Business & Commercial Aviation

Edited by James E. Swickard
Flight Safety Technologies of Mystic, Conn., is awaiting funding from NASA to continue development of its wake vortex turbulence detection system. The company said it has been working with the FAA, NASA, the Air Line Pilots Association and major airports to develop its SOCRATES (Sensor for Optically Characterizing Remote Atmospheric Turbulence Emanating Sound) technology within a cost-effective system to monitor ``wake vortex turbulence.'' A ``proof-of-principle'' test of SOCRATES at JFK International Airport was held in May 1998.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The FAA confirmed air traffic control will be reclassified as a commercial activity (something that could conceivably be outsourced) but stressed that within that classification it will be designated Category A, meaning that no pricing comparisons or outsourcing can occur. The agency ``has no intention to competitively outsource en route or larger terminal [control] facilities,'' spokesman Greg Martin said. The Bush administration is required by law to classify all job functions as either commercial or inherently governmental.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Certain dial type cabin pressure altimeters can display dangerously misleading indications, the NTSB discovered in the course of several accident investigations. The Safety Board, in a letter to the FAA, said that at extreme low cabin pressure (high cabin altitude), some single-needle indicators can drop through the bottom of the low-pressure range, travel around the bottom of the gauge, and back into the higher-pressure, lower cabin altitude indication range.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The Bell/Agusta 609 commercial tiltrotor has begun ground testing at Bell Helicopter's flight research center in Arlington, Texas. Jointly developed by Bell, a unit of Textron, Inc., and Agusta, an AgustaWestland company, the BA609 will undergo 40 to 50 hours of ``ground run'' testing prior to its first flight. No date has yet been set for that flight.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Mark Van Tine was to become Jeppesen's new president and chief operating officer on Jan. 1, succeeding Horst Bergmann, who will continue as CEO and chairman of the board until May 1, when he reaches age 65, the mandatory retirement age. Van Tine had been executive vice president, responsible for Jeppesen's worldwide flight information development, information technology, printing and distribution. He began his career in 1981 with Lockheed DataPlan, which Jeppesen acquired in 1989.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Jeppesen will reorganize to align with its customer market segments effective Jan. 1. New business units will include: Commercial (airline) Aviation Services, led by Thomas Wede; Business and General Aviation Services, led by Kevin Collins; Military and Government Services, led by Dominic Custodio; Marine Services, Software Development and Infrastructure Services, led by Tim Sukle; and Advanced Business Development, led by Greg Bowlin. Jeppesen's German affiliate will continue to be led by Hermann Dudda.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The NBAA board of directors has begun a search for a new president to be appointed this year and to take office on Jan. 1, 2004. After more than 11 years leading the Association, President Jack Olcott will become the NBAA's president emeritus as of Jan. 1, 2004. Olcott was editor and publisher of B/CA prior to his nomination to the NBAA presidency. The Association's board of directors has accepted the recommendation of a search committee and selected ``a leading executive recruitment firm'' to find candidates for consideration as the next president of the organization.

Staff
Flightcraft, Inc., Portland, Ore., has hired Jeff Smith as the new director of line services. Smith will oversee the line departments at both the Portland facility and the Eugene, Ore., location.

Edited by James E. Swickard
KaiserAir opened a NiCad battery service shop at its location at Oakland North Airport in California. The shop can service as many as 12 batteries at one time and is equipped with an Aviall analyzer load bank and Aviall Data Acquisition System (ADAS) to provide customers with an analysis and guaranteed performance check.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The Transportation Security Administration has activated the toll-free hotline for Airport Watch. The hotline, (866) GA-SECURE (866-427-3287), is answered by the National Response Center, which also initiates coordinated response to about 20 different situations. Callers should expect an automated answering system to say you've reached the National Response Center. There is a short telephone menu, and then a live operator will pick up.

By Fred George
In late November 2002, Eclipse Aviation made the stunning announcement that it had terminated its agreement with Williams International to supply EJ22 turbofans for the Eclipse 500. Eclipse founder and CEO Vern Raburn said that EJ22 development was ``significantly behind schedule'' and that the 770 lbf thrust Williams powerplant was ``clearly a weak engine.'' Although Raburn says the Eclipse program will go forward with another, soon-to-be-named engine, the decision at the minimum will cause Eclipse to miss its original certification target of late this year.

Staff
In the simmering seven-year trade dispute between Embraer/Brazil and Bombardier/Canada, the amount and method of ``retaliation'' or compensation (by the World Trade Organization against the Canadian government) was finally to be decided on Dec. 18, 2002. The debacle started back in 1996 when Bombardier instigated proceedings through the Canadian government and the World Trade Organization (WTO) against Brazil's PROEX program of financing Embraer's exports.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Bombardier announced it had more orders for its Q400 turboprop than for regional jets during third quarter 2002. The manufacturer logged four turboprop orders, a single CRJ200 customer and two CRJ700 orders.

Staff
Thunder Air Charter, Inc., St. Louis, has appointed Kevin Colson director of operations. Colson has over 17 years of experience in the aviation industry.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Frost & Sullivan's new World Inflight Entertainment and Passenger Communications Markets reports that industry revenues totaled $2.18 billion in 2002 and are projected to reach $3.56 billion by 2008. However, it said inflight entertainment vendors may soon find their products becoming obsolete, giving way to remote distribution of content. DBS radio and television have successfully overcome bandwidth limitations and have become more affordable for inflight applications (see Intelligence, page 20, ``Avionics Innovations . . .'').

Edited by James E. Swickard
GPS Fault Detection and Exclusion (FDE) software is now standard on Garmin International's 400/500 series avionics systems. FDE is an algorithm that monitors the accuracy and reliability of GPS signals, detects erroneous GPS data, and excludes those data from the active navigation solution. Unlike Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM), which will terminate GPS navigation altogether if signal integrity is compromised, FDE enables the pilot to continue navigating with GPS, albeit in a degraded mode.

By John Wiley
It all happens very quickly. Something goes bang! A red or yellow light illuminates. A warning bell goes off. With that, a routine flight becomes an emergency or ``non-normal.'' And then come those three words, ``I've got it!'' With that emphatic announcement, workload usually goes up and the pace quickens. The captain is now the Pilot Flying (PF) and the first officer is now Pilot Not Flying (PNF). But is this the best solution to handling a problem? Maybe not.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Honeywell's AS907 turbofan engine received European JAR certification on Dec. 3, 2002. The AS907 will power the Bombardier Challenger 300, scheduled to enter service this year. The 7,000-pound-thrust class engine, flat-rated to 6,500 pounds for life extension, has a 34.2-inch fan and a 4.2 bypass ratio.

Staff
Garrett Aviation Services, Tempe, Ariz., has named Tony Checa regional sales manager for Garrett's Eastern region, including New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

Edited by James E. Swickard
International SOS has launched China's first dedicated air-ambulance service with a specially configured Hawker 800XP on permanent standby in Beijing. Previously, SOS used its air ambulance based in Singapore to bring patients out of China. Jim Williams, International SOS chief operating officer, the Americas, stated that the flying range of the Hawker 800XP aircraft enables it to provide services anywhere in China and as far afield as Korea, Japan and Mongolia. Deer Jet, a subsidiary of Hainan Airlines, operates the Hawker. The Web site is www.internationalsos.com.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The Eclipse 500 program suffered a serious setback in late November when managers abandoned the Williams EJ22, claiming the engine was "weak" and its development too slow. Vern Raburn, Eclipse founder and CEO, said he soon hoped to select a replacement engine, which is likely to be in the 1,000 lbf thrust range. At press time both Honeywell and Pratt & Whitney were in the running, though development and certification of such an engine could involve a capital investment of $100-150 million.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Piaggio America will sell up to six Avanti P180s to Avia Aviation Ltd., a fractional operator based in Calgary, Alberta. The order calls for Piaggio to deliver three Avanti P180s this year, one in each of the first three quarters; with an option to purchase three additional aircraft in 2004. Avia President Joe Viveiros said he liked the cabin size of the Avanti and the 395-knot cruising speed. ``Plus,'' he noted, ``it has the Canadian-built PT6 engines.''

Edited by James E. Swickard
The Molasky Group is building a private jet hangar facility at McCarran International Airport (LAS) near Las Vegas. Jet Hangars, LLC, a development entity owned by the Molasky Group, a Las Vegas developer, has received a 40-year lease for an 11-acre parcel adjacent to the airport. The facility will include seven 14,000- to 18,000-foot condominium hangars, offices, garages and a small passenger facility with a pilot lounge and flight-planning stations.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Gulfstream Aerospace rolled out the 500th and final GIV in December 2002; that model is being succeeded by the G300 and G400. Speaking to some 3,000 employees and suppliers crowded into a production hangar at its headquarters in Savannah, Ga., on Dec. 3, Gulfstream President Bill Boisture said the model had generated more than $12.5 billion in revenues over its 15-year production history.

Staff
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, Fla., has appointed Brian Barents, Karen Holbrook and Donald Shepperd to its board of trustees.