Monthly Archives: April 2011

Jet Aviation Names David Petke Vice President of Flight Operations of its Aircraft Management and Charter Division in …

Teterboro, N.J. / March 29, 2011 – Jet Aviation has promoted 13-year employee Dave Petke to the position of vice president of flight operations at the company’s aircraft management and charter division for the Americas, Jet Aviation Flight Services.

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Jet Aviation Names David Petke Vice President of Flight Operations of its Aircraft Management and Charter Division in …

TEASER: US naval aviation centennial feature – The DEW Line

Photo illustration by Northrop Grumman Retired Vice Adm Robert Dunn remembers being called to the Secretary of the Navy’s office. It was 1989 and the US Navy was still at the peak of its Cold War, 600-ship glory. Defence spending,…

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TEASER: US naval aviation centennial feature – The DEW Line

"It is hovering and it's not an aircraft." | MetaFilter

The possibility remains that Valentich staged his own disappearance: even taking into account a trip of between 30 and 45 minutes to Cape Otway, the aircraft still had enough fuel to fly 800 kilometres; despite ideal conditions, …

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"It is hovering and it's not an aircraft." | MetaFilter

Aviation industry flying high in SWLA

Lake Charles, La. — What is the fastest growing segment of the economy in Southwest Louisiana? It’s the aviation industry.

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Aviation industry flying high in SWLA

Air Crossing of South Atlantic Then and Now

LISBON – The Fairey single engine float plane is displayed as if taking off over the Tejo River. But when Gago Coutinho and Sacadura Cabral departed Lisbon in the first crossing of the South Atlantic by air in 1922 they were not flying in this particular airplane. Their historic feat was only accomplished in a three airplane relay, the first two planes were lost along the way. But in such perseverance is aviation history (and aviation safety) made. This was made clear to me again on Sunday. As I was learning about these Portuguese aviation pioneers and their ultimately successful travails in flying from Portugal to Brazil, air crash investigators with the French Bureau d’Enquetes et d’Analyses or BEA were rewarded by their own travails in the South Atlantic with the discovery of wreckage from the Airbus A330 that flew as Air France Flight 447 . The so-far mysterious crash of Flight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris nearly two years ago, has been as loaded with drama as it has been light on details. Remember the plane carrying 228 people was at cruise altitude when, after a few minutes of automated maintenance warnings to Air France through the ACARS system , the plane disappeared. Since then, the only operating theory is that ice in the speed-measuring pitot tubes caused incorrect readings by the autopilot leading to the crash. All Thales pilot tubes were ordered replaced by aviation authorities. Despite the fact that no one yet knows what happened to Flight 447, the French government recently filed manslaughter charges against Airbus and Air France. You read that correctly. This is not an unprecedented step for the French. Continental Airlines and an employee were found guilty of manslaughter in France just three months ago for the crash in Paris of the supersonic Concorde in 2000 that killed 113 people. (That ruling that got remarkably little attention, frankly. Continental says it will appeal.) Anne Candies during the April 2010 search It is quite obvious that everyone wants to know more about what happened to Flight 447, making the $40 million plus cost of the repeated underwater searches bearable – in spite of the continual raising and dashing of hopes from the previous fruitless searches . The Portuguese naval aviation pioneers Coutinho and Sacadura left Lisbon in March 1922 on a three-month effort to fly to Rio de Janeiro using a sextant they designed for air navigation. The journey required multiple stops for fuel along the way and cost three airplanes.

'Flying chameleon' simulates future flying wing aircraft

The German Aerospace Center’s ATTAS research aircraft resembles a conventional small passenger aircraft , but it has been fitted with special hardw…

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'Flying chameleon' simulates future flying wing aircraft

Skylight on Southwest Flight Not Unique

Yes, I’m trying to take a few days off for fun before the beginning of the European Society of Air Safety Investigators conference in Lisbon, but what could I do when I saw the news story? Another aging Southwest Airlines 737 pops a hole while at cruise altitude? A skylight in an airliner is bad enough the first time. Friday evening, while at 36,000 feet, Southwest Flight 816 from Phoenix to Arizona developed a suitcase-sized tear in the upper fuselage about 45-minutes after takeoff. The hole was big enough to bring the cabin altitude, normally maintained by the pressurization system to around 8,000 feet, to above 10,000 feet in 45 seconds. This causes the passenger oxygen masks to drop. But even when passengers quickly don them, it can also cause a lot of discomfort. (Read more than you’ll ever want to know about depressurization events on 737s here .)

U.S. Works To Help Iraq’s Air Force Take Off

Iraq’s air force was totally destroyed as a result of the Gulf War in 1991 and the U.S. invasion in 2003. Now the U.S. Air Force is helping the Iraqis to rebuild it. It’s just one component of what some describe as an emerging long-term strategic relationship between Iraq and the United States.

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U.S. Works To Help Iraq’s Air Force Take Off