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NAS Daily 16 JAN 17

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

miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 15 Jan 17, 23:18Post
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News

Commercial

Embraer delivers 108 commercial aircraft in 2016, up 6.9%
Embraer delivered 108 commercial aircraft in 2016, up 6.9% over 101 commercial aircraft delivered in 2015. The Brazilian manufacturer delivered 90 E175s in 2016, eight more than it delivered in 2015.
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Airbus hopes for smoother output across 2017
Airbus is hoping for a smoother production flow over the course of this year, to avoid a repeat of the heavy rush which resulted in 111 aircraft being delivered in December. Problems with ramping up the A350-900 – which the airframer largely attributed to cabin equipment supply – combined with engine-related delays to the A320neo resulted in a back-loading of deliveries in the second half of 2016.
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Airlines

AirBaltic: CS300 performance ‘exceeding expectations’
Latvian carrier airBaltic reported its Bombardier CS300 operation performance is exceeding expectations since launching scheduled flights in December. The CS300 launch customer took delivery of the aircraft Nov. 28, 2016, and launched its first flight from Riga to Amsterdam Dec. 14. It received its second CS300 Dec. 31. The two aircraft have completed more than 100 flights and flown over 200 hours.
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Alitalia scraps proposed Air Malta stake
Italian flag carrier Alitalia has terminated plans to take a major stake in neighboring national airline Air Malta. Talks on Alitalia taking a shareholding in the Maltese airline, which were scheduled to be completed in summer 2016, had become increasingly protracted. Maltese newspapers speculated last weekend that negotiations between Alitalia and the Maltese government, which owns the tiny Mediterranean island’s airline, had broken down.
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American sees growth in revenue
American Airlines is projecting a better-than-expected fourth quarter, despite a 0.8% drop in December traffic. The company also reported increases in traffic and seat capacity for all of 2016.
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British Airways cabin crew to strike again
British Airways (BA) is facing a fresh bout of industrial action from some of its cabin crew after the union involved said staff would strike for 72 hours next week over pay rates. Members of the Unite trade union who work on BA’s mixed fleet based at London Heathrow Airport will stop work at 12:01 a.m. local time Jan. 19. Mixed fleet personnel operate both short- and long-haul services; Unite said that around 2,900 of the 4,500 mixed fleet cabin crew are union members, with 800 having joined since the dispute started.
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EasyJet take-off data incident uncovers software anomaly
Investigations have traced an EasyJet A319 take-off performance incident at Malaga to a software anomaly in a particular electronic flightbag function. The flaw enabled the flightbag to display information for two different runways simultaneously, which led the crew to use take-off calculations for runway 13 during a departure from runway 31.
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Eurowings: Wet lease of airberlin A320s a challenging task
Eurowings Europe, which is adding 33 wet-leased airberlin Airbus A320s to its fleet by the end of April, said the additional aircraft will create operational challenges for the Lufthansa Group low-cost subsidiary (LCC). Eurowings MD Michael Knitter told ATW that one of several challenges facing the LCC is training airberlin flight attendants to Eurowings standards. “We started cabin crew training on Jan. 10. Airberlin needs five to six crews per aircraft. Also, at the same time, we have to bring together two different operations [airberlin and Eurowings fleets] into the same traffic control center,” Knitter said.
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JetBlue grows revenue passenger miles in Dec.
Traffic, load factor and capacity all increased at JetBlue Airways in December. Passenger traffic for the final month of 2016 hit almost 4 billion revenue passenger miles, an increase of 4.5% over the previous year.
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Mozambique authorities: No UAV collision with LAM Mozambique 737
A LAM Mozambique Boeing 737-700 that landed in Tete, Mozambique, Jan. 5 with nose damage was not hit by an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), authorities in Mozambique have concluded. The aircraft was widely reported to have been in a possible drone collision as it approached the airport, but the evidence does not bear that out, the Mozambican Civil Aviation Institute (IACM) said. IACM is the civil aviation regulator in Mozambique.
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SpiceJet orders more Boeing 737 MAX 8s
Indian low-cost carrier (LCC) SpiceJet has substantially increased its commitment for Boeing 737s, with a major order for the forthcoming 737 MAX 8. The carrier already has an order for 42 737 MAX 8s on Boeing’s books. The new order, announced Jan. 13, adds a further 100 MAX 8s that were booked at the end of 2016, 13 additional MAXs that Boeing’s had previously attributed to an unidentified customer, plus purchase rights for 50 more aircraft.
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Airports

Russia, Finland increase St. Petersburg-Helsinki frequencies
Russian and Finland aviation authorities have agreed to increase flight frequencies from 14X- to 21-X per week for designated carriers on Saint Petersburg-Helsinki services. Helsinki-based Finnair will start selling tickets for the additional flights at the end of January
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American to add capacity at Mobile Regional Airport
American Airlines is expanding capacity out of Alabama's Mobile Regional Airport. Beginning in March, the number of seats on daily flights to Dallas-Fort Worth will increase from 50 to 76 per flight, and seats for service to Charlotte, N.C., will grow from 50 to 65 as American brings in larger aircraft.
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Military

KC-46 schedule unlikely to go as planned
If past performance is any indication of future schedules, the Boeing KC-46A Pegasus tanker program won’t go as planned, according to the Pentagon’s top weapons tester. Based on the tanker replacement program’s history, its current schedule is “aggressive and unlikely to be executed as planned,” Michael Gilmore wrote in his annual report. In a prime example of schedule delay, the US Air Force had planned to complete 66% of testing by the end of the engineering, manufacturing and development phase. By the beginning of low-rate production last August though, Boeing had completed only 30% of EMD testing, the report states.
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How to keep a Cold War veteran flying
According to an old tale, a fighter pilot who had been instructed to hold off from landing while a B-52 bomber made an approach with a defective TF33 quipped to air traffic controllers: “Oh no – the dreaded seven-engine approach”. On 4 January, this perhaps apocryphal story became reality, when the crew of an aged bomber returned to their North Dakota base minus an engine, which had disintegrated in flight.
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Aviation Quote

Bombing is often called 'strategic' when we hit the enemy, and 'tactical' when he hits us, and is often difficult to know where one finishes and the other begins.

- Air Vice-Marshal J. E. 'Johnnie' Johnson, RAF.


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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
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