Business & Commercial Aviation

Edited by David Rimmer
Cyprus: Two unidentified individuals attempted to gain access to the Foreign Broadcasting Information Service (FBIS) post in Nicosia in January. The FBIS is a U.S. government service that monitors foreign broadcasting in the region. The two men escaped and security forces conducted a search but found no explosive devices. A few days before the incident, Cypriot officials received information that al Qaeda operatives based in Lebanon might attempt a terrorist attack against U.S. and British interests in Cyprus. Source: AirSecurity

Staff
IMAR Corp. President Rob Shellow describes his company's Aviation Security Tape as ``probably the least technical security system ever invented, short of the deadbolt lock.'' Shellow, who has a broad background in law enforcement and government service, makes no claims to have originated the practice of taping over aircraft doors, hatches and access panels to determine if an airplane has been illegally entered or tampered with. ``It started with air crews using Scotch Tape,'' he said in an interview from his office in Bethesda, Md.

Edited by David Rimmer

Edited by David RimmerBy David Rimmer Florida Airports Welcome Regionals Code-share turboprops replacing jets
Two Florida coastal cities that lost much of their scheduled jet service following the September 11, 2001, terror attacks are welcoming new regional airline turboprop service.

Edited by David Rimmer
Bryan Moss, vice chairman of Gulfstream Aerospace and a major player in the high-end corporate aircraft business for more than three decades, has announced his plans to retire from Gulfstream in April. He will continue working as a consultant to Gulfstream after his formal retirement.

Edited by James E . Swickard
SIMCOM's new King Air 350 simulator should be ready for duty this spring. Based in Orlando, the Level 5 device will have visual and motion systems, Collins radios, a Honeywell GNS-XLS FMS and a KLN-90 GPS. Swap-out instruments and panels will allow the device to be used for King Air C90B and King Air B200 training in addition to training for the 300/350 series of aircraft.

By Dave Benoff
Paperless Cockpit has introduced a portable electronic flight bag called the ST 3500 EFB. With a 10.4-inch display, the ST 3500 EFB allows pilots to view on-screen information including full-size, full-color approach charts through Jeppesen's electronic approach chart software, JeppView FliteDeck. The tablet is powered by a 500 MHz Intel Celeron processor, has a 15-gigabyte hard drive and can be equipped with up to 256 MB of SDRAM.

Edited by David RimmerBy Dave Benoff
Research conducted by the United Kingdom's Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) could lead to stricter bird-strike requirements for engine manufacturers. A spokesperson for the CAA said proposals are currently being evaluated to change engine standards to make them resistant to larger birds. Current engine certification requirements, FAR Part 33.77, JAR-E 800, Ad-visory Circular ACJ E 800 and Advisory Circular 33-1A, specify ingestion tolerances of small (3.0 ounces), medium (1.5 pounds) and large (4.0 pounds) birds.

By Richard N. Aarons
Six people were killed on December 9, 1999, when a Cessna Citation (CE-525) owned by the College of the Ozarks crashed in Branson, Mo., while attempting a night non-precision approach to its home base at M. Graham Clark Airport in nearby Point Lookout. The accident occurred, said the NTSB, because the pilot allowed the aircraft (N525KL) to descend below a segment minimum altitude of the GPS approach some four miles from touchdown.

Edited by James E . Swickard
In the everything old is new again department, as the flying component of the major aviation exhibitions steadily diminishes, organizers of the Aerospace America International Airshow in Oklahoma City are co-locating a conference and exposition to which the public will be admitted by invitation only. The Aerospace America Aviation Conference and Exposition (ACE 2002) will be held at the Westin Hotel in downtown Oklahoma City on June 13 and 14. The primary focus will be on aviation in the Southwest and Southern Midwest.

Edited by David Rimmer
If you need to fly above FL 290 and up to FL 410 in EUR RVSM airspace, your aircraft must be RVSM-equipped, -monitored and -approved by your country's civil aviation authority. Also included in the requirement is that operators must prove that they have instituted procedures for continued airworthiness maintenance and have instituted flight crew procedures for operations in EUR RVSM airspace.

Edited by David Rimmer

By Dave Benoff
In an effort to help maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) facilities build effective customer relationships, Essential Air Group has developed a new online maintenance-tracking program. ``MxAlert'' goes beyond the traditional desktop-based software, providing up-to-the-minute status of aircraft that are in the shop, including current budget information. MxAlert enables operators to log into the MRO's maintenance tracking Web site and update the hours and cycles on specific aircraft, and then immediately print out fresh maintenance forecasts.

Edited by David Rimmer
The second Ae270 single-engine prototype completed its first flight in late December 2001. The aircraft has entered a flight-test program that has accumulated 200 hours of flight time and 217 landings since its maiden flight in July 2000. The first flights above manufacturer Aero Vodo-chody's Prague factory lasted approximately two hours, achieving a top speed of 180 knots and reaching an altitude of 10,000 feet.

Edited by David Rimmer
The regional airline industry has lost another of its colorful pioneers with the early January passing of Ransome Airlines founder J. Dawson Ransome at the age of 81. Ransome founded the Philadelphia-based carrier in 1957, initially flying between Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. The airline's route structure ultimately blanketed the Northeastern United States and, for a time, included operations in South Florida and Germany.

By Dave Benoff
Link Tools has introduced a line of one-quarter-inch sockets and drivers that automatically lock and are designed to prevent accidental unlocking when palming the tools. The Link ratchets use a locking slide button that must be pushed forward in order to attach or detach another tool; other Link tools use a gold locking collar that releases attached tools when pulled up. B/CA tested the five-piece one-quarter-inch drive set and found it to be of good quality and weight and compatible with other locking tools.

Edited by David Rimmer

Edited by James E . Swickard
Nav Canada's temporary discount on air navigation services charges was officially terminated on January 1. The Nav Canada board approved the change as part of a plan to respond to a projected $145 budget shortfall in the fiscal year ending August 31, 2002. The shortfall is a result of ``significant declines in both actual and projected traffic.'' Elimination of the discount amounts to about a six percent increase in the cost of air navigation services.

By Robert N. Rossier
The pilots never saw it coming. Darkness had settled over Narita, Japan, and the Boeing 737-800, en route from Guam, was nearing the end of its flight on a warm August night in 2000. No more than 10 minutes earlier, a DC-10 transitioned the same airspace without difficulty. But when the cockpit and cabin of the 737 filled with haze and dust, the pilots knew something was seriously wrong. They donned their oxygen masks, and within three to four minutes, they were back in clear air. But by then they were in trouble.

Edited by David RimmerBy David Rimmer, in Chicago Indigo Legacy Funding Near
Indigo Air's billion-dollar purchase of up to 75 Embraer Legacy business jets is a step closer to reality. In exclusive interviews with B/CA, senior executives of the public charter operator said Boeing Capital has agreed, in principal, to be the senior lender on the Legacy buys. If consummated, the financing helps clear the way for what will likely be two additional financing companies to fund the remainder. The Legacy financing is also said to be instrumental in Indigo's search for another $15 million in operating capital.

Edited by David Rimmer
Bombardier will cut 800 more positions at its Wichita manufacturing plant and completion center in Tucson as part of its plans to reduce production. The layoffs are in addition to some 3,800 jobs that the Canadian conglomerate already had begun to eliminate in fall 2001.

Edited by James E . Swickard
Embraer is buying Nashville-based Celsius Aerotech, Inc. to improve support to its U.S. clients, which include Continental Express, American Eagle and Mesa Air Group. The deal, for an undisclosed price, is expected to close in February. Celsius employs about 200 persons and specializes in regional aircraft inspection and maintenance services.

Edited by David RimmerBy Mike Vines, in Birmingham, England Five Dead in Challenger 604 Crash
A Bombardier Challenger 604, N90AG (serial number 5414), crashed January 4 on takeoff from Birmingham International Airport (BHX) in England, killing all three crew and two passengers. The accident occurred shortly after liftoff from Runway 15. Eyewitnesses said the Challenger's wing contacted the runway, the aircraft cartwheeled, and the fuselage broke into two major pieces, finishing 50 yards apart and inverted near Runway 15/33. It then burst into flames on impact and debris was scattered over a 250-square-meter area, according to officials.

Edited by David Rimmer
The Helicopter Association International (HAI) has named Lt. Michael Melia, Massachusetts State Police, as its 2001 Law Enforcement Award recipient. The HAI recognizes Melia for his ac-complishment in transforming the state police air wing unit as an ``internationally recognized leader in airborne law enforcement.'' Under Melia's direction, the Air Wing has initiated a pilot/tactical flight officer crew concept, which includes required annual factory training and active participation in professional aviation organizations.

Edited by David Rimmer
Signature Flight Support, Orlando, has promoted Jackie Vibbert to Newark/Teterboro, N.J., area general manager.