Business & Commercial Aviation

Staff
Agusta Global Support Plan (GSP) -- Designed to provide comprehensive cost control measures, the GSP covers parts and labor for both scheduled and unscheduled maintenance, repair and replacement of components, overhaul, life-limited parts and pilot refresher training. Parts and labor for mandatory Service Bulletins are included. Avionics are also included. Engine services are provided by engine OEMs. The contract is transferable.

David Rimmer
I WAS ONE OF SEVEN PEOPLE on the aircraft when we had a midair over the Amazon. I am grateful we survived. It was really a matter of less than an inch that was the difference between our surviving or perishing. And it was a matter of several feet that was the difference between the lives of the people on the airliner being spared. Sadly, that didn't happen.

Staff
Reader Hogan is right. The first guy to say he's too tired will be the last guy called and that guy will get plenty of rest while he watches TV and waits for the phone to ring. We know of no ALJ rulings on that subject so far.

Edited by James E. Swickard
In a July 11 speech in Washington, D.C., FAA Administrator Marion Blakey announced her agency's new "Operational Evolution Partnership," which replaces the "Operational Evaluation Plan" launched in 2001. The new OEP lays out the agency's path to the Next Generation Air Transportation System through 2025, and now encompasses all of the FAA's NextGen-related activities, not just capacity improvement. But the original OEP goal of a 30-percent increase in system capacity by 2013 remains.

Edited by Robert A. Searles
(Stratford, Conn.) -- Napo Hohn has been named chief executive of the North American arm of this aircraft charter, sales and management business. Hohn has held several senior management positions with the company during his 20 years with the firm.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The U.S. Air Force is conducting aerodynamic tests of a 2 percent model of a blended-wing-body (BWB) design at the Arnold Engineering Development Center near Tullahoma, Tenn. The object of the tests is to provide data to help evaluate the BWB's flight characteristics at higher Mach numbers than those applied to the same model earlier this year at NASA Langley Research Center's National Transonic Facility in Hampton, Va. The tests -- a joint effort by the Air Force, Boeing and NASA -- are sponsored by the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL).

Richard N. Aarons
WHEN DOES A CASE OF pilot error become a case for the criminal courts? Mark Tayfel, a Canadian pilot, has been tried for criminal negligence causing death in Manitoba and, at this writing, was awaiting a verdict by the justice who heard three days of testimony. His aircraft crashed into a Winnipeg street intersection after running out of fuel during a second attempt at an IFR approach.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The National Air Transportation Association is urging the FAA to clarify that Safety Alerts for Operators (SAFOs) are voluntary. The association said it supports the use of SAFOs to distribute important safety information, which usually includes recommended -- but not required -- actions. But the association expressed concern that SAFOs have also said that "failure to adhere to the SAFO recommended actions could result in an FAA determination that operators are not in compliance with their obligations as certificated air carriers," which sounds like an implied threat.

By Fred George
In the late 1980s, British Aerospace (BAe) embarked upon development of the 30-passenger Jetstream 41 regional turboprop, an updated and stretched version of the 1960s-vintage, 19-seat Handley-Page Jetstream 31. The J41 would have a seven foot longer cabin, 25- to 30-knot higher cruise speeds and improved airport performance, especially at high-and-high landing facilities. The low-price, low-DOC J41 was intended to compete against considerably more modern and roomier regional commuters, such as the Dornier 328, Embraer EMB-120 Brasilia and Saab 340.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Cessna will be collaborating with Germany's Thielert Aircraft Engines with the objective of offering a diesel engine option.

Edited by James E. Swickard
FAA Administrator Marion Blakey told senior staff members recently she was encouraged by the quality of applicants who are seeking the post of chief operating officer of the FAA's Air Traffic Organization and said she planned to begin interviewing candidates soon. FAA Deputy Administrator Bobby Sturgell has been serving as acting head of the ATO since former ATO head Russ Chew left the agency earlier this year to join Jet Blue.

Staff
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Edited by James E. Swickard
Just 202 days after design work began, the Epic Victory single-engine, build-it-yourself jet made its maiden flight July 6, from Redmond, Ore. The company planned to debut the aircraft publicly at the Experimental Aircraft Association's AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wis.

Dennis L. Taylor (Richboro, PA)
In his June Washington column, "Getting Greener" (page 90), David Collogan seems to have imbibed a little too much of the "Al Gore green tea." All this talk about reducing CO 2 emissions, and remaining "carbon neutral" is going to make my head explode.

Edited by Robert A. Searles
"I think we're probably in the healthiest market I have observed since I have been in the business," declared Nick Cerretani, who co-founded Miller Aviation in Binghamton, N.Y., in 1975. He helped grow that flight school and Cessna dealer into a full-service aviation support company that produced FBO management software and eventually merged with Corporate Wings. After a stint at Flight Options, Cerretani formed his own aircraft sales company in 2002. Cerretani Aviation now has East and West Coast offices in addition to its headquarters in Boulder, Colo.

Edited by James E. Swickard
After an overrun of a snow-covered runway at Midway Airport in December 2005, in which a Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 struck two vehicles on a nearby road, killing a six-year-old child, the FAA released a controversial policy statement calling for FAR Part 121, 135 and 91 (K) operators to add a 15-percent safety margin in landing distance calculations, based upon runway conditions that exist at time of arrival.

Edited by Robert A. Searles
Stevens Aviation, the aircraft sales and support company that announced its Lear 4 Ever upgrade program in late 206, has received an STC for the comprehensive refurbishment of a Learjet 25 at its Nashville base. The company's Denver location is presently working on a similar upgrade program for Learjet 35s and 36s and hopes to exhibit an example of one of those refreshed aircraft at the NBAA convention in Atlanta in September.

Edited by James E. Swickard
DayJet has begun limited on-demand, per-seat Eclipse 500 service in Florida, and at least one existing operator is concerned. Fort Lauderdale-based Gulfstream International, which is about to go public, is worried that the upstart VLJ air taxi operator could, if successful, poach some passengers from its scheduled service.

Staff
Whenever things go off track, the account goes to minus, or a bit of gloom settles in and stays, I know I'm going to call up your most thoughtful and selfless note and will be cheered by it. It's sometimes hard to know if we're actually connecting with the readers, whether what we put on paper is helpful to and welcome by them, so a message like yours is immensely encouraging. Thank you so much for your support.

Edited by James E. Swickard
Grupo Omnilife de Mexico signed a contract to buy a Lineage 1000 business jet from Brazilian manufacturer Embraer, the first sale of the Embraer 190 airliner variant to a Mexican customer. The Lineage is expected to enter service in 2008. Grupo Omnilife de Mexico, a major distributor of health and entertainment products and services, is scheduled to get its Lineage in December 2009.

Staff
Editor-in-Chief William Garvey [email protected] Executive Editor Jessica A. Salerno [email protected] Senior Editors Fred George [email protected] George C. Larson [email protected] Safety Editor Richard N. Aarons [email protected] Art Direction Ringston Media [email protected] Intelligence Editor James E. Swickard [email protected]

Edited by Robert A. Searles
Operators of late model Falcons need not be jealous of operators who have signed up for the new Dassault Falcon 2000LX, which features winglets designed in collaboration with Aviation Partners Inc. The Seattle-based maker of performance-enhancing airfoils is working with the airframe manufacturer to offer at least a couple of winglet retrofit programs for earlier models of the French-made business jet.

Staff
Summer is bringing in softer economic data than hoped for in the United States, as the weakness in car sales is joined with continued weakness in housing. Higher oil prices, and even higher gasoline prices, are sapping purchasing power at the same time that wealth is declining because of falling home prices. We continue to expect the economy to avoid a recession, but the cushion is getting smaller.

By Fred George
Where's Vern?" were likely to be the two most frequently heard words as Eclipse Aviation's early Monday, July 23 press conference was to get under way at this year's Experimental Aircraft Association AirVenture in Oshkosh, Wis. As scripted, Peg Bilson, the firm's chief operating officer, was to preside over most of the event, whose centerpiece was to be a concept mockup of a single-engine personal jet being evaluated by Eclipse. Company founder, president and CEO Raburn, she was to explain, would arrive sometime later.

Edited by James E. Swickard
The FAA plans to assemble an industry-based rulemaking group to develop recommendations for addressing safe runway landing distance margins, James Ballough, director of the FAA's Flight Standards Service, said at the National Air Transportation Association's recent Air Charter Summit. The runway landing distance issue got a lot of attention after the Southwest Airlines runway overrun at Midway Airport in December 2005 in which a Boeing 737 slid off a snowy runway and struck two vehicles on a nearby road, killing a six-year-old child.