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Airbus

June 20, 2008

A step forward for the Dreamliner

Boeing_787 Boeing says it has completed the "power-on" sequence for the first 787 Dreamliner flight test airplane, a major milestone in bringing the world's most advanced airliner closer to its first flight. Boeing's press release says

Power On is a complex series of tasks and tests that bring electrical power onto the airplane and begin to exercise the use of the electrical systems. The 787 is a more-electric airplane ith the pneumatic, or bleed air, system being totally replaced by electronics.

"The team has made great progress in bringing the bold innovation of the 787 to reality," said Pat Shanahan, vice president and general manager of the 787 program. "There is plenty of work to be done between now and first flight, but with every step forward we grow more and more confident."

The Power On sequence began in early June with a series of pretest continuity checks to verify that the wiring installed in the airplane had been connected properly. Upon completion 787_cockpitpower_on_62008_3of those checks, the Boeing team plugged in an external power cart and slowly began to bring full power into each segment of the system, beginning with the flight deck displays. From that point forward, the pilot's controls were used to direct the addition of new systems to the power grid.

At each step of the testing, power is allowed to flow into one additional area and gauges are used to verify that the right level of electrical power reached the intended area. "We are very methodical in ensuring the integrity of the airplane's systems," said Shanahan. "In completing the Power On sequence, we have verified both that the electrical power distribution system is installed as designed and that it functions as intended."

An inside look at the Power On testing sequence will be featured on www.boeing.com and newairplane.com beginning Monday at 5 a.m. PDT.

Continue reading "A step forward for the Dreamliner" »

June 09, 2008

Emirates to launch first A380 service in U.S.

Emirates_a380Emirates Airlines is set to begin the first service in the United States with an Airbus A380, on a flight between Dubai and John F. Kennedy Airport in New York. The 14-hour nonstop flight will launch Aug. 1, the airline said today. The mammoth plane is scheduled to fly three times a week between the two cities.

- Trebor Banstetter

Continue reading "Emirates to launch first A380 service in U.S." »

February 22, 2008

Fuel sipping engine technology

Pratt & Whitney reports is continuing to make progress on the development of a turbine engine that will use at least 12 percent less fuel and be quieter than existing engines of the same size and class.

Pratt says it is moving into the second phase of tests on a full-scale demonstrator version of the Geared Turbofan engine after conducting extensive ground testing including running the engine on alternative fuel.

Bombardier and Mitsubishi has already selected the new engine for their new smaller narrow body airliners and Pratt has said the technology is suitable for wide-body aircraft as well. Bombardier says it plans to begin deliveries of its new C-series airliner equipped with the engines by 2013.

Flight International has an article on the new engine development.

- Bob Cox

A new airliner from Bombardier

Flight International reports that Bombardier has taken the next step towards launching a new airliner family, the C-series ranging from 110-1030 seats and may be close to landing some orders.

Qatar Airways is considering an order for 20 of the type, says the airframer, and the aircraft is also being studied by Lufthansa and US lessor International Lease Finance (ILFC).

The CSeries family comprises 110- and 130-seat aircraft and will be powered by Pratt & Whitney’s geared-turbofan engine.

- Bob Cox

February 19, 2008

Singapore A380 grounded

Singaporeairlinesa380landsinsydneyA Singapore Airlines flight on an Airbus A380 was cancelled due to a fuel pump defect, in what is being called the first technical glitch to ground a flight on the super-jumbo jet.

The problem was detected when the engine was started before the Singapore to Sydney flight.

- Trebor

December 19, 2007

Rigorous Airbus rudder checks now required

Plane_crash_2The Wall Street Journal reports today that European safety regulators have ordered frequent and extensive testing on the composite rudders of Airbus A300/310 series jets due to safety concerns.

The rudders of about 420 older Airbus jetliners are being subjected to repetitive ultrasonic and other enhanced inspections, the first time airlines and safety regulators have resorted to such recurring, high-tech procedures to determine the integrity of composite parts on airliners already in service.

The stepped-up inspection program, recommended by Airbus months ago and then reaffirmed by the European Aviation Safety Agency through a mandatory directive, calls for the first enhanced rudder checks to be completed within six months or 500 flights. Some inspections on certain planes must be repeated every 1,400 flights, a relatively short compliance schedule for checking structural integrity of primary flight structures.

The enhanced inspections, including ultrasound, X-rays and other techniques, stem from a March 2005 incident in which an Air Transat Airbus A310 suddenly lost its rudder over the Caribbean while flying from Cuba to Quebec. There were no injuries, and the plane returned safely to Cuba. But as a result, the plane's manufacturer, Canadian air-safety investigators and European regulators began investigating what, if any, additional inspection requirements were necessary to safeguard the integrity of such rudders used on early model Airbus aircraft.

While the changes primarily affect a relatively small number of older twin-engine A300s and A310s, they nevertheless represent a significant break from longstanding Airbus-developed maintenance standards for composite materials. Before the incident, Airbus, a unit of European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co., and European regulators maintained that simple visual inspections, combined with a mechanic's manually tapping on the surface of the composite rudders, were adequate to detect any potentially hazardous internal flaws or structural weaknesses.

But now for the first time, high-tech inspections methods are being required -- and must be repeated during the life of a what Airbus described as a "limited number" of Airbus jets -- to assure long-term rudder integrity. A spokesman for Airbus U.S. operations said only a small number of affected aircraft are flown by U.S. carriers. Spokesman Clay McConnell said about 400 A300 and A310 aircraft are covered by the added inspections, along with 20 wide-body Airbus A330 and A340 jetliners. Mr. McConnell said Airbus changed its rudder-manufacturing process before the 2005 incident.

The Star-Telegram reported on this issue a year ago (Nov. 12, 2006) because of the potential that it could be related to the 2001 fatal crash of American Airlines Flight 587 in New York:

Five years after an American Airlines jet crashed in New York City and killed all 260 passengers and crew members, questions linger about whether the type of plane involved has flaws that could imperil other flights.

An investigation concluded that the crash of Flight 587, on Nov. 12, 2001, in a Belle Harbor neighborhood, was largely due to pilot error. The co-pilot made overly aggressive attempts to steer the Airbus A300 as it bounced from side to side in turbulence created by another jet that had taken off ahead of it.

The pilot’s actions put so much stress on the aircraft’s vertical stabilizer, or tail fin, that it was torn off, fatally crippling the wide-body jet, the National Transportation Safety Board said in its final report. For a pilot to break the airplane’s structure in flight was unprecedented, the NTSB said.

But to this day, American, a group of its pilots who flew the jets and other observers contend that the safety board and its investigators rushed to blame the pilot and gave short shrift to evidence that pointed to potential flaws with the Airbus rudder controls or even a structural defect.

"I think there are a large number of troubling, unanswered questions" regarding the A300, said Michael Slack, an Austin attorney and former aerospace engineer. Slack represents the families of Flight 587 victims in liability lawsuits and has examined documents and questioned witnesses from American and Airbus.

Recently, new incidents involving damage to A300 tails and rudders have called into question the safety and reliability of the Airbus plane. They’ve also reinforced concerns about the growing use of carbon-fiber composite materials in manufacturing commercial airplanes.

- Bob

December 06, 2007

French to Airbus: You don't dare move

A French government official was quick to respond Wednesday to warnings by EADS officials that they might move some Airbus production out of Europe, possibly to the U.S., in part to better cope with the rise in value of the Euro vs. the dollar.

As reported yesterday on Sky Talk, Ralph Crosby, the top North American executive of Airbus parent company EADS, said Monday that if the company wins all or part of the Air Force tanker contract, the European plane maker may "bring other final assembly activities to the United States."

EADS Chairman Louis Gallois has also said repeatedly the value of the Euro is a real problem and Airbus may need to relocate some of its production work outside Europe. The French government, according to the Financial Times, responded by saying in essence: Wait a minute, remember who is subsidizing your business.

French companies were warned on Wednesday not to move production outside the eurozone in hasty response to short-term currency movements.

Christine Lagarde, France’s finance minister, appeared to send a shot across the bows of EADS, the Franco-German aerospace group, suggesting that the government might reconsider its financial assistance to the company if it cut its operations in France.

Ms Lagarde told parliament she would ask Louis Gallois, EADS chief executive, in a meeting scheduled for Wednesday evening to explain “how he intends to manage his strategy and costs to optimise the sales and market share of the French aerospace industry”.

Mr Gallois said this week that EADS had “no choice” but to move production of some components outside the eurozone.

Ms Lagarde acknowledged that EADS faced real difficulties when its sales were priced in dollars but a large share of its costs were in euros. But she reminded parliamentarians that the government had recently promised extra aid for research and development worth €1.5bn to the French aerospace industry.

“We will be extremely attentive,” Ms Lagarde said. “At a time we are increasing our tax credits for research, it goes without saying that our industrial partners must also participate in French industrial policy.”

Mr Gallois’s message about production costs was echoed by Charles Edelstenne, chairman of Dassault Aviation, who said his company could not cope with a 30 per cent depreciation of the dollar against the euro in the past two years.

- Bob

December 05, 2007

Airbus: Made in Alabama

Airbus officials are dropping not very subtle hints that if the company wins an Air Force contract for new aerial refueling tankers it could also move some significant pieces of its other jetliner production to the U.S. The Seattle Times reports today:

Ralph Crosby, the top North American executive of Airbus parent company EADS, said publicly Monday that if the company wins all or part of the Air Force tanker contract, the European plane maker may "bring other final assembly activities to the United States."

A person close to Airbus confirmed privately that top executives are discussing in detail the possibility of assembling commercial jets in Mobile, Ala., where the company would complete its A330 military tankers.

Nothing like the prospect of lots of local jobs to convert Southern members of Congress into big fans of the Franco/German planemaker and provide a political counterweight to Boeing's home court advantage.

- Bob

October 31, 2007

No Mile-High Club on Singapore Air's A380

Apparently, Singapore Airlines will only go so far in indulging its passengers' desires. The airline is asking passengers to refrain from having sex in the private first class suites on the carrier's new A380 superjumbo, Reuters reports. Singapore launched the first flight of its A380 on the Sydney-Singapore route last week.

Click here to take a virtual tour of the first class cabin.

-- Scott

October 25, 2007

Now that's expensive airfare

A380paint Ever thought you'd pay $100,000 for a pair of seats on an airplane? How about $50,000?

Those were some of the amounts shelled out in an online auction on eBay for the right to fly on Singapore Airlines' inaugural Airbus A380 flight that took off yesterday.

You can read the full Associated Press story on the flight here.

In the AP story, you can read about how Tony Elwood and his wife together paid $50,000 for their one-way seats in a two-person suite that included leather chairs, a desk and two full-size beds that unfold from the wall. They also sipped champagne and ate marinated lobster and double-boiled chicken soup.

Not a bad way to spend the 7 hours in a plane from Singapore to Sydney.

-David

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