Business & Commercial Aviation

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Executive Jet Management has added two Cincinnati-based and one Newburgh, N.Y.-based Cessna Citation Excels to its charter fleet. The operators say it now manages 50 aircraft nationwide.

Edited by Paul Richfield
DaimlerChrysler Aviation is adding a 14-passenger Gulfstream IVSP and a 12-passenger Gulfstream III to its managed fleet. Both aircraft will be available for charter through Automotive Air Charter.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
Mesaba Airlines has opened its 126,000-square-foot maintenance facility at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport. The new hangar will focus on performing heavy checks for Mesaba's fleet of 36 Avro RJ 85s, and will lead to the creation of around 150 jobs by the end of 2002, the airline says. Currently, Mesaba's RJ 85 C-checks are done in St. Johns, Newfoundland. The $12.4 million construction project was funded through a bond issued by the Kenton County (Kentucky) Airport Board.

Edited by David Rimmer
Gilles P. Ouimet, Pratt &Whitney Canada's President and COO, has been promoted to chief executive officer, succeeding L. David Caplan, who will remain with the engine giant as chairman until April 2001. As CEO, Ouimet says he intends to double the company's sales to $4 billion and increase market share to 34 percent over the next decade. The manufacturer claims it is well on the way towards achieving those goals, with 23 P&WC-powered aircraft scheduled to enter service by 2002.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
Airline Training Academy in Orlando has signed a five-year lease for a second British Aerospace Jetstream 32, which will be used for scheduled charter flights under the Discover Air brand.

Edited by Paul Richfield
Potez Aeronautique, already a major contributor to Dassault Falcon programs on the OEM side, is looking to grow its repair and overhaul work on the French-made jets. A structures specialist, the 87-year-old company makes cockpit, wing box and tail sections for current-production Falcons. Potez has worked with Dassault on several after-market continued airworthiness fixes, but wants to branch out on its own -- particularly with U.S. customers.

Edited by David Rimmer
Gulfstream Aerospace has opened a 53,650-square-foot refurbishment center at its Savannah headquarters. According to the manufacturer, the new facility consolidates and adds to existing completion and refurbishment activity in Savannah. Gulfstream says it plans to ``build a substantial refurbishment business'' in the next few years and will add staff to support the operation. The company also has broken ground on an expansion of its Brunswick, Ga., facility where G-IVSPs and G-Vs in the Gulfstream Shares fractional ownership program are completed and maintained.

Edited by David Rimmer
The Professional Pilots Federation (PPF) is waging another fight against the FAA's age 60 rule, filing a petition for exemptions for 69 of the group's 500 members. Each of the members on the petition has undergone extensive medical testing that PPF chief Bert Yetman says goes far beyond what FAA first-class medicals require. Yetman expects the agency to decline the petitions and then challenge the decision in federal court.

Edited by Paul Richfield
-- Vail Valley Jet Center wants operators to know that Colorado's Eagle County Regional Airport (EGE) will remain open during its runway renovation project, scheduled from April 22 to June 23. During the construction, the parallel taxiway will be converted into an active runway, but with use limited to aircraft with approach speeds not exceeding 121 knots and wing spans less than 79 feet. Navaids will be out of service during the construction, but the tower will remain open.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
A random sampling of airline crews chose to penetrate convective weather rather than deviate around it more than two-thirds of the time, according to data collected by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Lincoln Laboratory. Pilots were found to be more likely to penetrate convective weather -- including cells with precipitation intensities of National Weather Service levels 3, 4 and 5 -- when near the destination airport, when following another aircraft, when more than 15 minutes behind schedule or while flying at night.

Edited by David Rimmer
Galaxy Aerospace delivered a Galaxy business jet to Lions Air, a Swiss charter operator. The delivery marked the first Galaxy to a European operator and the third Galaxy in customer hands. The second Galaxy was delivered to Veridian Aviation Services, an aircraft sales, insurance and consulting company. Galaxy is the manufacturer's first large-cabin business jet, featuring intercontinental range and an $18.2 million price tag.

Edited by David Rimmer
The Aviation Employment Placement Service has scheduled its fourth aviation career fair for June 16 and 17 at the Los Angeles Airport Hilton in California. According to the company, which also operates an online employment listing service, the March AirFair in Florida attracted more than 800 job seekers and 31 employers, including Bombardier FlexJet and Kellstrom Industries, as well as Mesa, Colgan, Piedmont and other airlines. Another AirFair is scheduled in Dallas on August 18 and 19.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
Continental Express plans to turn New York's La Guardia Airport (LGA) into a major hub for its fleet of 50- and 37-seat Embraer regional jets. Assuming the DOT grants it the necessary slot exemptions, ConEx will begin its LGA operations in September with the addition of one city per month, for a total of 22 new nonstop destinations within two years. The airline says its decision to expand at LGA was driven by the recent passage of legislation (AIR-21) encouraging looser slot restrictions for air service to smaller cities.

Edited by David Rimmer
President Clinton has nominated seven people to the Federal Aviation Management Advisory Council. Nominees with direct aviation experience include GAMA President Ed Bolen, Air Wisconsin President and CEO Geoffrey T. Crowley, American Airlines executive Robert W. Baker, Boeing retiree Robert A. Davis and former ALPA President Jerome Randolph Babbitt. Other nominees are Debbie Branson, a Dallas attorney, and former DOT official Kendall W. Wilson, who now operates a high-tech finance company advising new businesses.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Titusville, Fla.-based FBO Executive Aviation is now an Avfuel dealer.

Edited by David Rimmer
The NTSB has recommended that the FAA mandate crash-protected cockpit video recorders in FAR Part 121, 125 and 135 aircraft now required to have cockpit voice recorders and digital flight data recorders. According to the NTSB, the new recorders should produce color images with sufficient clarity to show the ``identities, locations and actions of the people in the cockpit'' as well as to discern instrument readings.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
Simple solutions would appear elusive as United Airlines struggles to find the best way to integrate regional jets into its network, according to Captain Rick Dubinsky, master chairman of the United Airlines chapter of the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA). The following is an excerpt from an interview with Dubinsky that appears in the March Rupanews -- the Journal of the Retired United Pilots Association:

Edited by David Rimmer
Honeywell plans to redouble its commitment to general aviation around the Bendix/King brand, which it says will become a ``product and services machine.'' New products include the traffic information service, or TIS, which depicts uplinked traffic data on an airborne MFD; the integrated hazard avoidance system (IHAS), which will display weather, terrain, traffic, position and other flight information; and ``Wingman'' -- a new subscription service that will provide GA pilots with a comprehensive weather and communications package.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Elliott Aviation (Moline, Ill.) -- Jay Anderson joins as the company's Minneapolis service manager. Terje J. Peterson is now flight department manager in Moline.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
The FAA is teaming up with the American Society for Quality to conduct the Conference on Quality in Commercial Aviation. The conference is scheduled for March 25 to 28, 2001 in Dallas. More information is available from Helen Schneider at (254) 776-3550.

By Richard N. Aarons
NTSB Air Safety Investigator Bob Hancock is working on two unusual business aircraft accidents -- one involves a King Air pilot who attempted to fly an out-of-service approach procedure, and the other an experienced Baron pilot who seems to have been overwhelmed by the complexities of a New York Metroplex arrival. Both deserve your contemplation in that each represents situations that all business pilots face from time to time. Clearance for a Non-Approach

Edited by David Rimmer
SunJet President James Watkins says that although he was ``quite surprised'' by the day-long FBI raid, he added ``when you have things like Waco and Ruby Ridge, why should this surprise us? At least they didn't set fire to us or shoot anybody.'' Watkins adamantly denies any criminal wrongdoing or cover-up in the Learjet 35 crash and investigation, and brands any suggestion to the contrary ``the most ridiculous assumption in the world.'' According to Watkins, FBI agents ``rounded-up'' SunJet employees and prevented them from making or receiving calls.

Edited by David Rimmer
Beginning June 1, Cessna Service Centers in the United States will operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Cessna also has instituted an ``EJA Weekend Shift'' program for Citation 560 Ultra service at its San Antonio and Orlando centers using dedicated maintenance personnel. Both initiatives will help ensure that Citation operators have access to factory service when and where needed.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Jet Aviation (West Palm Beach, Fla.) -- Business aviation veteran Bruce McNeely joins as vice president and general manager of the operator's U.S. aircraft management division. McNeely replaces Jerry Keating, who has been named vice president of operations and special projects with responsibility for Jet Aviation's West Coast operations.

Edited by David Rimmer
Flight Options, the Cleveland-based fractional operator, says all 35 Raytheon Beechjets and Cessna Citation IIs in its fleet have gone paperless and it will convert all remaining aircraft in its fleet by the end of the summer. Using Jeppesen's JeppView Electronic Flight Guides, the new system incorporates electronic airway manuals, flight planning software, terminal charts and checklists in a pen-based computer system. The operator says that JeppView will save the time and baggage space previously required for maintaining updated paper charts and manuals.