Business & Commercial Aviation

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertLinda L. Martin
Those planning to attend England's biennial Farnborough Air Show from September 7 to 13 can expect to see most of the major business aircraft manufacturers, as well as many of the leading engine and avionics makers. In the no-show category are Cessna Aircraft as well as Russian companies Yakovlev, Antonov, Tupolev and Mikoyan. As usual, the first five days are for aerospace trade visitors, with the public days on Saturday and Sunday, September 12 and 13.

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertGordon A. Gilbert
New Piper Aircraft is now selling its Malibu Mirage with a BFGoodrich SMARTboot tailplane ice detection and alert system as standard equipment. The six-place, single-engine Malibus are the first aircraft to be certificated with the SMARTboot. Under development since 1994, the system is designed to integrate the aircraft's current pneumatic deicer with ice detection technology that monitors up to three linear feet (by one inch wide) along the deicer area, as opposed to more typical systems that sense ice buildup at one single point.

Edited by Gordon A. Gilbert

Edited by Gordon A. Gilbert
After eight years as the European Business Air Show (EBAS), the annual event will have a different name and will welcome the airlines into the fold when the it plays again on May 20 to 22, 1999 at Germany's Dusseldorf-Express Airport. "We feel that the two sectors of aviation coexist in the same environment, and many aircraft operators are active in both business air charter and scheduled services," a spokesperson said. The event, newly dubbed Air Transport and Business Aviation, still will not include fighters, microlights, spacecraft or admit the public.

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertLinda L. Martin
Those who remember the sparse attendance at the first NBAA Flight Attendants Conference in 1996 would have been struck by the robust group of participants gathered at the third annual conference held recently in Washington, D.C. Some 150 attendees discussed safety and training issues, inflight medical responses, the government's perspective on their livelihood and even the ways to work with U.S. Customs, Immigration and Department of Agriculture officials.

Staff
For a number of market and marketing considerations, OEMs will offer guaranteed cost programs as a sales incentive or marketing statement. These have not been included in the guaranteed maintenance cost program survey because they are offered to purchasers of new aircraft only, and because they are offered to purchasers of new aircraft only, and because they do not have a renewal option.

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertPerry Bradley in New York City
The aerospace industry is on the cusp of a paradigm shift that will see increases in value replace increases in performance as the key market driver, Boeing Chairman Phil Condit said in an address recently to members of the Wings Club in New York City. "We have to fundamentally change our industry so we provide value to the customer," he said. Whether it's the business jet, airliner, military or even the commercial space market, in order to achieve success, companies will have to address cost of ownership, Condit contends.

Staff
TAC Air, an Arkansas-based firm with six FBOs in the Central and Southern United States, has gained a foothold in the Midwest with the recent purchase of Sky Harbor Air Service at Omaha's Eppley Field. The facility is now known as TAC Air, and TAC Air veteran Steve Pickle has taken over its management. The company plans to redecorate the interior of the terminal, upgrade ground support equipment and spin-off the FBO's charter operations.

Gordon A. GilbertEdited by Gordon A. Gilbert
Pratt&Whitney Canada received Transport Canada certification for its PW150 turboprop engine that powers the new de Havilland Dash 8Q-400, 50- to 80-passenger regional aircraft

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertArnold Lewis
Air Wisconsin has placed firm orders for four Canadair Regional Jet Series 200LRs. The aircraft will be domiciled out of the carrier's United Express operation at Denver.

Gordon A. GilbertEdited by Gordon A. Gilbert
Regent Aerospace, a Valencia, Calif. repair station, has introduced repair services for aircraft acrylic and glass windows

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertGordon A. Gilbert in Savannah
A status report on service and equipment issues led off Gulfstream Aerospace's 1998 annual maintenance and operations workshop this spring in Savannah. Approximately 900 people representing nearly half of the worldwide fleet of more than 1,000 Gulfstreams were in attendance, including the operator of the first Gulfstream to enter service-a G-I now being used for charter by an international air taxi company.

Staff
Shared ownership and lease programs using preowned aircraft were announced recently by Aviation One, a new company based in Quincy, Mass., and Chrysler Aviation of Van Nuys, Calif. Aviation One launched a program with three refurbished aircraft: a Citation I and II, and a Cheyenne 400LS. A one-sixteenth share lease in a Citation I is $110,000 annually, which includes the monthly management and lease payments and the hourly fee for 44 flight hours per year.

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertMal Gormley
With the easy availability of cellular phones, nationwide pagers and Internet access providers, you might think that we have all of the communication options that we need. Well, there's more on the way. Just look up. In "Satcom's Second Generation" (July 1997, page 60), we outlined the next wave in aeronautical telecom. That article describes a number of ambitious plans to place large fleets of satellites in orbit that will become new networks of cellular phone antennas.

Staff

By Arnold Lewis
Northwest Airlink Mesaba Airlines is the first U.S. regional to offer first-class service. It had to. When Northwest decided to equip the carrier with British Aerospace Avro RJ 85 quadjets-nominally an 85-seater-to replace aging DC-9s on mainline routes, it faced a 69-seat limit in the scope clause with its pilots.

Staff
Discussions within Transport Canada may lead to a new rule requiring that inoperative or removed ELTs on commercial aircraft be a no-go item. Currently under Canadian (as well as U.S.) rules, aircraft are permitted to operate up to 90 days if an ELT is removed for repair or replacement. Canada's concerns stem from its investigation into at least two recent accidents, including the dead-stick descent and crash landing of a Pilatus PC-12 single-engine turboprop near Clarenville, Newfoundland on May 18.

Linda L. MartinEdited by Gordon A. Gilbert
Brad Kost is the new general manager of this FBO at Palm Beach International Airport.

Staff
Taneja Aerospace and Aviation Ltd. (TAAL), an India-based aircraft maker, signed a memorandum of understanding with the federal National Aerospace Laboratories to develop a 15-seat utility turboprop. A prototype is scheduled to fly by late 1999. Meanwhile, TAAL plans to introduce a time-share concept called Net-Air. The program will offer clients up to 200 hours of flight time annually for five years in three TAAL-built Piaggio P68C recip twins for an up-front payment of $178,000 and a DOC of $105 per hour.

Linda L. Martin
National general aviation trade groups bird-dogged Congress through its relatively uncontroversial approval of a one-year reauthorization of FAA programs, and now are sharpening their arguments and mobilizing to shape a multi-year aviation bill in 1999. Congress was distracted from aviation issues earlier this year due to its focus on the passage of a six-year highway bill. As a result, lawmakers tabled electric subjects like user fees and a performance-based ATC system.

Edited by Gordon A. GilbertArnold Lewis
Notified earlier this year that its net assets had fallen below the $4 million minimum required for listing on the Nasdaq stock exchange, Great Lakes is fighting back. A hearing was scheduled for late June on the carrier's argument that the value of its Chicago O'Hare slots should be taken into account in applying Nasdaq's net-tangible-asset test for continued listing.

By Edward G. Tripp
The first-or at least the first widely known-guaranteed maintenance cost program in business aviation was created more than 30 years ago. Rolls-Royce introduced "Power by the Hour" (PBH) to support the 3,000-pound-thrust Viper 520 (and later, higher thrust versions) turbojet installed on early models of the de Havilland/Hawker 125.

Edited by Gordon A. Gilbert
The city of Austin is planning a May 1, 1999 opening for Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, the former Bergstrom Air Force Base (October 1997, page 14). Construction is now about 70 percent complete at the facility, which has the distinction of being the FAA's largest transformation to date of a military base into a civilian airfield. The airport was opened in June 1997 for air cargo, and those flights have shown "remarkable growth," a spokesperson from the airport projects office told B/CA.

Staff
The BBJ is expected to be on static display at the NBAA convention in Las Vegas in October, the aircraft's first scheduled public appearance. First flight of the BBJ is set for this quarter.

By Richard N. Aarons
For most domestic flight department managers, August arrives with its own list of hazards-sizzling ramps, precarious powerplant temperature limits, high density altitudes, thunderstorms and, most feared, the beginning of the annual budget process.