The Weekly of Business Aviation

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Staff
MICHAEL MCCLAIN joined the sales team for Jet Works Air Center. McClain will be based in the Houston, Texas center and promote Jet Works aircraft maintenance, avionics, paint and interior services for turbine aircraft. McClain has more than 30 years of business aviation maintenance, repair and overhaul experience with companies including Tenneco and Duncan Aviation. He held sales and marketing roles with West Star Aviation, where he later became president. He also worked at Alliance Engines, Dallas Airmotive, Garrett Aviation and most recently, M7 Aerospace.

Staff
STAN (SKIP) FEHER was named regional sales director for the Pacific Northwest for Mooney Airplane Company. Feher is an air transport pilot and certified flight instructor with more than 5,000 hours. He previously was a charter pilot with Sierra Pacific, where he flew tours with high-profile musical performers including Fleetwood Mac, the Beach Boys and John Denver. He also was a director of flight operations, an airline pilot and held sales positions with Global Systems, Airshow, and Rockwell Collins.

Staff
SCOTT GALDI joined FlightSafety International as regional marketing manager. Galdi will work with FlightSafety’s Part 135 customers. He has 30 years of business aviation experience, serving as president of Atlantic Aviation Flight Services, executive vice president of The Air Group in Van Nuys, Calif., and executive vice president, sales and service for K-C Aviation Transportation Services. He also has held roles with Executive Jet Aviation, United Air Fleet and Teterboro Aircraft Supplies.

Kerry Lynch
The International Civil Aviation Organization next year is expected to roll out a number of environmental recommendations, including possible market-based initiatives, in time for the next post-Kyoto agreement, a senior ICAO official told attendees at the National Business Aviation Association’s annual meeting and convention this month in Orlando, Fla. Roberto Kobeh Gonzalez, president of the ICAO council, said the ICAO Assembly last year created a group to recommend “an aggressive program of action on international aviation and climate change.”

Staff
October 20-22 – Airports Council International-North America Public Safety and Security Fall Conference, Ritz Carlton Pentagon City Hotel, Arlington, Va. For more information call (202) 293-8500 or go to www.aci-na.org/conferences October 22-24 – International Aviation Womens Association (IAWA) 20th Anniversary and the Accomplishments of Women in the Aviation and Aerospace Industries, Chicago. Contact: Karen Griggs at [email protected]

David Collogan
SEOS, a supplier of “highly realistic visual display solutions for commercial and military full flight simulators,” will be acquired by Rockwell Collins, the two companies announced late Friday. Terms of the acquisition agreement were not disclosed, but the deal is expected to close within about 30 days. After the transaction closes, SEOS will operate under the Rockwell Collins name and become part of the larger firm’s Simulation and Training Solutions organization.

Kerry Lynch
DUNCAN AVIATION, which operates two highly regarded full-service maintenance facilities in the Midwest, is planning a third full-service business jet facility near the West Coast. The facility, to be built in Provo, Utah, is slated to open by August 2010. The Provo operation will offer airframe, engine, completion, paint and avionics installation services. Duncan currently has major facilities in Lincoln, Neb. and Battle Creek, Mich., and operates more than 20 satellite avionics and seven satellite engine locations throughout the U.S.

Staff
BOMBARDIER DHC-8-400 airplanes [Docket No. FAA-2008-1083; Directorate Identifier 2008-NM-130-AD] – This proposed AD would require operators to replace the weight-on-wheels harnesses and steering harnesses, according to the instructions of Bombardier Service Bulletin 84-32-51, Rev. B (dated Dec. 17, 2007). This proposal, which resulted from an MCAI originated by Transport Canada Civil Aviation, was prompted by several cases in which the landing gear did not retract after takeoff.

Staff
ANGEL BENNETT was promoted to director of client services in the McLean, Va. office of Sullivan Higdon & Sink. Bennett joined SHS in 2005 as senior brand manager. She will coordinate advertising, marketing and public relations strategy and tactics for accounts such as FLIR Government Systems and Delex Systems.

Kerry Lynch
EMBRAER selected Elbit Systems of America to provide the Kollsman EVS II enhanced vision system for the Lineage 1000 jet as optional equipment. The system, which is expected to be certified by 2010, would be offered in combination with the Rockwell Collins Head-Up Guidance System Model 5600E.

Kerry Lynch
ESTERLINE CMC ELECTRONICS formed a strategic alliance with Pentastar Aviation to pursue corporate and military market opportunities for CMC’s electronic flight bag product line and Pentastar’s articulating yoke mount. Pentastar is a “Platinum Dealer” for CMS, holding a number of supplemental type certificates for the CMC PilotView EFB. Pentastar has a patent pending for the yoke mount, which will allow the pilot to adjust the view angle for improved situational awareness.

David Hughes
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Lockheed Martin and other partners plan the first demonstration of a new NextGen ATC testbed at Daytona Beach Airport next month in a project backed by FAA. The research and development demonstration under way in a 5,000-square-foot facility at Daytona has been included under FAA’s umbrella of NextGen testbed activity in Florida – an effort to accelerate the roll-out of benefits to aircraft operators from airlines to military jets and general aviation. Miami Airport is also involved in other work with FAA.

David Collogan
Gulfstream Aerospace conducted a flight last month using four different technologies – including wireless – to move control surfaces on a Gulfstream V business jet. Gulfstream said the Sept. 18 flight was “historic...the first known application of wireless signaling for a primary flight control surface in a civilian or military aircraft.”

Staff
ANOTHER VIEW of how tight credit markets and volatile stock markets are affecting business jet orders is expected this week when Gulfstream Aerospace parent General Dynamics conducts a conference call with analysts to discuss the company’s third-quarter results.

David Collogan
Textron’s Bell Helicopter unit lost a U.S. Army contract worth billions of dollars Thursday, Textron is closing down its financing arm, and worldwide economic woes have sharply reduced new orders for Cessna Aircraft’s line of business jets, company officials said.

Kerry Lynch
FLIGHTSAFETY INTERNATIONAL reached an agreement with Hawker Beechcraft to expand both its pilot and maintenance training services. FSI will build a new 33,000-square-foot maintenance training center at the north end of the runway adjacent to the Hawker Beechcraft manufacturing facility in Wichita. The ramp from the maintenance center provides access to aircraft for training purposes, and the new building will be equipped with classrooms and hands-on aircraft component training areas.

Staff
IN LIGHT OF GROWING environmental pressures, the business aviation community continues to attempt to position the industry as environmentally friendly. Fractional aircraft ownership provider Flexjet has become the latest major operator to join the carbon offset movement, announcing it is partnering with Climate Care, a carbon offset provider. Flexjet is offering the program to its aircraft share owners, assessing a voluntary per-hour fee for carbon emissions used.

Kerry Lynch
JET SUPPORT SERVICES, INC., the Chicago-based indepen dent provider of hourly cost maintenance programs, named a new CEO and strengthened its sales and customer service efforts. The company tapped former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Joe Hagin as chief executive officer. Hagin, a former executive at Federated Department Stores and Chiquita Brands, served with President George W. Bush from his inauguration through mid-July of this year. His duties included overseeing the White House Military Office and the presidential aircraft fleet.

Staff
CHICAGO MAYOR RICHARD DALEY, who incurred the ire of the general aviation community five years ago by ordering the destruction of the runway at Meigs Field in an unannounced, dark-of-night backhoe attack (BA, April 7, 2003/153), is now close to finalizing a 99-year lease of the city’s Midway Airport to private investors.

David Collogan
Gulfstream Aerospace formally announced its G250 business jet last week, a program that has been widely anticipated (BA, Sept. 8/110).

Kerry Lynch
(5,302: A new record for the sale of exhibit booth spaces at the show. The previous record was 5,275 10-foot by 10-foot booth spaces sold for the 2007 NBAA convention. The static display also set a record with 139 piston, turboprop and jet aircraft at Orlando Executive Airport.

Staff
BRAD LENNEMANN was appointed Embraer aircraft service sales representative for Duncan Aviation. Lennemann, who has served as a Duncan service sales representative since 2003, has 22 years of aviation experience.

Staff
MEANWHILE Gulfstream is working with NASA on a series of flight tests using a modified F-18 to help prove that a camera-equipped aircraft with no forward vision windows could be an option for a supersonic business jet. See article on Page 169.

Neelam Mathews
– Eighteen people died and one was injured Oct. 8, when a Yeti Airlines de Havilland DHC-6/300 Twin Otter carrying tourists crashed on landing at Lukla Tenzing Hillary Airport, in the lap of Mt. Everest. The aircraft, flying from Nepali capital Kathmandu to Lukla, 90 miles away in northeastern Nepal, burst into flames after crash-landing near the sloping runway under heavy cloud.