Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Jet Aviation Moscow Vnukovo recently signed an agreement with Vnukovo Invest, a co-owner of Vnukovo International Airport in Moscow, to expand its operations into a new hangar, storage and office facility later this year. Jet Aviation began operating at Vnukovo in November 2007 and has offered 24/7 line maintenance and AOG support throughout Russia since 2009.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Business aviation is a valuable asset to New York's Westchester County, contributing to jobs and economic growth, Kevin J. Plunkett, Westchester's deputy county executive, told the audience at the general meeting at the NBAA's Regional Forum held June 8 in White Plains, N.Y. Plunkett noted that HPN alone is home to 80 businesses and 1,300 direct jobs — and that its aggregate airline and general aviation impact was worth over $600 million. The forum drew a record 1,918 registered attendees, featured 112 exhibitors and showcased 34 aircraft on static display.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
May business aircraft activity was up 3.6% over April, according to “TraqPak” data from Cincinnati-based Argus. Looking at the results by operational category, all segments posted a positive month, with FAR Part 91 operations leading the way, up 5.5%, says the report. “Part 135 charter activity came in second, up 2%, and the fractional market showed a slight increase of 0.1%,” the company says. All aircraft categories posted an increase over April, with turboprops providing the highest increase, up 5.4%.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Amsterdam Schiphol Airport has opened a new general aviation terminal. The new facility was built to replace the existing facility, says spokeswoman Antoinette Spaans. The GA terminal is located at Schiphol East, about 500 meters (1,640 ft.) away from the existing one, she adds. The current facility handles about 18,000 business aircraft a year. The new terminal will have a gross floor area of 6,500 sq. meters (70,000 sq. ft.), including a 1,000-sq.-meter (10,780-sq.-ft.) terminal and lounge and 3,500 sq. meters (30,670 sq. ft.) of office space.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
The Salina Airport Authority's board of directors approved a $218,994 design contract with Wichita-based Howard and Helmer Architecture to handle renovations at the Kansas facility's Hangar 959. Hawker Beechcraft is vacating the hangar, known as Big Bertha. The building can handle narrowbody aircraft and maintenance, repair and overhaul operations.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
FAA corrected a technical error in its regulations governing fractional aircraft ownership programs that were issued in 2003. Specifically, the amendment revises Part 91.1091 (f)(2) to replace the term “check pilot” with “flight instructor.” “Because the section title applies to flight instructors, it is obvious that the use of the term 'check pilot' in (f)(2) should have been 'flight instructor,'” the agency says. The change was effective June 2.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Diamond Aircraft is planning to recall furloughed workers and ramp up work on the D-Jet program after receiving a commitment for a “significant investment” targeted for the single-engine jet. Diamond says funding will enable the recall of furloughed engineering and technical staff, the resumption of flight test operations and production of the next test aircraft. The five-seat D-Jet was about two-thirds into the development program and about 22 months from completion when activity halted. Diamond has produced three prototypes.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Piaggio Aero, one of the oldest names in aviation, expressed faith in its future by breaking ground for a new, ultra-modern and super-efficient manufacturing plant at Villanova d'Albenga, Italy. The new plant, set to open in 2013, will manufacture parts and subassemblies for the P180 Avanti II turboprop as well as aircraft engines. If Piaggio goes ahead with its long-studied business jet, that would also be manufactured there. Meanwhile, the Avanti pusher will continue to be assembled and finished at the company's historic facility in Genoa.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Quest Aircraft Co. said it is increasing the production rate for the its Kodiak turboprop. A recapitalization earlier this year plus new investor funding enabled the company to expand and invest in key areas, including production increases at its Sandpoint, Idaho facility. Quest began customer deliveries of the Kodiak in late 2007, and it has since been deployed in more than 10 countries around the world in a variety of applications. Kodiaks are in service with charter operators, small businesses, personal owners, skydiving operations, U.S.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
FinServe Aviation Insurance, a European business aviation insurance broker, has developed a new insurance program — FinServe European Business Aviation Placement (F-EBAP) — that is designed to cover a broader range of risks associated with owning and operating business aircraft in Europe. “Most policies are very limited, covering the aircraft only,” says FinServe CEO Guy Broddin.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Piper Aircraft held a PiperJet Altaire supplier gathering in June as the company moves toward certification of the single-engine business jet, with first flights of conforming test articles in 2012. Piper says certification and first deliveries will occur in 2014. Aerospace suppliers represented at the June 16 event included Castle Metals, Garmin International, Kollsman, L-3 Communications, Millennium Concepts, PCI, Goodrich Cabin Systems, PPG Aerospace, Triumph Aerospace, and Williams International.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
Maximum Manuals has developed a package to enable charter operators to apply for approval and implement use of the Apple iPad as an Electronic Flight Bag. Maximum Manuals' iPad EFB Program includes a submittal package for application to the FAA, a training program for flight crews, supplemental language for company documents and full support throughout the approval process to obtain A061 Ops Specs.
Business Aviation

James E. Swickard
A new rule — that applies to electrical and electronic systems installed on aircraft certificated under FAR Parts 23, 25, 27 and 29 — establishes two levels of lightning protection for aircraft systems based on the consequences of system function failure: catastrophic and hazaderous/major consequences. This regulation, which goes into effect Aug. 8, also addresses lightning protection for systems according to the aircraft's potential for lightning exposure.
Business Aviation

By William Garvey
Rod Hightower President and CEO Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) Oshkosh, Wisc.
Business Aviation

By Fred George
Charles Edelstenne, chairman and CEO of Dassault Aviation, unveiled the Falcon 2000S on the eve of EBACE 2011. In doing so, he dispelled any misconceptions about how and when the French firm would field a super-midsize business jet. Plainly put, it won't. Not now. Not anytime soon.
Business Aviation

By David Esler [email protected]
Twenty-two years after the fall of the Berlin Wall — the pivotal event marking the sunset of the USSR — former Soviet satellite states have emerged from the shadows to claim their place in the new Europe.

By George C. Larson [email protected]
More than 15 years ago, the FAA chartered a human factors team to look into the causes of a spate of accidents that involved crews trying to function within highly automated cockpits that had been introduced by a new generation of aircraft. The Flight Safety Foundation published the results of that initiative in 1996 and noted in the report that one key issue centered on the disconnect between pilots and the airplane, often expressed by crew members as “Why did it do that?” or “What is it doing now?”
Business Aviation

George C. Larson
Development of new products always involves a decided end point at which the design will be frozen; once that point is reached, changes become more costly to make. Engineers therefore use a convenient tiered system to determine where the end point of a program will be. NASA and the Department of Defense, the government agencies aside from the FAA most closely involved in the aerospace sciences, provide a ready-made scale called the Technology Readiness Level to measure the maturity of a new technology.
Business Aviation

George C. Larson
Honeywell is not the only company developing cockpit systems with active ingredients drawn from human factors sciences. Derek Jensen, senior engineering manager of flight deck user interfaces at Rockwell Collins, says his team engages customers early on and joins engineers, pilots, advisory groups and OEMs in evaluating functionality.
Business Aviation

By Fred George
Investigators with the French Bureau d'Equetes et d'Analyses (BEA), the agency charged with investigating the crash of Air France Flight 447, now are focusing on a breakdown in situational awareness on the part of the flight crew and possible pilot error as contributing factors in the June 2009 mishap that killed 228 people when the Airbus A330 crashed into the South Atlantic. The latest findings broaden the scope of the inquiry well beyond a fly-by-wire flight control malfunction, possibly caused by iced-up pitot probes.
Business Aviation

By Fred George
Pilots often characterize flying as “hours and hours of boredom, occasionally punctuated by moments of terror.” Modern cockpit automation increases the risk that pilots will be lulled into a dull state, unaware of subtle changes that may portend increasing risks.
Business Aviation

By Mike Gamauf [email protected]
In the days when a time clock actually had hands, punching the clock was the universal marker for the beginning or end of the workday. Late arrival or early departure meant a skinny payday; or depending on your boss's mood, an assignment to clean the lav service cart. The time card was all-important and represented the portion of your life you exchanged for a paycheck. When the hangar was busy, overtime meant a sometimes welcome opportunity to earn more cash at the expense of family life.
Business Aviation

Mike Gamauf
The Department of Labor has a useful website to help explain the various labor laws. Although they are very complex, and almost every situation has a unique way to interpret the rules, the website has helpful explanatory brochures and regulatory and interpretative materials. It is available on the Wage and Hour Division's website: www.dol.gov/whd/
Business Aviation

David Collogan
Faced with a ludicrous plan by the FAA to dismantle a well-run joint government/industry program that helps ensure the safety of thousands of aircraft and their occupants, the leaders of the NBAA, AOPA and EAA have joined forces to contest the FAA's misguided efforts.
Business Aviation

Richard N. Aarons
Investigators from Ireland's Air Accident Investigation Unit (AAIU) are working with their peers from the U.K.'s AAIB, the American NTSB, Spain's CIAIAC and Israel's AIAI to determine the cause of the loss of a Fairchild Aircraft SA-227-BC Metro III on approach to Cork Airport on Feb. 10, 2011. Both pilots were killed as were four of the 10 passengers. The remaining passengers survived, some with serious injuries.
Business Aviation