As a retired corporate pilot, I am somewhat puzzled about the crash of UPS Flight 1354. Surely the aircraft was equipped with a radio altimeter and a ground proximity warning system which should have given the crew ample time to respond to a “Whoop, Whoop, Pull Up” audio alert, if the system was working properly. Eden Prairie, Minn.
Andrew C. Bradley has been promoted to Washington-based president of global sales from the division's senior vice president at the Avjet Corp., Burbank, Calif.
Gunnar Kleveland has become senior vice president-integrated operations, Cathy Ferrie senior vice president-engineering and Matt Hasik senior vice president-commercial programs, all at Fort Worth-based Bell Helicopter. Kleveland succeeds Pete Riley, who will be retiring. Ferrie and Hasik follow Jeff Lowinger, who is leaving Bell and whose position as executive vice president-engineering and commercial programs has been divided.
The Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) had agreed on a compromise solution about the introduction of a global market based measures (MBM) system to be used in tackling the problems of aviation emissions. The council accepted the principle of regional emissions trading systems (ETS) and agreed to have a single global MBM for aviation to be implemented in 2020. The principles for a global MBM should be adopted at ICAO's next assembly in 2016.
Michael Faber has been appointed to the board of directors of CPI Aerostructures Inc., Edgewood, N.Y. He is CEO of the NextPoint Management Co. and senior adviser to law firm Akerman Senterfitt.
Record-breaking autogyro pioneer Wing Cmdr. Ken Wallis died at home near Dereham, Norfolk, England, on Sept. 1. He was 97. A Royal Air Force (RAF) Wellington bomber pilot during World War II, Wallis spent 20 years in weapon research for the RAF, but was best known for his exploits with autogyros, working on them in his spare time at home. His experience with the machines helped him set 34 autogyro world records between 1968 and 2002, several of which still stand today, including the speed record for an autogyro: 207.7 kph (129 mph).
Boeing has been cleared by the U.S. Air Force to begin building four developmental KC-46 aerial refuelers following completion of a 10-month critical design review (CDR). The Air Force announced that the CDR was finished Aug. 21, one month ahead of the contractual requirement. Flight testing for the 2C version of the 767-200ER, the platform on which the refueler will be housed, is slated for the middle of next year. First flight of the actual tanker is planned for early 2015. Delivery of the first of 18 refuelers is expected in 2017.
AgustaWestland says it has reduced drag on its AW609 tiltrotor by 10% as it aims to reduce acquisition and operating costs of the aircraft, which is due to be certified in 2017. The second prototype, based in Italy, has a new-design vertical stabilizer and tail cone, more aerodynamic engine exhaust nozzles and changes to the rotor-spinner cones. The manufacturer says these changes have yielded substantial weight reduction.
Mark R. Baker (see photo) has been named president/CEO of the Frederick, Md.-based Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association. He succeeds Craig Fuller, who was president/CEO for five years.
Leo Mendoza has been appointed Latin America sales leader for airlines and fleets for StandardAero. He was Vancouver-based head of technicians and buyers for MTU and had been supply chain manager for Avensa Airlines.
With deeper budget cuts to procurement, research and development expected as the Pentagon implements sequestration cuts in fiscal 2014, the Navy will drop 25 aircraft from its aviation acquisition plan, according to the chief of naval operations, Adm. Jonathan Greenert. A reduction of $14 billion in those accounts for the year starting Oct. 1 means less of each kind of aircraft than had been planned, including fewer carrier-based Joint Strike Fighters, P-8 maritime patrol aircraft and helicopters.
Samuel Vlodinger and Ron Ben-Haim have been appointed to the board of directors of TAT Technologies Ltd., Gedera, Israel. Vlodinger is a senior partner and Ben-Haim a partner in the FIMI Opportunity Funds.
Reviewing the Asia-Pacific civil aerospace industry this week, we see the great range of challenges facing managers outside of the world's main aircraft building centers in the Americas and Europe. India's private aerospace industry, only 12 years old, is grappling with the usual problems of a startup in finding skilled people and volume contracts—although local company Dynamatic is succeeding in high-rate production for Airbus while other Indian companies are carving niches in engineering services.
USAF Lt. Col. (ret.) John A. Crocker (Tavernier, Fla. )
Unlike readers Mike Canty and Bob Walker (AW&ST Aug. 26, p. 8), I salute USAF Lt. Gen. (ret.) Thomas McInerney's out-of-the-box thinking on using business jets to fix readiness (AW&ST July 29, p. 54). Having flown military, commercial and corporate aircraft for more than 40 years, I can attest that flying different types of aircraft does not hinder mission effectiveness. Some days I would fly a Boeing 737 in the morning and that afternoon I would strap in my ANG C-130 and fly either a tactical or proficiency training mission.