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NAS Daily 13 JAN 17

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 12 Jan 17, 22:46Post
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Commercial

Air Lease converts to a dozen A321neos
US lessor Air Lease has become the latest customer to convert to the larger Airbus A321neo, having switched an order for a dozen A320neos. The change has been disclosed in Airbus’s latest backlog data, unveiled during a briefing in Toulouse.
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Honeywell’s JetWave receives EASA certification
Honeywell has achieved European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) certification for its JetWave high-speed satellite communications equipment on the Airbus A319. The development will allow JetWave to be installed and used on the single-aisle airliner, giving passengers, pilots and operators who have access to satellite operator Inmarsat’s Global Xpress Ka-band service, GX Aviation, connection speeds similar to those at home or in an office.
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Airlines

Atran Airlines receives Moscow-Frankfurt designation
Moscow-based cargo carrier Atran Airlines, which is part of Volga-Dnepr Group, has received approval for 7X-weekly Moscow-Frankfurt service, according to a statement by Russia’s Federal Air Transport Agency. Atran is the group’s regional and express cargo airline; it operates a fleet of Boeing 737-400 freighters.
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Brussels Airlines to wet-lease Superjets
Brussels Airlines will expand the use of hired-in regional aircraft as it phases out a fleet of Avro RJ100s, the airline said Jan. 12. The Belgian flag carrier will use three Sukhoi SSJ100 Superjets from Ireland-based CityJet beginning in April, when the aircraft start a two-year contract.
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China Southern to boost international routes in 2017
China Southern Airlines’ parent China Southern Group transported 115 million passengers in 2016, up 4.8% over 2015. The Group reported a 3.2% increase in operating revenue to CNY115.8 billion (16.7 billion) and a “record high profit,” although the company did not disclose figures.
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Delta 2016 net profit down 3% to $4.4 billion
Delta Air Lines posted a 2016 net profit of $4.4 billion, down 3% from net income of $4.5 billion in 2015, as higher labor costs drove a slight decrease in earnings. Delta’s full-year earnings report indicates the revenue environment remained sluggish in the US airline market in 2016, with the Atlanta-based carrier’s revenue dropping 3% year-over-year to $33.8 billion. Costs for 2016 fell just 1% compared to 2015 to $32.7 billion as employee salaries rose 14% to just over $10 billion. Operating income in 2016 was just under $7 billion, down 11% from an operating profit of $7.8 billion in 2015.
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Eurowings Europe opens Salzburg base
Lufthansa Group low-cost (LCC) subsidiary Eurowings Europe opened a base in Salzburg, Austria on Jan. 11, the LCC’s second base after Vienna. The Salzburg network will include 30 weekly flights to Hamburg, Düsseldorf, Cologne, Brussels, Paris Charles de Gaulle, Palma de Mallorca, Olbia, Spilt, Dubrovnik and Saloniki.
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Interjet returns 11 SSJ100s into service following repairs
Russia’s Sukhoi Civil Aircraft (SCA) has completed repairs on all 11 Sukhoi Superjet 100s (SSJ100s) that were grounded by Mexican airline Interjet, the only SSJ100 operator in the Americas. The carrier grounded 11 out of 22 SSJ100s at the end of December 2016 after SCA identified a minor fault in the tail stabilizer of one aircraft during inspections. At the end of last year, SCA experts were sent to Mexico to perform all required maintenance.
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JetBlue brings high-speed internet to the skies
JetBlue's entire fleet is now enabled with complimentary satellite Wi-Fi capabilities, enabling broadband-level speeds for all passengers. "It's 2017 and our customers expect to be connected everywhere, whether that be from the comfort of their sofa or 35,000 feet above it," said Jamie Perry, JetBlue's vice president of marketing.
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Malaysia Airlines to order 25 widebodies
Malaysia Airlines say it will make an order for 25 new widebodies by the end of the year, with plans for deliveries to start in 2018. In an email response to FlightGlobal, the carrier says that 15 of these aircraft are for replacement of the same number of Airbus A330-300s coming off lease, and the remaining 10 targeted at growth.
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Salalah Air to launch regional services
Omani startup Salalah Air is planning a move from its original equipment of light aircraft and 19-seater regional turboprops to jets about a year after it starts services. The airline, which will be Oman’s first charter airline, aims to operate its first flights this month. Operating from Salalah, Oman’s second city, the startup plans initially to operate four light aircraft plus a single Dornier 228.
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United to retire last Boeing 747 in 2017
United Airlines says it will retire its last Boeing 747 by the end of the year. "It's a bittersweet milestone -- this jumbo jet with its unmistakable silhouette once represented the state-of-the-art in air travel," United President Scott Kirby wrote in a letter to employees. "Today, there are more fuel-efficient, cost-effective and reliable widebody aircraft that provide an updated in-flight experience for our customers traveling on long-haul flights."
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Airports

Hawaiian Airlines plans return to Maui airport
Hawaiian Airlines expects to resume service from Maui's Kapalua Airport, once the facility incorporates a Transportation Security Administration checkpoint. The checkpoint equipment is scheduled to arrive by the end of January.
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Airports in Washington, D.C., area ready to accommodate inauguration travelers
The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority is working collaboratively with airlines and airport partners to ensure a smooth travel experience for passengers traveling through Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and Washington Dulles International Airport, heading to presidential inauguration events.
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Military

Germany to acquire used A321 for VIP missions
Germany has signed a deal with the special mission division of MRO provider Lufthansa Technik (LHT) for the acquisition and conversion of an Airbus A321 for its air force. Berlin values the agreement, signed on 5 January, at €90 million ($96 million), which also includes spare parts and training.
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Mattis strikes sharp contrast to Trump on F-35, nuclear weapons
Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of defense supports Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program, the NATO alliance and restrained use of nuclear weapons during his confirmation hearing, marking a stark departure from the president-elect. Retired US Marine Corps General James Mattis’ stance on those issues would have been unremarkable with any other incoming administration. Yet in light of Trump’s Twitter attacks on the defense aviation industry and his coziness with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Mattis’ boilerplate comments took on a fresh relevance.
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Aviation Quote

"Since, in the long run, every planetary civilization will be endangered by impacts from space, every surviving civilization is obliged to become spacefaring--not because of exploratory or romantic zeal, but for the most practical reason imaginable: staying alive... If our long-term survival is at stake, we have a basic responsibility to our species to venture to other worlds."

- Carl Sagan, Pale Blue Dot, 1994


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Trivia

General Trivia

1. What country has the world’s worst weather?

2. What is the greatest speed ever attained by a human being in flight?

3. Explain how it is possible for two aircraft to maintain a constant distance and bearing from each other while both maintain the same true heading and altitude, yet are flown at different true airspeeds (in no-wind conditions)?

4. What famous pilot also was a bantamweight boxer who won a West Coast Amateur Championship and became a professional boxer?

5. What U.S. airline was first to operate an all-turbine (turbo-prop) fleet, and what U.S. airline was first to operate an all-jet fleet?

6. A pilot is speaking to an FSS specialist and is overheard saying, “I am going to praise God.” Why does this make perfect sense to the specialist?

7. Who was the first politician to use an airplane to travel between campaign stops?
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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