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Keyword: commercialaviation

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  • Boom Supersonic XB-1 jet breaks sound barrier on historic test flight

    01/28/2025 12:22:59 PM PST · by Miami Rebel · 8 replies
    Space.com ^ | 1/28/2025 | Brett Tingley
    Boom Supersonic made history today (Jan. 28) when its XB-1 jet broke the sound barrier for the first time. Boom Supersonic's chief test pilot Tristan "Geppetto" Brandenburg took off in the company's XB-1 jet from the storied Mojave Air & Space Port in California this morning under mostly clear skies. Some 11.5 minutes into the flight — the 12th overall for the XB-1 — at an altitude of around 35,000 feet (10,668 meters), the test plane exceeded Mach 1, the speed of sound, marking the first time a civil aircraft has gone supersonic over the continental United States. "This is...
  • (Those Were The Days!) PHOTO: Late 1960s: Economy Class Seating on a Pan-Am 747

    08/21/2014 7:19:24 PM PDT · by DogByte6RER · 106 replies
    Retronaut ^ | Circa 1960's | Retronaut
    Late 1960s: Economy Class Seating on a Pan-Am 747 The 1960's were barely done when Pan Am again set a standard the rest of the world was forced to follow. Pan American's Boeing B-747 Jumbo Jets brought down the cost of long distance air travel once again. Source: Pan Am Historical Foundation
  • Safety Group Urges Airbus Fixes (Nota Bene: for Airbus A319/A320 cockpit displays that go BLANK)

    07/24/2008 4:52:35 PM PDT · by VOA · 15 replies · 1,464+ views
    The Wall Street Journal ^ | 07/23/08 | ANDY PASZTOR
    Safety Group Urges Airbus Fixes LOS ANGELES -- U.S. aviation safety watchdogs, concerned about severe electrical problems that have blacked out cockpit displays on dozens of Airbus jetliners over the years, urged regulators on both sides of the Atlantic to mandate aircraft fixes and enhanced pilot training to alleviate such hazards. Recommendations released by the National Transportation Safety Board Wednesday cite 49 incidents over the years in which electrical problems caused various cockpit displays on widely-used Airbus A319 and A320 to suddenly stop functioning and temporarily go blank during flight. According to the board, seven of those incidents resulted in...
  • FAA KIDS ARE IN 'CONTROL' - DESPERATE FEDS WOOING HIGH-SCHOOLERS

    07/14/2008 2:50:17 AM PDT · by Stoat · 30 replies · 192+ views
    The New York Post ^ | July 14, 2008 | CHUCK BENNETT
    The FAA has offered an unprecedented $100,000 bonus to air-traffic controllers throughout the country to lure them to the New York area's five understaffed radar centers - and has even begun trolling local high schools to recruit for the jobs. The FAA began its recruitment efforts in high schools and through online ads on MySpace and Craigslist because of a severe staffing shortage and lack of experience among workers at its air-control towers.   (edit) By 2011, 59 percent of all controllers will have less than five years on the job.  
  • Former head of Airbus detained in insider probe: source

    06/30/2008 10:24:52 AM PDT · by Republicain · 122+ views
    AFP via Yahoonews ^ | 06/30/2008
    PARIS (AFP) - The former German head of aircraft manufacturer Airbus, Gustav Humbert, was detained for questioning by France's financial crime unit Monday in connection with alleged insider trading at Airbus parent EADS, a source close to the matter said. The French financial market regulator, AMF, in April alleged in a report that Humbert sold 160,000 EADS shares in November 2005, earning 1.685 million euros (2.7 million dollars). He is suspected of having benefited from privileged information on EADS' financial prospects as well as delays to the Airbus A380 superjumbo project, which were announced in June 2006 and caused the...
  • Iraqi Airways Flying High as Country Continues to Rebuild (what will the Rats gripe about now?)

    06/27/2008 1:43:38 PM PDT · by tobyhill · 22 replies · 152+ views
    Fox News ^ | 6/27/2008 | David MacDougall
    There was a time when Iraqi Airways criss-crossed the globe, operating flights from Baghdad to cosmopolitan destinations including Tokyo, Rio de Janeiro, Paris, Bombay and a host of other cities. But that was nearly three decades ago — before the economically ruinous Iran-Iraq war, two other wars involving the United States and its allies, a no-fly zone and crippling U.N. sanctions. The long slide into decay was both painful and inevitable. By the time Saddam Hussein was toppled from power in 2003, numerous abandoned Iraqi Airways jets sat rusting on the tarmac in at least three regional airports, and the...
  • NASA won't disclose air safety survey

    10/22/2007 4:16:54 AM PDT · by Virginia Ridgerunner · 12 replies · 45+ views
    AP, via Yahoo! News ^ | October 22, 2007 | RITA BEAMISH
    MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. - Anxious to avoid upsetting air travelers, NASA is withholding results from an unprecedented national survey of pilots that found safety problems like near collisions and runway interference occur far more frequently than the government previously recognized. NASA gathered the information under an $8.5 million safety project, through telephone interviews with roughly 24,000 commercial and general aviation pilots over nearly four years. Since ending the interviews at the beginning of 2005 and shutting down the project completely more than one year ago, the space agency has refused to divulge the results publicly. Just last week, NASA ordered...
  • Aviation News (Blog)

    05/20/2005 3:43:30 PM PDT · by beerguzzler · 20 replies · 711+ views
    http://aogdesk.org/v-web/b2/ ^ | 5/20/05 | BeerGuzzler
    What do you think about aviation news? Post your own news or comment on existing posts.
  • Missile Threat Means New Rules at Airports

    03/30/2003 4:28:34 AM PST · by Pharmboy · 25 replies · 390+ views
    NY Times ^ | March 30, 2003 | PHILIP SHENON
    WASHINGTON, March 28 — Federal authorities will order major security improvements at several of the nation's largest airports after inspections showed that passenger planes taking off or landing at those airports would be vulnerable to attack by terrorists using shoulder-fired missiles, senior Bush administration officials said. The inspections, which began several weeks ago, are being conducted by a federal task force created by the White House late last year after terrorists linked to Al Qaeda tried to shoot down an Israeli passenger plane on takeoff from an airport in Kenya in November. The two small, shoulder-fired missiles barely missed the...