Business & Commercial Aviation

Linda L. Martin
Rockwell Collins (Cedar Rapids, Iowa)--The avionics maker announced two new appointments: Gregory S. Churchill to vice president of integrated applications and navigation systems, and Scott Gunnufson to director of customer programs.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Signature Flight Support will proceed with building a permanent, full-service terminal and hangar facility at Miami International Airport, following the renewal of its lease. Construction is expected to be completed in late 1999. Signature has been operating out of temporary facilities near the new building site. Phone: (305) 526-6344.

Arnold Lewis
Fairchild unveiled the Envoy 7--the corporate version of its 70-seat 728JET regional jet--in October. At $28.5 million (for the first 10 customers), the proposed twin-engine jet is forecast to transport 16 to 19 passengers 4,200 nm at FL 410 and a cruise of 0.80 Mach.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Jet Aviation acquired a second hangar and associated ramp space at Hanscom Field. The acquisition doubles the FBO's hangar capacity to more than 42,000 square feet and 18,000 square feet of ramp space. The company is a Raytheon authorized service center and says it can support ``unscheduled maintenance needs.'' Phone: (781) 274-0030.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Fatal accidents from walking into a spinning propeller happen rarely, but there recently were two fatal ones within four days of each other. Both incidents occurred at night. At 0030 on October 30 at Chandler Airport in Fresno, Calif., an intended passenger was killed when he walked out of the lobby, onto the ramp and into the rotating propeller of a Cessna 182.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
General Accounting Office is investigating the FAA's decision to release Kansas City from its obligations under the improvement grants program for Richards-Gabaur Airport, permitting the city to close the facility (November, page 18). The study appears to be part of a larger GAO investigation into the FAA's grant assurance enforcement program as a whole. A report is due April 1, 1999. The AOPA wants the DOT to investigate, too.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Skyshare International, an organization formed in May to provide packaged fractional ownership franchise systems to FBOs, is close to selecting its first true operators, according to company president Samuel Miller. The Little Rock, Ark., company has been testing the concept with a Bonanza A36, Baron 58 and King Air C90B managed by Central Flying Service, a Skyshare founding member. A Skyshare franchise includes documentation, aircraft selection, national interchange agreements, pricing of services, marketing, accounting and maintenance.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Truman Arnold Corp. (TAC Air) acquired Sky Harbor Air Service, an FBO at Omaha's Eppley Airfield and its eighth facility. All eight are Phillips 66 Aviation Performance Centers (APCs). In addition to Texarkana and Omaha, the company has FBOs in Lexington, Ky.; Shreveport, La.; Amarillo, Texas; Fort Smith, Ark.; and Greenville, S.C. Phone: (402) 422-6633.

By Linda L. Martin
The BAS-400 digital pitot/static test set, developed by Banyan Air Service, meets requirements for Reduced Vertical Separation Minimum certification for turbine-powered aircraft. The unit can be used to test and certificate altimeters and air-data computers, and can be used to troubleshoot and certificate pitot and static systems. Price: $8,900. Banyan Air Service, Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport, 1575 W. Commercial Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33309. (954) 491-3170; fax: (954) 771-0281.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
PATS, inc. of Columbia, Md., has received its newest STC for the installation of an APU kit in the tail of Falcon 20s. The latest system features the Sundstrand T-40C9 APU, certificated for starts up to 25,000 feet msl and operation up to 35,000 feet msl.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
British Aerospace plans to offer two to three BAe 146 four-engine regional jets per year to corporate customers. The niche is its ability to operate from 3,200- to 3,300-foot runways and meet FAR Part 36, Stage 3 noise limits, said Alan Stiley, who heads BAe's regional aircraft operation in Herndon, Va. Base price for the aircraft is $26 million--``nicely equipped for $30 million,'' he added. There are eight older BAe 146s in corporate service.

By Mal Gormley
It isn't often that we come across a book that we know right away could become an industry standard. But that may become the case with Aircraft Acquisition Planning, the first of three texts produced by Conklin and de Decker, a provider of aircraft costing information based in Orleans, Mass.

Staff
The Air Line Pilots Association in late October granted $1 million each to the pilots of Atlantic Southeast Airlines and Skyway Airlines. Both pilot groups were threatening job action over stalled contract talks with their employers. In the case of ASA pilots, it was the second $1 million grant.

Linda L. Martin
William B. Wagner, chief pilot of Townsend Engineering Co. and immediate past chairman of the NBAA Board of Directors, is the recipient of the first annual Duncan Aviation Excellence Award. The Lincoln, Neb.-based aircraft service and support company established the award to recognize ``an individual for his or her significant commitment and leadership in the business aviation industry.'' Wagner was the founder of Townsend's corporate flight department in 1978, and has served on various NBAA committees and in elected positions.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
The FAA has approved FlightSafety International's Category IIIa low visibility training program for the Falcon 2000 equipped with the Flight Dynamics head-up display .

Arnold Lewis
Delta Connection Comair has declared its seventh three-for-two stock split since going public in 1981. The split was payable November 13 for shareholders of record on November 3. Previous splits were declared in April 1996, July 1995, April 1993, January 1992, July 1985 and February 1985. Comair over the past month has led all of the eight publicly held regional carriers in stock prices.

Linda L. Martin
Johnny Davis, 62, founder and president of Dallas Avionics, died October 26 of a heart attack. Davis, who worked in the general aviation industry for 30 years, was an active member of the Aircraft Electronics Association. He served as an AEA associate board member for several years.

Gordon A. Gilbert
In celebration of B/CA's 40th anniversary, each month throughout 1998 we will present excerpts from the top features published 40 years ago. We hope you find them interesting and fun. From the December 1958 issue:

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Three separate measures that would have a significant impact on general aviation operators are no longer active. An FAA program to permit agency inspectors to issue violations--similar to a ``traffic ticket''--on the spot for alleged ``minor'' infractions is being shelved (see page 118). Congress took no action on legislation that would have allowed law enforcement agents to order aircraft they suspect of drug smuggling to land.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Fairchild Aerospace and Newcourt Capital have established Millennium Leasing in San Antonio to provide operating and finance leases for Fairchild Aerospace customers .

Linda L. Martin
The AOPA not only speechifies and issues ``calls to arms'' about threatened airport closings, it's also ready with some new resources for volunteers who want to join in local efforts to save general aviation airports. To date, almost 500 AOPA members have joined the organization's Airport Support Network.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
S-TEC Corp. says it still intends to offer a stability and control augmentation system (SCAS), but the firm no longer is setting a timetable or targeting a specific aircraft. S-TEC originally hoped to have systems STCed and available for Bell 206s in the fall of 1996 (August 1996, page 28). A spokesman told B/CA that the system is currently in ``development flight testing'' on a Bell 206 and that the company plans to give a complete update on the SCAS program at Heli Expo '99.

Gordon A. Gilbert
An STC to upgrade King Air 200s to Pratt&Whitney Canada PT6-42 power is no longer a conversion program in waiting. Engine overhauler Standard Aero and aircraft modifier Stevens Aviation are collaborating to offer P&WC PT6-42 conversions for King Air 200s powered by the -41. The conversion provides the KA200 with higher cruise speeds and altitudes, and eliminates hot-day takeoff restrictions.

Linda L. Martin
Sextant Avionique (Velizy, Villacoublay Cedex, France)--Francois Lureau has been named chairman and CEO for this manufacturer of avionics.

Edited By Gordon A. Gilbert
Safety investigators are trying to determine the cause of the November 4 crash of a Mitsubishi MU-2B-60 near Rock, Kan., that had departed Wichita at about 2100 local on a maintenance test flight. Killed in the crash were pilot/owner Leslie Nesmith and FlightSafety International employee Phil Dupont, according to the NTSB. Weather was VMC.