Aviation Week & Space Technology

By Tony Osborne
A Canadian audit says pilot and engineer retention are limiting the capability of the RCAF’s CF-18 Hornet fleet.
Defense and Space

By Graham Warwick
Distributed drive units should increase performance while enabling simpler, lighter, less costly systems.
Air Transport

By Graham Warwick
MIT flies solid-state; Boeing launches SkyGrid; X-59 metal cut; NASA’s liquid battery; air mobility tie-up; unmanned cargo biplane; drones demo 5G.
Aerospace

By Byron Callan
It might provide the leverage to achieve another budget deal.
Defense and Space

By Adrian Schofield
Air New Zealand has introduced its first Airbus A321neo, with Virgin Australia and the Qantas Group due to follow with their own new-generation narrowbodies.
Air Transport

By Lee Hudson
French five-star general says a European military will make the NATO alliance stronger.
Defense and Space

Our roundup of the main aerospace and defense stories making the news this week.
First Take

By Bradley Perrett
Part of a technology acquisition effort for a fighter, a Japanese Mach 2 stealth inlet has been designed and tested.
Defense and Space

Upcoming aviation and aerospace industry events and Aviation Week Network events.

By Thierry Dubois
Despite good salaries and working conditions, French companies have yet to attract enough sheet metal workers, fitters and cutters for its production lines.
Air Transport

By Kevin Michaels
Relatively stable labor rates, intellectual property protection, manufacturing expertise and growing maintenance services could attract more U.S. aerospace work to Mexico.
Air Transport

By Bradley Perrett
The MHI F-2 was a step forward in lightweight structural design. A new Japanese fighter would go further.
Defense and Space

By Joe Anselmo, Jens Flottau, Graham Warwick
A year after giving its C Series program to Airbus, Bombardier unloads its turboprop business. Is the CRJ line next? Aviation Week editors discuss.
Air Transport

By Jen DiMascio
Foreign sale package includes Japanese request for SM-3 missiles; Israeli Air Force plans F-15 purchase; U.S.’ air power demo; and Northrop to sustain J-Stars.
Defense and Space

By Michael Bruno
The momentum at Mercury could be emblematic of who the real winners of the Trump era in defense spending really may be.
Manufacturing & Supply Chain

By Graham Warwick
Details of the solar-powered stratospheric unmanned aircraft's technology.
Aerospace

By Thierry Dubois
A new regulation for upset recovery and prevention training is creating a market for companies operating aerobatic aircraft and targeting commercial pilots.
Air Transport

By Bradley Perrett
The IHI XF9-1 achieved its designed output before undergoing the usual tuning process to adjust a new engine for improvements.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Sean Broderick, Guy Norris
Boeing and others note that while the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System is new, emergency procedures did not change.
Air Transport

By Graham Warwick
With the flight of the first multi-engine hybrid-electric aircraft, the combination of electric and conventional propulsion takes a key step forward.
Connected Aerospace

Recent appointments, promotions and honors in the aviation and aerospace industry.

By Jens Flottau
In spite of the draft withdrawal agreement, huge uncertainty remains for aviation in general as Brexit deadline approaches.
Air Transport

By Bradley Perrett
By October, 17 months after the first flight, two C919s had flown for less than 150 hr. The program reportedly needs a total of 4,200 hr.
Air Transport

By Bradley Perrett
Tests have verified aerodynamic and mechanical performance of the bay. Supersonic release is confirmed.
Defense and Space

Readers take a fuller look at Apollo history, ponder repurposing obsolete F-16s as lethal drones and question whether speedy helicopters are needed.
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