Aviation Daily

Staff
HEICO Corp.'s Trilectron Industries subsidiary has acquired selected assets of the former Air-A-Plane Corp. Terms were of the deal were not disclosed, but under the transaction, Trilectron, which is a subsidiary of HEICO's Electronics&Ground Support Group, acquired all rights to Air-A-Plane's trademark and all product designs, data and related information. Trilectron also purchased limited inventory, certain specified customer order contracts and a manufacturing facility in Suffolk, Va.

Staff
Bombardier's new Q400 regional airliner made its inaugural revenue flight between Copenhagen and Poznan, Poland, yesterday, operating for SAS Commuter. SAS Commuter has firm orders for 22 Q400 aircraft, including three recently converted options. While the Q400 introduced yesterday has 72 passenger seats in a two-class configuration, SAS Commuter's fleet also will include single-class, 76-seat models. The Q400 will replace SAS Commuter's 50-seat turboprops on routes within Scandinavia and between Scandinavia and other points in Europe.

Staff
United plans on taking an unspecified equity interest in On2.com Inc., a New York-based company that provides full-motion, television-quality video over the Internet. United did not disclose terms of the agreement but said it signed a deal with the company in order to develop and market the first travel Web site featuring television-quality travel videos. "Partnering with marquee brands like United is an important step as we expand the broadband On2Network," said Dan Miller, founder and chief executive of On2.com.

Staff
While DOT appears ready to name its choice from among four candidates for the career deputy assistant secretary for aviation and international affairs post, its top aviation post -- assistant secretary -- remains vacant. Dorothy Robyn, White House economic policy special assistant and leading candidate, is no longer being considered for the job, sources tell The DAILY.

Staff
Mercury Air reported that revenues for its second quarter ended Dec. 31 rose 47% to $83.5 million, but that net income before an extraordinary charge was $1.5 million, down from $1.9 million. For the first six months, revenues grew 45% to $158.2 million, while net income before an extraordinary charge was $3.6 million, up from $3.5 million. Net income, after the extraordinary charge of $979,000, was $2.6 million.

Staff
Egypt has asked Indonesia to initial an air services agreement, paving the way for national carrier EgyptAir to start services to Jakarta this year. EgyptAir representative Didien Juanedy said the airline wants to develop the Middle East and Egypt as tourist markets for Indonesia.

Staff
Lufthansa will expand its services to the U.S., starting March, 26, with double-daily flights between Frankfurt and Los Angeles, Washington Boston and Chicago, up from daily service. The airline also will add six weekly frequencies to New York Kennedy offering 27 weekly flights. Lufthansa will split up the Bogota and Lima flight and introduce three-times-weekly Airbus A340 services to both cities. The three-times-weekly Munich-San Francisco flight will become daily, operated with a Boeing 747-400. Frequencies from Frankfurt to Manila/Philippines will rise to five.

Staff
Great Lakes Aviation will continue United Express service between Salina, Kan., and Denver and increase service between Denver and Hays, Kan. It also will upgrade service to nonstop on two flights to Denver from Liberal, Kan. Beginning March 2, Great Lakes will offer three roundtrip one-stops from Salina to Denver via Hays on weekdays, plus a single roundtrip to Salina and Hays on Saturdays and two on Sundays.

Staff
GetThere.com signed a deal with Lucent Technologies to deploy GetThere.com's Internet travel booking system to its 60,000 traveling employees. GetThere.com said the rollout follows a pilot test that resulted in lower average air fares for the staff and improved efficiency for travelers using the online booking system. Located on Lucent's intranet, the booking site enables employees to use a Web browser to see availability of air, hotel and car rental, to book travel instantaneously.

Staff
Boeing employees represented by the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA) probably will not return to the bargaining table very soon, said Bill Dugovich, a union spokesman. SPEEA employees walked off the job Wednesday morning after negotiations with a federal mediator failed to yield a contract. Dugovich said the two sides "are not close at all" on a deal. "Boeing in two days of negotiations changed nothing, made no adjustment, did nothing with the nation's top mediator," he said.

By Gen. Charles T. Robertson, USAF, Commander In Chief U. S. Transportation and Commander, Air Mobility Command
Mr. Miller's editorial comments in the Jan. 3 edition of Aviation DAILY ("The Decline of Aviation Leadership in Washington") included some misleading remarks concerning the Civil Reserve Air Fleet (CRAF) and its importance to our national defense strategy. Some points of clarification are in order:

Staff
Continental selected Worldwide Flight Services to provide ramp services at Toronto Pearson Airport. Worldwide will begin servicing seven Continental Boeing 737 daily flights and five Continental Express regional jet daily flights on Feb. 27. The new contract calls for a 40-person work force. Worldwide also provides services to Continental, Continental Express and Continental Micronesia at 13 other airports throughout the U.S. and Canada. Worldwide serves 12 other airline customers at Toronto Pearson.

Staff
LOT Polish Airlines selected ARINC Inc. as its preferred VHF data-link service provider. ARINC currently provides VHF data-link service to LOT in North America and Asia and, with this agreement, will provide data-link communications in Europe. LOT already has data link in its Boeing 767s and regional jets. LOT uses ARINC's air traffic services (ATS) applications, such as digital automatic terminal information service (D-ATIS) in North America.

Staff
Rolls-Royce and SR Technics, a subsidiary of SAirGroup, are forming a new maintenance and overhaul company to service Trent engines in Europe and Africa. The 50/50 venture is to begin operations in 2001, the companies said yesterday. SR Technics will be responsible for Trent 500 and 700 engines, while Rolls will service Trent 900 engines out of Derby. Swissair has committed to nine firm and 10 option Airbus 340-600s powered by Trent 500s. Rolls said the Trent fam8ily has secured nearly a 50% share of the widebody market.

Staff
The Virgin Group named consulting firm iXL Enterprises to be the exclusive "services partner" to develop and build the company's Internet portal, Virgin.com. Virgin plans on investing $247.5 million "to transform the highly trusted offline brand into a successful online business," first in the U.K. and then throughout Europe and finally to the U.S. The new site is intended be a portal for all Virgin-branded goods and services.

Staff
Eurowings, Europe's largest independent regional, flew more than 3 million passengers for the first time last year. Traffic rose 4.9% to 3.04 million passengers. Eurowings flew more than one-third of its passengers from 11 German airports to Amsterdam Schiphol. Eurowings is a member of the KLM/Northwest/Alitalia alliance. German domestic traffic fell 10% as the airline stopped its Frankfurt-Berlin service last October. Eurowings redeployed two of its BAe 146s from charter to scheduled flights and put one more Airbus A319 into service.

Staff
Boeing Commercial President Alan Mulally said yesterday he is consolidating certain operations for more efficiency and better use of assets and facilities. One of the most significant changes will be consolidation all commercial airplane programs within a single organization led by Jim Jamieson, Mulally said. Boeing will focus on five business strategies. "Organizing our airplane programs in this way will enable us to improve the way common processes and solutions are developed and shared," he said.

Staff
The Navy was asked to search for possible parts of an Alaska Airlines MD-83 that separated from the aircraft about four miles from the crash site, NTSB Chairman Jim Hall said yesterday. Radar hits showed what "might be an indication of something coming off Flight 261," Hall told reporters in Washington, D.C. "I have asked the Navy to search an area of ocean about four miles from the main wreckage," Hall said. The Navy Monday night recovered an eight-foot section of what is believed to be the left horizontal stabilizer.

Staff
Continental amended its "rights agreement" yesterday to raise the limit of stock an institutional investor can hold in the airline. It previously allowed an investor to hold up to 15% of Continental's shares, but a spokesman said investor Alliance Capital has an interest in buying more. Because the acquisition is not intended in a "hostile nature," the airline's board decided to raise the buy limit to no more than 20%, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

Staff
Gourmet Nova has taken a 25% stake in Anton Airfood, the third largest airport restaurant operator in the U.S. Gourmet Nova is a fully owned subsidiary of SAirRelations, the catering and hotel division of SAirGroup. The company wants to get a foothold in the U.S. airport market.

Staff
After seven months of operation, startup LanPeru enjoys a 34% market share on the Lima-Cusco route and 37% on Lima-Miami. In April, the airline plans to fly Lima-Iquitos, gateway to the Peruvian Amazon. This will require adding a third aircraft to its fleet of two Boeing 737-200s, according to affiliate Aviation Latin America&the Caribbean. Peruvian investors hold 51% of LanPeru's shares and LanChile 49%.

Staff
Effective immediately, Venezuela's Avensa/Servivensa reduced its schedule to South America and the U.S. It now operates from Caracas Maiquetia to Aruba, Bogota, Lima, Medellin, Mexico, Miami and New York; and from Barquisimeto, Maracaibo, Valencia and San Antonio de Tachira to Aruba, Medellin and Miami. Passengers holding Avensa tickets issued before Feb. 1 to or from Madrid, Rome, Lisbon, Milan and Oporto must use them before Feb. 20 to be able to complete their itineraries on Iberia.

Staff
Galileo International unveiled the details of its plan to acquire Trip.com, which it hopes will kickstart its own Internet initiatives. Galileo purchased 20% of Trip.com last year, and now plans to buy the remaining 80% ownership interest for $269 million in a combined stock and cash transaction. The deal is expected to close by the end of the first quarter, when Denver-based Trip.com will become a wholly owned subsidiary of Galileo International.

Staff
American parent AMR Corp. set March 15 as the date when it will spin off its remaining 83% interest in Sabre Holdings. AMR shareholders of record at the close of business on March 1 will receive roughly 0.7 shares of Sabre for each share of AMR. The stock dividend will be distributed after close of business on March 15.

Staff
Two competing web sites aimed at connecting airlines and suppliers will take off in spring or early summer. Henrik Schroder, chairman and chief executive of aviationX.com, said yesterday that his web-based network will offer a real-time opportunity to carriers seeking goods and services at lower cost. BACK Inc. in two weeks will announce the launch of skyfish.com, a site similar to aviationX. com but serving "total airspace," said Steve Casley, chief marketing officer.