Business & Commercial Aviation

Keith W. Baird (Via e-mail)
With the latest proposal to limit the operational freedom of aircraft weighing over 12,500 pounds, I am surprised by how limited and guarded the responses have been from the aviation community. It seems that with every passing quarter, the TSA has issued some new restriction on our civil liberties. I don’t think I am alone in believing that the TSA is continuing to expand its sphere of influence, control and restrictions at a rate faster than it can effectively manage, or measure, its own effectiveness.

Name withheld by request
I read “Without Apology” (Viewpoint, January, page 7) with interest because of the negative spin placed on business aircraft by Congress, and of course the lapdog media with its pile-on mentality, during the hearings on the automotive industry bailout proposal. The fat, stupid cats running Detroit deserve an Oscar for sheer arrogance. However, you raise a very interesting issue once again — business aircraft as a sign of noblesse oblige.

By Jessica A. Salerno
Out of the past comes Kellett Aircraft’s KD-1A, shown taking off at Turner Field, Willow Grove, Pa. First built in the early 1930s, the 225-hp autogyro is being pushed for agricultural and utility use. Southern business flying center of the future? The U.S. Navy releases Chamblee, Ga., Air Station near Atlanta. The first FBO is Executive Aviation, a Cessna distributor.

James E. Swickard
The Environmental Protection Agency will delay changes it published in fall 2008 to clarify Spill Prevention, Control and Countermeasure (SPCC) requirements deadlines “Amendments” that the agency said were designed to encourage greater compliance with the regulations. Under SPCC rules, owners and operators of fuel storage facilities built before Aug. 16, 2002, must have a plan in place to meet spill prevention and cleanup requirements. Owners and operators of facilities built after that date have had until July 1, 2009, to develop their plans.

James E. Swickard
The NTSB determined the probable cause of a midair collision between two EMS helicopters last year was both pilots’ failure to see and avoid the other helicopter on approach to the helipad. Contributing to the accident were the failure of one of the pilots to follow arrival and noise abatement guidelines and the failure of the other pilot to follow communications guidelines. On June 29, 2008, about 3:47 p.m. MST, two Bell 407 EMS helicopters, operated by Air Methods Corp.

Robert A. Searles
Stevens Aviation has received Parts Manufacturing Approval (PMA) for its avionics upgrade to the Learjet 60. Stevens owns an STC that covers installation of the Universal Avionics EFI-890R multifunction display with the application server unit and the optional Vision-1 Synthetic Vision System in the Learjet 60. Stevens Aviation is negotiating with several partners for distribution and installation of the Learjet 60 kit worldwide.

James E. Swickard
The ninth European Business Aviation Convention & Exhibition (EBACE) drew to a close May 14. Event organizers cheered the show as the third-largest EBACE ever, with 10,917 registered attendees. The three-day event opened May 12 in Geneva, Switzerland with 9,300 pre-registered attendees, 411 exhibitors and 65 aircraft on static display — five more aircraft than in 2008. BCA had our Show News staff on site, where they published an issue each day and posted it to the AviationWeek.com free Web site, where they’re still available.

Richard N. Aarons
I have an acquaintance — a light-twin business pilot — who always files IFR for any trip away from his immediate local area for two reasons: “One, I’ve got someone to talk to and help me watch for traffic; and, two, staying IFR keeps me on track for the correct airport, especially at night.” Not a bad idea, especially for a lone pilot in busy airspace.

By Jessica A. Salerno
June 15-21: International Paris Air Show, Le Bourget Exhibition Centre, Le Bourget, France. www.paris-air-show.com June 24: NBAA Regional Forum, Signature Flight Support, St. Paul Downtown Airport, Minn. www.nbaa.org June 25-27: 14th Annual Flight Attendants Conference, Doubletree Hotel, New Orleans. www.nbaa.org July 16: Demonstrating & Quantifying the Value of Business Aviation, McGraw-Hill Corporate Headquarters, 1221 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. (800) 240-7645. www.aviationweek.com/conferences

James E. Swickard
ARINC Direct is offering a new Web-based package of flight support services for VLJs, plus other general aviation aircraft weighing less than 12,500 pounds at takeoff. The subscription price of only $1,500 per year, includes flight planning, complete weather information, aircraft tracking, runway analysis and weight and balance calculations. It also includes participation in ARINC’s discount fuel service. Dispatchers and crews can access the service from anywhere using any Internet device or smartphone.

James E. Swickard
Cessna announced the 200th Citation Mustang delivery when Maritime Air Charters picked up its new aircraft at Cessna’s Independence, Kan., facility. Although based in Honolulu, Maritime Air Charters will operate the new Mustang in charter service from its facility in Newnan, Ga., outside Atlanta. Maritime intends to offer its services including aircraft management, flight crew service and charter management to other Mustang owners.

James E. Swickard
The FAA released its bird strike database at the end of April at the direction of Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood. The agency’s fear that the information might cause an unsophisticated public to worry excessively about specific locations proved unfounded. There was a flurry of attention in the general news media, now subsided, mostly about the 59,776 total strikes since 2000 and that probably 80 percent of “wildlife strikes” are unreported. Acting NTSB Chairman Mark Rosenker remarked, “I was particularly gratified to read [Secretary LaHood’s] comments . . .

James E. Swickard
At a May 11 briefing, Luis Carlos Affonso, Embraer executive vice president, Executive Jets, announced the Legacy 450 and 500 have completed the Joint Definition Phase of the development program, which involved over 100 engineers from key system suppliers, as well as Embraer’s own staff.

By William [email protected]
It was croissants, café au lait and a larger crowd than I had expected one recent morning in Paris. I’d come to learn about aviation 2030 as seen by Thales, the French aviation electronics outfit. My curiosity sprang in part from an exchange with one of my teenage sons one winter day as he readied for a flight to Florida.

James E. Swickard
Garmin Synthetic Vision Technology (SVT) received FAA-certification on a range of G1000-equipped aircraft in April. Cessna announced at the Friedrichshafen, Germany, air show that the new SVT certification applies to all G1000-equipped 172 Skyhawks, 182 Skylanes, 206 Stationairs and Caravans. The day before the Cessna announcement, Daher-Socata announced SVT certification of its TBM 850. The system also received an STC on the King Air 200/B200. And Cessna expects FAA certification on the Citation Mustang, 350 Corvalis and 400 Corvalis TT in the coming weeks.

Executive Vice President and Principal, ExcelAire, Long Island MacArthur Airport, Ronkonkoma, N.Y.

James E. Swickard
Robert Holleran, Jeppesen’s chief technical pilot, recently completed the flight validation training course for Satellite-Based Performance Based Navigation (PBN) and Special Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) Instrument Flight Procedures (IFP) — making Jeppesen the first and only third-party vendor authorized to flight check PBN procedures.

James E. Swickard
Korean Air has ordered two Citation CJ1+ aircraft to join its fleet of Citation Ultras, which have been used for advanced pilot training platforms since 1995. The new Citations will have a special center-mounted instructor/observer seat just behind the two pilot seats. The aircraft will be based at Korean Air’s pilot training center at Jeju, South Korea.

Name withheld by author’s request (Williamsburg, VA)
With respect to the January Intelligence item by James E. Swickard about the “systemic shortcomings in Brazilian air traffic control concepts” (page 11), I offer a personal anecdote.

James E. Swickard
Canada is the only country that requires noncommercial operators of turbine-powered aircraft to be certified and regularly audited for safety compliance. Even more notably, Canada’s DOT has delegated the administration of the Private Operator Certificate program to the Canadian Business Aviation Association to save government money and resources. (See Business & Commercial Aviation, April, page 42.)

By David Esler
A leaner, consolidated industry, more accountability, perhaps new forms of ownership and longer aircraft retention, a resurgent charter component . . . and a “pony.”

Robert A. Searles
John Didier, president of Sacramento Aviation, which specializes in handling Citations and King Airs, believes the market may be turning. “The last quarter of 2008 was very slow. So was January. We went four months with just a few sales. Since the first part of February we have seen more activity — not big time — but the phones are ringing and we are getting an offer here and there. I think there is some light at the end of the tunnel.”

Bob Howie (Houston, TX), Assistant Chief Pilot (Houston, TX), Wing Aviation Charter Services (Houston, TX)
Well, the Super Bowl has come and gone for another year and while folks still laud the game, aviation would be remiss if it did not praise the efforts of the FAA and, in my case, Signature Flight Support in Tampa for their efforts in successfully orchestrating the post-game departures of what was likely more than 100 corporate jets. Ramp and ground control choreographed a ballet that would have made George Balanchine envious!

John Jones (San Diego, CA)
The comments by Michael Boyd in February’s Viewpoint are totally out of line! The CEOs of the car companies should have sold those airplanes rather than use them to beg for money. Come on, that is just wrong. They should have let them go bankrupt.