Aviation Week & Space Technology

Edited by Norma Maynard (New York)
Apr. 15-16—AVIATION WEEK Interiors, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Apr. 15-17—MRO Conference and Ex­hibition, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Sept. 23-25—MRO Europe, Madrid. Oct. 14-16—MRO Asia, Singapore. PARTNERSHIPS Mar. 31-Apr. 6—FIDAE, Santiago, Chile. Apr. 1-3—JEC Composites, Paris. Apr. 7-10—U.S. Space Foundation, Col­orado Springs. May 27-June 1—ILA Berlin air show. June 16-18—Aircraft Interiors-Middle East, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

BOC Aviation will buy two of Air Canada’s Boeing 777-300ERs and lease them back to the airline for 12 years after their delivery this month and next. It is the first contract between the two companies and expands the North American exposure of the Singapore-based lessor, whose expansion is driven by its owner, Bank of China.

Allen Benedetti, Jr. (Pacifica, Calif.)
Regarding your editorial “Easy on the Political Blather” (AW&ST Mar. 10, p. 58), Congress must consider the total ramifications of military purchasing decisions. Buying a refueling aircraft from a European country involves a huge transfer of wealth and technical capability. This is the issue on which members of Congress have more expertise than a civilian in the Defense Dept. And uniformed members of the military never make these decisions.

Joseph B. Smith has been named senior quality manager at Alto Aviation , Leominster, Mass.

EasyJet is cautioning that high fuel prices may hurt its full-year pre-tax profits. The company says at the start of February, when it issued its interim management statement, the projected cost for fuel for the mid-year and beyond was $840 a ton. This has now risen to above $1,000. EasyJet continues to anticipate delivering first-half results in line with expectations.

Jan K. Brueckner, a professor of urban and public economics at the University of California-Irvine and a specialist in the aviation industry, has become an academic affiliate and member of the transportation group at LECG , Emeryville, Calif. He has been a consultant to United, Northwest and American airlines and the U.S. Transportation Dept.

John C. King (Kaysville, Utah)
My children often complain that life isn’t fair. And, of course, I’ll sometimes give them some of the standard “Dad” answers, such as: “Yeah, if life was fair, you’d be starving to death just like the kids in Africa.” But my most common answer is that life is usually fair, it’s just a matter of picking the right frame of reference. Over time, things even out.

Edited by Edward H. Phillips
The European Aviation Safety Agency has certified the Hawker Beechcraft 900XP mid-size business jet as have 10 other countries including Australia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Spain. The 900XP is the company’s latest upgrade to the Hawker 800 series and features Honeywell TFE731-50R engines that produce 4.5% more thrust under high-altitude/hot-temperature conditions than the Hawker 850XP. In addition, range increases to 2,800 naut. mi. with six passengers and high-speed cruise range is 2,307 naut. mi.—nearly 9% more than the 850XP.

General Electric’s GEnx-2B engine for the upcoming Boeing 747-8 reached 70,950 lb. thrust during ground testing on Mar. 11 at GE’s outdoor testing facility in Peebles, Ohio. The engine, which shares a common core and 80% of the line-replaceable units with the GEnx-1B engine for the 787, achieved this thrust level just 12 days after making its first run to idle thrust.

Edited by Edward H. Phillips
The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) has issued preliminary guidelines for all flights by foreign aircraft associated with the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. Operators of business aircraft flying into China from July 1-Sept. 30 must file an application with the CAAC at least 30 days in advance for permission to land. Special arrival routes will be issued late this month, says the National Business Aviation Assn. For more about the guidelines, go to www.nbaa.org

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Thales will supply two more systems on the new Airbus A350XWB wide-body twinjet. In January, Airbus selected the French contractor to provide the cockpit display system, radio/navigation—including the inertial reference unit—and integrated modular avionics (IMA) in a deal that could be worth $3 billion over 20 years (AW&ST Jan. 28, p. 413). On Mar. 9, it was tapped to supply the electrical power conversion system and the common remote data concentrators (cRDC)—one of the two main building blocks, with the core processing input/output modules, on the IMA.

The Royal Navy 771 Naval Air Sqdn., based at Royal Naval Air Station Culdrose in Cornwall, England, performed a dramatic rescue of two missing swimmers believed to be stuck in a cave in the Newquay area. That 11-hr. mission has earned the five-person team the Breitling Award for Aviation Heroism. The crew was led by Lt. Cdr. Matt Shrimpton piloting the Sea King helicopter, and included co-pilot Royal Marine Capt. Damian May, observer Lt. Tim Barker, paramedic Royal Air Force Sgt. Mark White and Winchman Petty Officer Julian (Bungi) Williams.

The British government is to provide an additional £2 million ($4.06 million) to the Defense Ministry toward the cost of ongoing combat operations in Afghanistan and Iraq for 2008-09.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Skybus Airlines of Columbus, Ohio, offers an insurance policy that reimburses passengers whose flights are canceled for airline-prompted causes as well as for previously covered weather-related reasons. Under Skybus policy, if a flight is canceled by the airline or delayed more than 3 hr., passengers have the option of rebooking on the next available flight or accepting a ticket refund. The latest enhancement offers the insurance-covered passenger up to $250 for any increased costs associated with rebooking.

Tom Gentile (see photos) has become vice president/general manager for services for Cincinnati-based GE Aviation . He was chief marketing officer for GE Money and succeeds Brad Mottier, who has been promoted to vice president/general manager of the General Aviation Operation Div.

London Heathrow Airport was plunged into a security alert Mar. 13, the day before the official opening of Terminal 5 by Queen Elizabeth II, when a man with a rucksack scaled a perimeter fence and ran onto a runway. He was apprehended by police on the northern runway and arrested. The incident was not initially believed to be terrorism-related.

Edited By Michael A. Taverna
General Dynamics has delivered the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope (Glast) to Kennedy Space Center for final processing before its planned launch in May. The work will be done at the Astrotech payload processing facility near the NASA center. NASA is working with the U.S. Energy Dept. and research organizations in the U.S., France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Sweden on the project, which will cover the entire sky every 3 hr. in energy ranges from 10 keV. to more than 300 GeV.

The chairmen of the two U.S. House panels that oversee the Homeland Security Dept. say the Bush administration’s $50.5-billion Fiscal 2009 budget request wasn’t big enough and they intend to increase it. Rep. David Price (D-N.C.), chairman of the Appropriations homeland security subcommittee, and Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) say the White House did not ask for enough funds for the Transportation Security Administration and other homeland security agencies.

USAF Lt. Gen. (ret.) Jeffrey B. Kohler has been named vice president-international strategy for Boeing Integrated Defense Systems in St. Louis. He was director of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency and had been director of plans and policy at U.S. European Command Headquarters in Germany.

By Joe Anselmo
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries is Japan’s largest aerospace manufacturer and a premier collaborator with Boeing, Bombardier, Lockheed Martin and others on fighters, business, regional and commercial jets. But it hasn’t built a commercial airplane of its own for more than three decades and its last attempt, a turboprop, was an economic disaster.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
Lufthansa has acquired four additional Cessna Citation Businessjets to equip its Private Jet Fleet, set up in 2005 to provide point-to-point flights to destinations in Europe and Russia and to funnel business and premium passengers into Lufthansa and Swiss hubs. The two CJ3s and two Excel XLS+ aircraft are in addition to four CJ1s purchased last September for the German carrier’s new pilot training program. Lufthansa revealed that at year’s end it will cease using aircraft provided by NetJets Europe and acquire assets of its own to serve the fleet.

By Joe Anselmo
Shares in perennially profitable Southwest Airlines tumbled as much as 11% after the carrier was fined by the FAA for lapses in required inspections and briefly pulled 38 of its Boeing 737s out of service (p. 62). But Southwest shareholders must be euphoric when they look at the performances of other airline stocks.

David J. Helfgott has been appointed president/CEO/executive chairman of DataPath Inc. , Duluth, Ga. He has been president/chief operating officer. Helfgott succeeds Tom Dyer as CEO and Wilson Lowery as chairman, both of whom resigned.

Chris Jenkins has been appointed managing director of Thales Australia . He has been vice president-operations. Jenkins succeeds Norman Gray, who has resigned.

Jack Pelton, Cessna Aircraft Co. Chairman, President and CEO Although he grew up in the shadow of the Douglas Aircraft plant and then spent the first several decades of his career building airliners for Douglas in California and China and for Fairchild Dornier in Germany, Jack Pelton was never so much an airliner guy as he was an airplane guy. Old, new, big, small, burning aviation gas or Jet A—he really loved them all.