Business & Commercial Aviation

James E. Swickard
Bombardier Aerospace has inaugurated its 50,000-square-foot aircraft parts distribution facility in Frankfurt, Germany, which will support operators of Bombardier business jets and regional airliners. The new facility, located near Frankfurt International Airport, will stock more than 40,000 unique parts. Bombardier Aerospace Headquarters 400 Côte-Vertu Road West Dorval, Québec Canada H4S 1Y9 Phone: (514) 855-5000 www.bombardier.com

Edited by Robert A. Searles
*Dassault Falcon 2000 airplanes powered by CFE738-1-1B engines -- Inspect engines to verify that a spherical bearing is installed on the attachment fitting of the engine mount. Take corrective action if necessary. *Dowty Propellers on certain Fairchild turboprops -- Perform initial and repetitive ultrasonic inspections of propeller hubs (part number 660709201) for cracks and take corrective action if necessary.

Staff
NTSB, Washington, D.C. Kathryn O'Leary Higgins was sworn in as a member of the Safety Board. Her term expires on Dec. 31, 2009.

Edited by James E. Swickard
S-TEC is offering King Air 90, Conquest I, and Cheyenne I and II aircraft operators who purchase its 2100 digital autopilot a free glass cockpit with no installation fees. "These fleets need a low-cost autopilot and EFIS solution and we're excited about providing it," said S-TEC Director of Sales Greg Plantz.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Cessna Aircraft moved a step closer to certification of its Citation Mustang jet with FAA issuance of Type Inspection Authorization for the program. The FAA's decision to grant TIA to Cessna in late December 2005 cleared the way for the Mustang prototype flight test hours to apply toward federal certification and came several weeks earlier than originally scheduled. The Mustang prototype and s.n.

Staff
Banyan Air Service, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., has promoted Shawn Mack to the position of director of training.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Landmark Aviation completed the acquisition of Skyport Flight Services, the venerable but low-key FBO at Westchester County Airport (HPN) in White Plains, N.Y. Landmark, whose holdings include what had been known as Garrett, Piedmont Hawthorne and Associated Air Center, was rebranded in fall 2005 just before the NBAA Convention. Officials said then they planned to boost the profile of their FBO holdings with significant acquisitions in major business aviation markets. Skyport was the first of those acquisitions.

Staff
Jet Aviation, Teterboro, N.J., has named John Langevin senior vice president and general manager of its Teterboro FBO.

Edited by Robert A. Searles
*Eurocopter SA-365N, N1, N2 and -366G1 helicopters -- Inspect the main gearbox suspension diagonal cross-member for cracks and replace it with an airworthy part if any crack is found. *Hamilton Sundstrand 14RF-19 propellers -- Replace certain actuator yokes with improved actuator yokes.

Edited by James E. Swickard
GAMA praised President Bush and the Congress for enactment of the FY 2006 Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development Appropriations Bill, which guarantees funding for maintaining staffing levels in the FAA's Aircraft Certification Service. The final bill provides $4 million above the FAA budget request for the Aircraft Certification Service. It also brings back staffing to FY 2004 levels of 1,189 full-time equivalent positions.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Effective Jan. 1, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey officials increased landing fees at Teterboro Airport by 50 percent for all aircraft weighing more than 6,000 pounds, but canceled the increase for the lightest aircraft. Under the original schedule, fees for aircraft weighing up to 12,500 pounds were to increase from $15 to $22.50. The AOPA protested the fee schedule, saying the increases would disproportionately burden small operators, who pay the levies out of their own pockets rather than pass them onto corporations.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The Professional Aviation Maintenance Association is lobbying Congress to create a "National Aviation Maintenance Technicians Day" to honor Charles Taylor, who worked with the Wright brothers, and all maintenance technicians. For more information, contact PAMA President Brian Finnegan at [email protected].

By Fred George
It was a typical Chamber of Commerce late fall day on the beach at Puamana, just south of Lahaina, Maui, with brilliant sunshine, soft tradewinds, billowy cumulus clouds and 80°F temperatures. The only sounds to be heard were the breakers washing up against the rocks along with some mynahs singing in the acacia trees. I strolled down to the shore and settled into a beach chair to peruse A Hawaiian Reader, occasionally catching a brief glimpse of a sea turtle just beyond the shore break or glancing at the fishing boats plodding along off the coast.

Edited by James E. Swickard
A Bulgarian Air Force VIP Bell 430 has been sold to Sofia-based Balkan Holiday Airlines as executive transport for officials of First Investment Bank. According to local reports, the cash-strapped Bulgarian military, which operated the aircraft on behalf of the Bulgarian government, needed the $3 million to finance army helicopter operations. This low-hours aircraft now sports the apt registration LZ-VIP.

Edited by Robert A. Searles
In mid-December the FAA approved of an RVSM compliance package for the Hawker 600, according to Linwood "Woody" Cottner, Sr., CEO and vice president of engineering for LJSC Ltd., the Kansas-based engineering company that is developing the modification. Flight Research, Inc. did the flight testing of the retrofit. The airplane has been modified to include the installation of two air-data display units and two air-data sensors manufactured by Innovative Solutions & Support.

Compiled by William Garvey
The early evening flight to transport a patient to Seattle's Harborview Medical Center was done, and the pilot and flight nurses set off across Puget Sound to return to their home base at Arlington Municipal Airport (AWO) in their Agusta A109A. Conditions were VMC. The twin engine helicopter proceeded north, following the coastline at approximately 800 feet msl and as it reached an area near Edmonds called Brown's Bay, radar showed it turning towards the west, away from the shoreline.

Staff
Embraer Executive Jets, Sao Jose Dos Campos, Brazil, appointed Colin Steven to the post of vice president of marketing and sales. He will be responsible for Embraer business jet sales in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Beginning in mid-October, Oxford, Conn.-based Tradewind Aviation will be operating a fleet of Cessna Grand Caravans and Pilatus PC-12s in the Caribbean. The aircraft will be based out of St. Croix, U. S. Virgin Islands, and will be serving the islands of St. Bart's, Gorda and Anguilla, St. Kitts, Nevis, Barbuda, Antigua, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Puerto Rico and Vieques. Customers who fly into San Juan via commercial airlines will be met there and transferred to their final island destination. Customers coming via private jet to St. Croix will be met at the ramp at St.

Staff
Rockwell Collins, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, has appointed Beverly Carmichael as vice president of staffing and organizational development.

Staff
Dallas Airmotive, Dallas, has named Jim Zarvos as director of sales for Rolls-Royce engine programs. Max Allen has been named program director Rolls-Royce at the company's Forest Park facility in Dallas and Steve Lunde has been appointed Rolls-Royce regional engine manager for the Western United States.

Mike Gamauf
As a maintenance manager, picture this scenario: Your aircraft pulls into Novosibirsk for a refueling stop on the way to Shanghai, carrying the CEO and the legal team to close a big deal. The refueling goes smoothly and just as Number 2 lights off, the pilots get an essential bus failure annunciation, and things go dark. The pilots get on the satcom and explain the problem to you. You have seen this problem before and know a simple fix. The problem is that even if you could explain it to the pilots, they could not legally return the aircraft to service.

James E. Swickard
Saint-Gobain Flight Structures is introducing a new nose radome for the Bombardier Challenger business jet and CRJ regional jet aircraft. The design features internal lightning diverters, lightweight composite components and the incorporation of Norton Armor and Stormview radome technologies. Saint Gobain said the Stormview system provides enhanced radar vision through better signal transmission, while Norton Armor provides protection from inflight erosion and damage. Saint-Gobain Flight Structures is a wholly owned subsidiary of Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics Corp.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Israel's Civil Aviation Authority certificated the Flight Guard anti-missile protection system for installation on commercial aircraft. Designed by Israel Aircraft Industries' Elta Systems Group to protect military aircraft from heat-seeking missiles, it won CAA approval for use on civilian aircraft after a series of tests using a Boeing 767 airliner. IAI claims Flight Guard offers 360-degree coverage and can detect approaching missiles in any weather. The TSA is working with at least two U.S.

By William Garvey
LIKE SO MANY SUCH FLIGHTS, it began with a crash. January 5, 2005, had been a wet and windy day in north central Mississippi and those conditions continued into the night. Shortly after 8 p.m. the phone rang at the North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo and the emergency dispatcher reported there had been an automobile accident in Falkner, a small town near the Tennessee line. A crash victim needed to be rushed to treatment.

Deanna Harms, Senior Vice President (Greteman Group, Via e-mail)
I always enjoy your Viewpoint, but never more than in the January issue (page 7). You nailed businesses' current lack of a customer-centric approach and how that black hole swallows up all flexibility, humanity and - as a result -- customer loyalty. I hope some of the offenders read Viewpoint, recognize themselves and make some much-needed changes.