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NAS Daily 13 OCT 15

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 12 Oct 15, 22:45Post
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News

Commercial

Boeing is on pace for record year
Boeing is on track to retain its position as the globe's largest aircraft manufacturer after delivering a record 580 aircraft through September. Boeing delivered 20 787-9 aircraft in the third quarter.
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Airlines

EASA issues missile advisory to airlines
The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has issued a Safety Information Bulletin (SIB) following Russia’s use of cruise missiles against Syrian rebel forces last week. The SIB, addressed to “national aviation authorities and aircraft operators,” sets out the publicly available information on the missile routes, which crossed three countries to their targets.
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Air France Staff Arrested After Oct. 5 Scuffles
Police have arrested several Air France workers at their homes as investigators tracked down protesters who hounded executives from a meeting about mass job cuts last week and tore the clothes of two managers. The arrests came a week after media broadcast footage of an Air France human resources manager scaling a fence to escape the angry workers.
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Air India Sued for $98M for Breach of Hajj Contract
Dynamic International Airways LLC launched a $97.7 million breach of contract lawsuit against Air India in New York Federal Court. Air India sub-contracted Dynamic International Airways LLC (a/k/a Dynamic Airways or Dynamic) for the year 2013 and 2014 for carriage of holy pilgrims from India to Saudi Arabia round-trip. Dynamic carried 47,976 passengers for Hajj 2014 and carried around 6000 passengers for Hajj 2013. Air India owes more than $8.8 million for Hajj 2013 and 2014.
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Alaska Airlines adds Calif.-Mexico route
Alaska Airlines will begin running three flights a week between Orange County, Calif., and Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. The route is Alaska's second new flight to Mexico.
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American Airlines sees increase in passenger traffic
American Airlines reported Friday that its passenger traffic increased in September by 7.2% year-over-year. The airline said its planes on average flew at 82.7% capacity for the month, an increase of 2.7 percentage points from last year.
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American prepares for res system cutover, retirement of ‘US Airways’
American Airlines has “spared no expense” in preparing for the Oct. 17 cutover of US Airways’ reservations system to American’s Sabre system, a senior executive said. “We are all completely committed to getting this right,” American chief information officer Maya Leibman told reporters during an Oct. 12 conference call. The reservations system cutover, which is considered the last major milestone of the American-US Airways integration visible to the public, will enable American to officially retire the US Airways brand.
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DHL Introduces Boeing 767 Cargo Service in Detroit
DHL, the world’s leading international express services provider, today announced a new flight that enhances service for U.S. importers and exporters based in Michigan. Stationed at the Detroit Metropolitan Airport, the new Boeing 767-200 cargo flight enables DHL to provide earlier delivery times and later pick-up times, equally by one hour on average. International customers within Detroit and the surrounding areas, as well as in mid- and western Michigan, will greatly benefit from the new service.
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Fastjet Kenya secures air service license
Startup carrier fastjet Kenya has been granted an air service license (ASL), paving the way for its air operator’s certificate (AOC) application. Fastjet Kenya plans to launch with domestic flights in 2016. It will join fastjet Tanzania (which is already operational), fastjet Zimbabwe (which is due for launch Oct. 28) and fastjet Zambia (which is slated to begin operations in early December). The group is also planning airline launches in Uganda and South Africa in 2016.
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Hawaiian Airlines saw 3.1% increase in passenger load in Sept.
More than 848,000 passengers traveled on Hawaiian Airlines flights in September, an improvement of 3.1% over the same month last year. The carrier's load factor remained essentially unchanged, however, dipping less than a percentage point to 82.1% in September, according to figures released by Hawaiian Oct. 7.
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Jazeera Airways reduces capital base
Jazeera Airways of Kuwait has received shareholder approval to cut its capital by more than a half, as it adjusts from having closed its airline leasing business. At an extraordinary general meeting in Kuwait on Oct. 12, shareholders approved a board recommendation to cut the hybrid airline’s capital from KD42 million ($139 million) to KD20 million through a share buyback program.
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JetBlue Airways Reports September Traffic
JetBlue Airways Corporation reported its preliminary traffic results for September 2015. Traffic in September increased 13.3 percent from September 2014, on a capacity increase of 13.1 percent.
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Singapore Airlines’ first A350 XWB route is Amsterdam
Singapore Airlines (SIA) has announced its first Airbus A350 XWB route will be Singapore-Amsterdam from April 2016. According to SIA, the first of 63 A350-900s will be delivered in January 2016. The Star Alliance member expects delivery of 11 A350-900s in 2016. Further routes will be announced as more aircraft are delivered.
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Southwest Recovering From Widespread Delays
Southwest Airlines is working to deliver late bags and shuttle displaced passengers after a software failure led to around 500 delays on Sunday. The US budget airline expects its technical systems to perform "normally" Monday, according to a spokesman. The disruption slowed boarding for Southwest flights nationwide and impacted the process for booking new travel.
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Tristar A300 crashes near Mogadishu
An Airbus A300 operated by Egyptian cargo carrier Tristar Air crashed near Mogadishu in Somalia on 12 October after attempting to land, the carrier confirms. Although the aircraft, which had been operating a flight from Cairo, suffered “total damage”, the crew survived the crash, says the general manager in Tristar’s operations center in Cairo.
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United says it has plans to order new jets
United Airlines reportedly told union pilots that it plans to order a fleet of 100-seat jetliners once the two sides finalize a two-year contract extension. The new aircraft would replace the 50-seat planes being used by regional carriers.
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Airports

Prominent US airports pursue hotel projects
Airports in a number of large US cities -- including New York, San Francisco and Denver -- have announced plans in the past 16 months to build on-site hotels. The TWA Flight Center at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York is set to be renovated into a $265 million, 505-room hotel.
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Indonesia plans more airport expansion
One of the biggest airport operators in Indonesia, Angkasa Pura II (AP II), has committed to invest IDR2 trillion ($150 million) for the construction of a new third runway at Jakarta’s Soekarno-Hatta International Airport. The airport operator has filed a land acquisition citation into the state budget and says it plans to start the construction process later this year.
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Military

Israel flies upgraded C-130H
The Israeli air force has performed the first flight of an upgraded Lockheed Martin C-130H tactical transport, under a modernization program launched in 2012. Being performed by Israel Aerospace Industries' Bedek division and incorporating some equipment supplied by Elbit Systems, the work includes installing glass cockpit avionics, a new weather radar and a replacement centre wing box.
Link

Thai army to boost AW139 fleet size
The Royal Thai Army is to increase its fleet of AgustaWestland AW139 utility helicopters to 10 units, after awarding the manufacturer a follow-on order for eight of the intermediate twins. Deliveries of the rotorcraft will be completed before the end of 2016, the European company announced during the Helitech exhibition in London.
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Regulatory

Potential DoJ Hurdle In Gulf Airline Dispute
The Justice Department has raised concern about demands by US airlines that the government limit flights of three Middle Eastern rivals to the United States, according to a media report. US Justice Department antitrust officials warned of higher fares and fewer choices for consumers if the Obama administration blocks new flights by Emirates, Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways, Reuters news agency quoted unnamed sources as saying.
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Carriers protest as EASA orders faster A320 pitot retrofit
European safety regulators have halved the compliance period for replacing pitot tubes on Airbus A320-family jets, after rejecting complaints about the shorter deadline. The revised schedule cuts the compliance time from 48 months to 24 months, bringing the required completion date forward to 12 November 2016.
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Aviation Quote

Why does every plane have two pilots? Really, you only need one pilot. Let's take out the second pilot. Let the bloody computer fly it.
— Michael O'Leary, Ryanair CEO, regards eliminating co-pilots in airline operations. Interview in Bloomberg Businessweek, 2 September 2010




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Trivia

General Trivia

1. What large aircraft was considered so slow that its pilots used to say the navigator needed a calendar more than a chronograph?

2. Normal, Utility and Aerobatic category aircraft are stressed for 3.8, 4.4 and 6 Gs, respectively. What is the maximum allowable load factor for transport category jetliners?

3. Many airplanes are equipped with electrical inverters. What is the purpose of an inverter?

4. A pilot on a cross-country flight looks down and sees the tallest waterfall. Where is he?

5. Many multi-engine airplanes are equipped with ice protection plates. Where are they installed and what is their specific purpose?

6. What did aircraft designers Larry Bell, Donald Douglas and James McDonnell have in common?

7. What was the only American-built airplane to see action in WW1?

8. True or false; The simple square knot is one of the best to use when tying down an airplane with rope.

9. True or False; The circumnavigating Rutan Voyager, and the Spirit of St. Louis and at least one thing in common. Neither of them had brakes.

10. True or False, Two space shuttles are orbiting the Earth at the same speed and altitude. One however is a thousand miles behind the other. For the laggard to catch up with the leader, he should add thrust in the direction of travel.

11. Flutter can destroy an airplane and is a function of:
Calibrated Air Speed
Equivalent Airspeed
Indicated Airspeed
True Air Speed

12. Which of the following does NOT belong:
Emu
Gooney
Kiwi
Ostrich
Penguin

13. With respect to pilot qualifications, which of the following does not belong?
Controllable-pitch propeller
Flaps
Engine with more than 200 hp
Retractable landing gear
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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