, I knew that one!
Slider... <sniff, sniff>... you stink.
 

Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests

LEFT

RIGHT
CONTENT