Business & Commercial Aviation

Edited by David Rimmer
Indigo Air, the public charter and FAR Part 135 operator using Dassault Falcon 20s, has tapped Arthur Andersen's Aviation Industry Practice for a variety of consulting services. The company hopes to launch public charter service between Chicago's Midway Airport and various New York City-area airports later this year. Indigo CEO Matt Andersen (no relation) says the consulting firm will assist with financial, fleet acquisition and regulatory advice.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
RTS Rework introduced a new FAA-approved pinion gear renewal repair for Bell 205, 212 and 412 helicopters. The repair facility also performs turboshaft gear and gear shaft inspection and repair process for Honeywell T53 gears and gearshafts.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
The captain of an Ansett New Zealand Dash 8 turboprop that crashed into a fog-shrouded mountain five years ago now faces manslaughter charges brought by the New Zealand Police. Four people died but 18 survived the June 1995 crash, which occurred as the pilots allegedly dealt with a landing gear problem. Also controversial is the court's reputed use of the aircraft's cockpit voice recorder tape as evidence. The flight was a scheduled run between Auckland and Palmerston North, a route over rough country including the Manawatu Gorge.

Edited by David Rimmer
MD Helicopters, Inc. (MDHI) has chosen Kaman Aerospace Corp. as the sole supplier of fuselages for MDHI's entire line of single-engine helicopters. The multi-year agreement has a potential value of $100 million, with 14 deliveries planned this year, 49 in 2001 and 60 by 2002. ``This will provide a good balance to our in-house programs, the SH2G Super Seasprite and KMAX, and it further enhances Kaman's position as a key player in the global aerospace market,'' Kaman President Walter R. Kozlow said.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Bombardier (Montreal) -- Pierre Lortie is now president of the Bombardier Capital division. Lortie succeeds Pierre-Andre Roy, who retired.

By David Rimmer
BAE Systems Canada (formerly known as Canadian Marconi Co.) is now trading with the ticker symbol BAE on the Toronto and American Stock Exchanges.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Galaxy Aviation (West Palm Beach, Fla.) -- Maureen Cole has been promoted to director of marketing and customer relations. Sandy Sabia is the FBO's new manager of marketing and customer relations. Mary Ellen Munson joins as marketing assistant at Galaxy Aviation of Stuart.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Aerodyne (Stuart, Fla.) -- Jeff Grothe joins the turbine repair facility as shop manager and Matt Woodworth joins as service manager.

Edited by Paul RichfieldPaul Richfield
The company that owns the rights to the Aerostar piston twin is on the verge of putting the aircraft back in production -- only this time as an entry-level business jet powered by two Williams FJ33-1 turbofans. According to Jim Christy, vice president of Hayden Lake, Idaho-based Aerostar Aircraft, the FAA has accepted a preliminary certification plan for the six- to eight-seat aircraft, and a ``test article'' fuselage is being used for functional tests of the tooling fixture.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Aerospace Products International is opening a new 24,000-square-foot facility near Manila to service clients in Asia and the South Pacific.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
Though they are designed mainly for the recreational general aviation market, handheld GPS units have found a home in many business and regional aircraft as a backup to other navigational aids. In modest trials aboard an Aviat A-1A Husky, Garmin's latest portable GPS -- the GPSMAP 295 -- was found to be fun and easy to use, thanks to its unique, 16-color display and logical format.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Aerospace Products International (Memphis) -- Glen Golden has been promoted to vice president of supply sales.

Edited by David Rimmer
Cessna expects to receive FAA certification of its Citation CJ2 this month and will begin customer deliveries of the jet in early 2001. The three aircraft in the CJ2 test program have amassed more than 1,000 flight hours. The manufacturer recently delivered the first Citation CJ1 to the Commercial Envelope Co. of Deer Park, N.Y. Both aircraft were introduced at the 1998 NBAA Convention.

By Torch Lewis
In earlier years, if you were a salesman for Executive Jet, your presence and solicitations in a corporate hangar were about as welcome as a sack full of adders. The president of EJA, a retired distinguished brigadier general named Olbert Fearing Lassiter envisioned more or less taking over corporate jet operations nationwide. His determinations were tempered by wiser heads to spread the word that EJA's jet fleet, mostly Lear 23s, could supplement, not replace, flight operations, a move that proved successful.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Mike Vines, in Birmingham, England
Druk Air (Royal Bhutan Airlines) will be the launch customer for the Avro RJX program, with an order for two 85-seat aircraft worth an estimated $60 million including spares. Deliveries are planned for November 2001 and January 2002, and the aircraft will be used to connect Druk's base in Paro, Bhutan, with Bangkok and Hong Kong. According to Nick Godwin, BAE Systems' marketing vice president, the company must build at least 18 RJXs per year to justify production, and he expects to announce another 20 sales by year-end.

By David Rimmer
The FBO line service staff at DB Aviation of Waukegan, Ill., has successfully completed the National Air Transportation Association's Safety First Program.

Edited by David Rimmer
StarShares, the TAG Aviation-owned fractional program operating Raytheon King Airs, plans to expand beyond its regional roots and go national. The company is hiring pilots for an Atlanta crew base and expects to add five new King Air 90s and 200s to an existing fleet of five King Airs by the end of the year. StarShares recently consolidated its flight operation and administrative offices at Westchester County Airport in White Plains, N.Y. The flight department formerly was based in Danbury, Conn.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy Paul Richfield
Growth in the worldwide helicopter business is flat and commercial operators are growing increasingly wary of high labor and maintenance costs. According to the Helicopter Association International's (HAI) 1999 Survey of Operating Performance, 39 percent of operators did not show a profit in 1998, a figure unchanged from the previous year.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Consolidated Fuel Systems (Montgomery, Ala.) -- Ralph Benway joins as director of engineering.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Rimmer
Flight Environments has selected Stevens Aviation to distribute and install its Cabin Comfort Systems sound insulation at seven East Coast and Southern locations.

By David Esler
Photograph: Pam Lohman, flight coordinator for Simon Property Group of Indianapolis, makes a point during one of the S&D Conference sessions. Offered under the auspices of the NBAA's Professional Development Program (PDP), the scheduler/ dispatcher certification course was unveiled in February at Las Vegas during the NBAA's 11th Schedulers&Dispatchers Conference.

By David Rimmer
Bombardier Aerospace sold three Canadair Regional Jet 200 series aircraft to China's Shanghai Airlines.

Edited by Paul Richfield
Continental Express will exercise 75 existing options for the purchase of 25 new Embraer ERJ-135 and 50 ERJ-145 regional jets, in addition to 25 undisclosed options for ERJ-145 aircraft exercised in December 1999. The latest order is worth nearly $500 million to engine-maker Rolls-Royce, whose AE3007 turbofan powers both aircraft types, as well as the derivative ERJ-140, a 44-seat variant of the ERJ-135/145.

Edited by Paul RichfieldBy David Esler, in Burbank, Calif.
In a vote of confidence for California's noise-sensitive Glendale-Burbank Pasa-dena Airport (BUR), Mercury Air Group opened its $10 million Mercury Air Center FBO on March 10. Distinguished by a glassed-in, elevated lobby, the facility was built to cater primarily to the entertain-ment industry, which frequently makes use of business aviation at BUR, the former Lockheed Air Terminal.

Staff
Bombardier Aerospace is opening a 43,500-square-foot factory service center at Dallas Love Field. The facility will employ 30 maintenance technicians to service the entire Learjet and Challenger line, with additional staff and facilities for Bombardier Global Express aircraft expected to be available in 2001. The Dallas operation is Bombardier's seventh U.S. location, operating under Bombardier's Business Aviation Services division. K-C Aviation Dallas veteran Stephen McNally has been tapped to manage the facility.