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NAS Daily 26 JAN 16

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 26 Jan 16, 00:19Post
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Commercial

Boeing sets tentative date for 737 Max first flight
Boeing has set a tentative date of 29 January to conduct the first flight of the re-engined 737 Max. The 737 Max 8 airframe was publicly unveiled in early December. Boeing says a final confirmation of the maiden flight date will depend on “weather and other factors”.
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Over 11,000 flights canceled during stormy US East Coast weekend
More than 8,000 flights were canceled in the US over the weekend, according to flight tracking site FlightAware, as a major snowstorm hit the Mid-Atlantic region. FlightAware reported more than 3,000 canceled flights on Friday, Jan. 22, when the storm began. Disruptions continued on Monday, Jan. 25, as 1,920 flights were canceled in the US as of 1 p.m. EST, according to FlightAware. More than 3,600 flight delays were recorded in the US Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 23-24.
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Rolls-Royce to build new $43 million engine disc plant
Rolls-Royce plans to invest more than £30 million ($42.8 million) to build a new 8,000 sq m plant in northeast England to manufacturer discs for in-service engines. The new facility will be located at Rolls-Royce’s existing discs manufacturing site in Tyne and Wear, which opened in 2014. “The new fleet support plant is expected to be fully operational in 2018,” Rolls-Royce said in a statement.
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Airlines

Air Canada, machinists union agree to 10-year contract
Air Canada and its machinists union have agreed on a new contract covering 7,500 workers for 10 years. Air Canada said the deal with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace represents its sixth labor agreement overall.
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Alaska unveils new livery and brand
Alaska Airlines has unveiled the first major update to its branding in 25 years, rolling out a Boeing 737-800 adorned in a new blue and green livery and featuring an updated logo. The company also updated its website with the new brand, part of a project that has been underway for one year and will likely take another year to fully implement, says the Seattle-based carrier.
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Alaska employees receive year-end bonus for 7th consecutive year
Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air announced it will give 14,000 employees year-end bonuses. The bonuses will total $98 million. "This is the seventh consecutive year where our employees will get a full month's pay and performance bonus," said Alaska CEO Brad Tilden.
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American 767 diverted to Canada after severe turbulence
An American Airlines Boeing 767 transatlantic flight was diverted to Canada after it experienced severe turbulence that resulted in several flight attendants and passengers being hospitalized. Flight 206 was en route from Miami to Milan Jan. 24, carrying 192 passengers and 11 crew, when it diverted to St. John’s, Newfoundland after it “briefly encountered severe turbulence,” according to an American statement. Paramedics met the flight and evaluated passengers and crew.
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Iran To Buy Eight Airbus A380s - Report
Iran has struck a provisional deal with Airbus to buy eight A380s to be delivered from 2019, the deputy transport minister said. A deal for 127, mainly new, aircraft which it hopes to complete this week also includes 16 A350s, Asghar Fakhrieh Kashan, deputy transport minister told Reuters news agency.
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JetBlue boosts DIA-SFO service for Super Bowl
JetBlue Airways is adding flights from Denver to San Francisco over Super Bowl weekend to allow fans to watch the Denver Broncos. "We always say we fly people to the places people want to go and that's why we’re adding these extra flights to the Bay Area the weekend of the big game," said Marty St. George, an executive vice president at JetBlue.
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JetBlue to offer fully connected inflight experience, new TVs
JetBlue Airways plans to launch a fully connected inflight experience on its Airbus A320s in which a new seat-back television system from Thales will be Wi-Fi connected, and high-speed Internet will be available free gate-to-gate. JetBlue said the A320 cabin “restyling” will begin in early 2017 “with completion targeted for 2019.” JetBlue has 130 A320s in its fleet.
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MH370 search hits a snag
The search for a missing Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777-200ER in the Indian Ocean has hit a fresh setback, with the loss of a sonar deep tow vehicle that was being used to scan the ocean floor. The Joint Agency Coordination Centre says in a statement that the vehicle, also known as a towfish, was being operated from the ship Fugro Discovery when it collided with a mud volcano. That caused the tow cable to break, leaving the vehicle on the ocean floor.
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Oil slump accelerates Oman Air’s path to profit
Plummeting oil prices will mean an imminent end to government financial support for Oman Air, the carrier’s annual staff conference in Muscat heard. The rapidly expanding national carrier has been heavily underwritten for many years by the nation’s government, which sees it as a tool to benefit the overall economy, notably by increasing inbound tourism.
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Qantas, Air NZ Halt Vanuatu Flights Over Runway Risks
Qantas and Air New Zealand have suspended flights to Vanuatu due to safety concerns about its airport runway, a blow to tourism and the Pacific island nation's recovery efforts after a cyclone last year. Virgin Australia, however, said it would continue to fly to Port Vila, after its investigators examined the runway over the weekend and deemed it safe.
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Ryanair issues French ATC strike ultimatum
Ryanair has called on the European Commission and European Parliament to either ban air traffic control (ATC) strikes, or allow other providers to step in and maintain service. In a statement issued on Jan. 25, Ryanair demanded European authorities to take “immediate action” over a French ATC strike planned from 1900 on Jan. 25 until 0600 on Jan. 27.
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Ryanair cabin crew agree on five-year pay deal
Ryanair has struck a five-year cabin crew pay deal that covers its network of 76 bases, building on the pilot agreement it secured in November 2015. “Following weeks of direct negotiations between Ryanair and its elected cabin crew representatives, using long established collective bargaining structures, Ryanair’s cabin crew at all of its 76 bases have voted by over 90% to accept new five-year pay agreements,” Ryanair said on Jan. 20.
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Southwest to speed up fleet renewal, CFO says
Southwest Airlines intends to hasten its plans for fleet renewal, thanks to robust revenue in 2015. The carrier moved up its goal of retiring its classic fleet from 2021 to mid-2018. "Overall the internal rate of return on accelerating retirement of our classic fleet is estimated to exceed the return of investment," said Tammy Romo, executive vice president and chief financial officer at Southwest
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United launches VIP concierge service at some hubs
United Airlines has debuted VIP concierge service called United Exclusive Assistance at several of its hubs. The carrier partnered with Global Airport Concierge to provide the amenity.
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Airports

New York Flights Begin To Recover After Storm
Flight schedules at New York City airports began to recover on Sunday evening after the worst snowstorm to hit the US East Coast in decades resulted in hundreds of cancellations and delays. Arrivals and departures at LaGuardia, JFK, and Newark were observed on Sunday, although Washington airports were idle except for a dozen flights that were en route, according to web tracker FlightAware.
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Military

Boeing correcting course as KC-46A refuels F-16C
The US Air Force is optimistic about awarding the first production contract to Boeing for the developmental KC-46A, following a flight test in which the 767-derived tanker transferred 725kg (1,600lb) of fuel to a Lockheed Martin F-16C – the most significant trial of its refuelling systems to date. During a 5h 45min sortie from Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington on 24 January, the KC-46A Pegasus completed several centreline boom contacts with the receiver on the F-16, before gaining clearance to transfer fuel.
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Long-range fashion catches on in IAF
Waiting so long for Rafael to respond to a new fashion in missile technology seemed surprising only because the state-owned Israeli weapons and sensor house is most often the industry’s leading trendsetter. But Rafael has been curiously slow to respond to a clear trend within the air-to-air missile community. In the past decade, the most anticipated new missiles – the Chinese PL-12, MBDA Meteor, Raytheon AIM-120D and Vympel RVV-AE-PD – have all shared a similar trait. As advanced sensors push the detection range of missile firing platforms ever farther, missile manufacturers have responded with new weapons with ranges beyond 54nm (100km), or twice that of the Rafael medium-range, radar-guided Derby weapon.
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Aviation Quote

Harmony comes gradually to a pilot and his plane. The wing does not want so much to fly true as to tug at the hands that guide it; the ship would rather hunt the wind than lay her nose to the horizon far ahead. She has a derelict quality in her character; she toys with freedom and hints at liberation, but yields her own desires gently.

— Beryl Markham, West With The Night,—1942.




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Trivia

General Trivia

1. A pilot is number two for takeoff behind a McDonnell Douglas MD–80 and notices that the right elevator of the jetliner is up while the left elevator is down. To whom should he report this?

2. On June 1, 2009, an Air France Airbus A330-200 operating between Rio de Janeiro and Paris crashed into the Atlantic Ocean in the vicinity of the Intertropical Convergence Zone. What is the ITCZ and what causes it to develop?

3. What is the maximum amount of lift that the wings of a typical, 2,000-pound general aviation airplane are allowed to develop?

4. How many aircraft carriers did Germany have during World War II, and what were (was) their (its) name(s)?

5. What well-known aircraft accident was the impetus for establishing the Federal Aviation Agency (later named the Federal Aviation Administration) in 1958?

6. What is unique about the Boeing 737-700IGW?
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
ANCFlyer (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 26 Jan 16, 01:50Post
1. No One

Rest in the morning.
LET'S GO BRANDON!!!!
JLAmber (netAirspace ATC & Founding Member) 26 Jan 16, 19:55Post
6. What is unique about the Boeing 737-700IGW?

It's only offered as a business jet?
A million great ideas...
miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 26 Jan 16, 20:04Post
ANSWERS:

1. No one. The elevators normally are not interconnected and float freely. When the wind is from behind, it is not unusual for them to deflect in opposite directions. During takeoff the elevators align with the relative wind, and moving the control column moves a trim tab on the trailing edge of each elevator that then moves the elevators in unison and in the desired direction.

2. It is an irregular band of thunderstorms that encircles the Earth and is caused by the moist, northeast trade winds of the northern Tropics meeting the moist, southeast trades of the southern Tropics—a form of equatorial front. The zone moves generally north of the equator during our summer and south during winter.

3. The maximum amount of lift (7,600 pounds, in this case) is determined by multiplying the maximum-allowable limit load factor (3.8 Gs) by the maximum-allowable gross weight of the airplane.

4. Germany did not any have any operational aircraft carriers.

5. It was a midair collision between TWA Flight 2, a Lockheed Super Constellation, and United Airlines Flight 718, a Douglas DC–7, over the Grand Canyon on June 30, 1956. The accident was caused in part by a primitive air-traffic-control system and resulted in the loss of 128 lives.

6. This is the Boeing Business Jet (BBJ). The “IGW” stands for increased gross weight (to accommodate an increased fuel load).
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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