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NAS Daily 20 NOV 17

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miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 19 Nov 17, 22:12Post
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Capacity control, economic rebound lifts LATAM to record 3Q net profit
Santiago-based LATAM Airlines Group reported a 2017 third-quarter net profit of $160.6 million, compared to $4.7 million net income in 3Q 2016, boosted by a $59 million foreign exchange gain based on a 4.4% appreciation of the Brazilian real during the quarter.
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Gulf Air names new CEO, leases 787-9s
Gulf Air has appointed the former head of Croatia Airlines, Krešimir Kučko, as CEO, effective immediately. He replaces Maher Salman Al Musallam, who retired earlier this year. The Bahrain-based airline’s chairman, Zayed Bin Rashid Alzayani, said Kučko “brings with him exceptional industry knowledge that I am confident will add considerable value to our business.”
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VLM Airlines acquires Belgian AOC for Fokker 50
Belgian aviation authorities have granted an air operator’s certificate (AOC) to regional VLM Airlines for its Fokker 50 aircraft, just days after approving an AOC for Airbus A320s acquired from Thomas Cook Airlines Belgium (TCAB). Currently, VLM Airlines has three AOCs: a Slovenian and a Belgian AOC for its Fokker 50 operations and a Belgian AOC for A320 operations.
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Revenue generation from IFE screens still elusive
Despite doomsayers over the years condemning it to the technology junk heap, the IFE seatback screen is here to stay, especially on long-haul flights, but airlines have to improve the retail opportunities that today’s IFE capabilities present.
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IndiGo to begin ATR turboprop operations
Indian LCC IndiGo—which so far has relied on Airbus A320s—will introduce its first ATR 72-600 turboprop Dec. 21, when it will take off from Hyderabad, India. The airline in May signed a letter of intent for 50 ATR 72-600s and took delivery of the first one Nov. 17.
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Jambojet to lease two Bombardier Q400s
Bombardier has signed a firm purchase agreement with Denmark-based Nordic Aviation Capital (NAC) for two Q400 turboprops, for lease to Kenyan LCC Jambojet. Based on list prices, the order is valued at approximately $64 million. The order was already on Bombardier’s 3Q orderbook as being assigned to an undisclosed customer.
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Boeing, Royal Jordanian ink 5-year training plan
Boeing and Royal Jordanian Airlines have signed a five-year strategic training agreement to help train the airline’s Boeing 787 pilots. The agreement, announced at the Dubai Air Show, will see Royal Jordanian pilots undergo type-rating and recurrent training at Boeing Global Services’London Gatwick training campus.
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Beijing’s Capital Airlines begins Qingdao-London service
HNA Group subsidiary Capital Airlines launched Qingdao-London services Nov. 17, as part of its international expansion plan. The new twice-weekly service uses an Airbus A330. In recent years, Capital Airlines has accelerated the pace of its international expansion as demand grows for outbound travel.
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LOT Polish Airlines to launch Singapore services in 2018
LOT Polish Airlines plans to begin 3X-weekly Warsaw-Singapore Changi services from May 15, 2018. Warsaw-based LOT will utilize a Boeing 787 in a three-class configuration—business class, premium economy and economy—on the service. Frequencies will increase to 4X-weekly from July 2018. LOT CEO Rafał Milczarski said the new service reflects the carrier’s promise to continue expanding its network of Asian connections and is part of its growth strategy.
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Airbus, Emirates face off over A380 impasse
To concentrate on the Emirates A380 order saga in anticipation of writing large figures in Dubai air show headlines is to ignore the fascinating high-stakes poker game being played in the background – one involving numbers far greater than a couple of dozen aircraft and a few billions of dollars.
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FAA details 777X folding wing-tip safety demands
US regulators have detailed a series of protective safety measures proposed for the Boeing 777X's folding wing-tips, having drawn comparisons with the risks posed by unreleased gust-locks. The US Federal Aviation Administration is seeking comments by 18 December on the measures which, it says, are intended to avert a "catastrophic event" should the wing-tips not be secured for take-off and flight.
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Air Canada to fly initial 737 Max on domestic and overseas routes
Air Canada will launch its first Boeing 737 Max 8 flights on domestic routes starting 11 December, and transition the type to transatlantic flying next spring. The Montreal-based carrier confirms the type (below) will enter revenue service on 11 December with a Montreal-Calgary roundtrip followed by a Montreal-Vancouver round trip.
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How do you replace a first-generation A330?
The Airbus A330 has proven to be one of the most successful twin-aisle types ever. A quarter of century on from its first flight in November 1992, and with the second-generation A330-900 now in flight, how are operators deploying the twinjet and what types might replace the existing fleets?
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Qantas to have 80 wi-fi equipped aircraft by end-2018
Qantas plans to equip 80 of its domestically-operated Boeing 737-800s and Airbus A330s with on-board wi-fi connectivity by the end of 2018. The Oneworld carrier says that following a successful trial earlier this year, it has rolled out the ViaSat equipment on 15 737-800s, and will start to fit it on its A330s from next year.
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How Airbus’s first big twin blossomed into the A330neo
Whisper it, but the recent first flight of a second-generation Airbus A330, the re-engined -900, was tantalizingly close to the 25th anniversary of the twinjet’s maiden sortie on 2 November 1992. Understandably, Airbus hasn’t made much of this historic milestone, but the fact is that the aircraft’s continuing appeal in a market of much younger competitors is a credit to the A330’s original concept which dates back to the 1980s.
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Why A330 tanker sales boomed
At the start of this century, the then-EADS began exploring the potential for its A330 widebody to deliver air-to-air refuelling (AAR) services for military operators. In doing so the European company replicated its strategy for the airliner market, by going head to head for international sales with Boeing, which held a virtual monopoly in the tanker sector.
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Northrop flies first E-2D for Japan
Northrop Grumman has performed the first flight of Japan's E-2D Advanced Hawkeye early warning and surveillance aircraft. Completed in early October from the US airframer's facility in St Augustine, Florida, the milestone was announced by the company on 15 November.
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Bell considers autonomous flight of V-280 tiltrotor
Being developed for the US Army's future vertical lift program, the V-280 is due to make its maiden sortie before year-end. But, says Vince Tobin, Bell's vice-president of military business, the manufacturer is now considering possible future applications for the tiltrotor.
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Pilatus registers first customer-owned PC-24 as certification looms
The first Pilatus PC-24 destined for launch customer PlaneSense has been registered in Switzerland by the Stans-based airframer, as certification and service entry of the superlight business jet draw near. The all-metal aircraft – serial number 101 – carries the registration HB-VSB and will be delivered to the US fractional ownership company following European Aviation Safety Agency and US Federal Aviation Administration validation of the PC-24 program, earmarked for December.
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Embraer shrinks cabin altitude for Legacy 450 and 500
Embraer has reduced the cabin altitude for its Legacy 450 and 500 business jets by 200ft (60m), as part of a continuing focus on delivering customer value across its product line. Aircraft shipped to owners in the first quarter of 2018 will have a cabin altitude of 5,800ft when flying at an altitude of 45,000ft, thanks to an increase in cabin pressurization from 9.3psi to 9.73psi. The aircraft's environmental control system also preserves a sea-level cabin altitude while flying below 27,050ft.
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Era says its H225 helicopters are worth just $4 million each
US offshore helicopter operator Era Group has booked a $117 million write-down in its latest financial quarter, primarily based on a reappraisal of its Airbus Helicopters H225s, which values the 11t-class rotorcraft at just $4 million each. Era has nine offshore-configured Super Pumas in its fleet. These have been idle since the April 2016 loss of an H225 off the coast of Norway, operated by CHC Helikopter Services, which claimed the lives of all 13 passengers and crew.
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UAE has eyes on the stars
Since humans first recognized the difference between the “fixed” stars and the roving planets, Mars has fascinated scientists and romantics alike. It is large to the naked eye – only the Sun, Moon, Jupiter and Venus look bigger – and, famously, it is red. By the late 1800s, telescopes were good enough to reveal “canals” which some observers speculated to be the elaborate infrastructure of an advanced civilization.
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The average pilot, despite the sometimes swaggering exterior, is very much capable of such feelings as love, affection, intimacy and caring. These feelings just don't involve anyone else.

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Trivia

General Aviation Knowledge

1. True or false, It is impossible for a jet fighter to shoot itself down by flying in to its own gunfire.

2. Pilots are familiar with adverse yaw, a result of using ailerons, but what is adverse roll, and what causes it?

3. During October 1945, what well known department store became the first such store to display airplanes for sale, and what type of airplanes did the store sell?

4. True or false, A radio aid to navigation used in the United States prior to the advent of the VOR (or "omni") was the VRB, or voice radio beacon. The VRB broadcast in voice the bearing of n aircraft from the station.

5. What is a vortilon?

6. True or false, Low-pressure troughs and high-pressure ridges associated with the jet stream in the northern hemisphere are situated north and south, respectively of the jet.

7. A pilot is wearing a lapel pin called a "Lennie," and he appears particularly proud of it. What does the pin represent?

8. What is a sub-cloud car and what type of aircraft were equipped with them?
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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