| In
This Issue |
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Poorly
Trained Cabin Aide Factor in TEB Accident |
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Wind
Played Role in East River Cirrus Crash |
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GAO
Further Muddles FAA Funding Debate |
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FAA
Promotes Safety System Implementation |
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Lockheed
Martin unveils ADS-B team |
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Operational
Alert
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Getting
Cold Sober About Icing
Four new icing safety sources are available for this
coming winter. NASAs online
course A Pilots Guide to Ground Icing
has been updated for all pilots, including business
aviation pilots. Also available is A Pilots
Guide to In-flight Icing, which is intended
primarily for GA pilots who fly aircraft certified
for flight in icing. The FAA just published a safety
alert for operators (SAFO
06016) that provides further guidance specifically
to pilots of turboprops to prevent in-flight icing
incidents. Meanwhile, FAA
Notice 8000.329 is a 37-page document providing
information on ground de-icing holdover times, a listing
of qualified de-icing/anti-icing fluids, and recommendations
on various other ground deicing/anti-icing issues
for the coming winter.
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Also
Noted...
The FAA introduced another information-dissemination
vehicle on October 30, this one called Information
for Operators (InFO). An InFO provides commercial
operators information that should help them meet certain
administrative, regulatory or operational requirements with
relatively low urgency or impact on safety, the FAA
explained.
Two business aviation leaders died last week. Alan Conklin,
founder of business aircraft performance and cost comparison
research company Conklin & de Decker, died Wednesday
at the age of 86. Donald Baldwin Sr., formerly head
of Texacos flight department and a member of the NBAA
board for 10 years, also died Wednesday. He was 88 years
old.
The Corporate Angel Network, the White Plains, N.Y.-based
charity that provides free air transportation for cancer
patients traveling to treatment facilities by using empty
seats on corporate and fractional aircraft, arranged a record-breaking
257 patient flights in October. The previous monthly record
of 253 flights was set last year.
Stage III Technologies, which received an STC 18
months ago for its combined hush kit/cascade thrust reverser
for Gulfstream IIs and IIIs, plans to have
its long-awaited first installation under way in February
at Western Jet in Van Nuys, Calif. See AIN
for an article on Stage III and QTA hush kits.
Comments are due tomorrow on Dallas/Fort Worth International
Airports petition
filed with the FAA requesting permission to operate without
a rotating beacon. To date, only one comment has been filed
(by a Delta Air Lines pilot opposed to the request).
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Poorly
Trained Cabin Aide Factor in TEB Accident
Included in the several factors that the NTSB says contributed to
the Feb. 2, 2005 crash of a Challenger 600 at Teterboro Airport
was its determination that the third crewmember, or cabin
aide, was not properly trained. According to the Safety Boards
final
report on the accident, the cabin aide did not perform
a seatbelt compliance check before the accident flight, which resulted
in two passengers being unrestrained during the accident sequence.
In addition, the cabin aides training did not adequately
prepare her to perform the duties with which she was tasked, including
opening the main cabin door during emergencies. Thus, the
NTSB is recommending that the FAA require that cabin personnel who
are intended to be qualified flight attendants on Part
135 flights receive basic FAA-approved safety training in preflight
briefing and safety checks; emergency exit operation; and emergency
equipment usage. The Safety Board also said Part 135 certificate
holders should be required to ensure that seatbelts at all
seat positions are visible and accessible to passengers before each
flight.
Wind
Played Role in East River Cirrus Crash
An excerpt from the NTSBs update on its investigation into
the crash of the Cirrus SR20 that hit the 30th floor of an
apartment building on October 11 while trying to make a U-turn
over the East River provides insight into the role of the
wind. Radar data indicate that the airplane was flying
over the east side of Roosevelt Island prior to initiating
a 180-degree turn. At this location, there would have been
a maximum of 2,100 feet clearance from buildings, if the full
width of the river had been used. However, from the airplanes
mid-river position over Roosevelt Island, the available turning
width was only 1,700 feet. The prevailing wind from the east
[given as 095 degrees at 13 knots at 700 feet by an aircraft
landing at Newark at the time of the accident] would have
caused the airplane to drift 400 feet toward the building
during the turn, reducing the available turning width to about
1,300 feet. At an airspeed of 97 knots, this turn would have
required a constant bank angle of 53 degrees. If the initial
portion of the turn was not this aggressive, a sufficiently
greater bank angle would have been needed as the turn progressed,
which would have placed the airplane dangerously close to
an aerodynamic stall. 
GAO Further Muddles FAA Funding
Debate
The Government Accountability Offices October 30 report
Observations on Potential FAA Funding Options
repeats some information the GAO released September 27 in
airspace system modernization testimony.
But an odd graphic in the new report might add confusion to
the user-fee debate. Figure 1 on page 5 illustrates the FAA
paying for airport, ATC and safety activities. The ATC sections
IFR Operations Commercial shows an airliner flying
above a VFR Operations General Aviation piston
single. GA turbine aircraft (and pistons) are not shown interacting
in the IFR Commercial part of the diagram, which
some might interpret as supporting the Air Transport Associations
claims that airliners operate in what it calls commercial
airspace. The GAOs Rich Swayze, who wrote the
report, told AIN that it would have been clearer to
show business jets and piston airplanes in the IFR section
but added that the FAA had not mentioned that GA piston aircraft
operate in airspace the airlines use.

FAA Promotes Safety System Implementation
The FAA released Notice
8700.49, effective October 11, to guide FAA inspectors
in helping operators develop Safety Management Systems
(SMS). An SMS advisory circularAC
120-92was released on June 22, and since then
the FAA has promoted the SMS concept industry-wide,
at meetings such as the Bombardier Safety Standdown
in early October and the Nascar race team SMS Safety
Summit on October 20. Organizations that participate
in the NATA Safety 1st program and the IBAC International
Standard for Business Aircraft Operations (IS-BAO) are
already using SMS tools. While SMS isnt mandatory,
the FAA encourages the aviation industry to consider
the benefits of an SMS and the development and implementation
of associated principles, the agency said in its
notice. NBAA said, While implementation of an
SMS may seem onerous to operators at the first assessment,
those who have implemented an SMS have found significant
benefit as a result. 
Lockheed Martin Unveils
ADS-B Team
Lockheed Martin at the Air Traffic Control Association
Convention on Monday announced its bidding team for
the FAAs nationwide automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast
(ADS-B) program. The team includes ground station manufacturers
Sensis and Rannoch, and avionics integrator Honeywell
and secure network communications specialist Harris.
The FAA plans to award a performance-based
contract next July, under which the winner will fund,
build and operate some 500 ground stations, with the
FAA certifying them and then purchasing their signals
in space. Adding strength to Lockheed Martins
bid was Rannochs announcement on Monday that it
had acquired Czech company ERA, the major European ADS-B
manufacturer. Sources told AIN that Raytheon
and, separately, ITT plus Thales would shortly announce
their bidding intentions. There was also speculation
about Northrop Grumman interest in the reportedly $2
billion ADS-B contract.

AINalerts
is a publication of The Convention News Co., Inc., 214 Franklin Avenue,
Midland Park, NJ 07432. Copyright 2006. All rights reserved. Reproduction
in whole or in part without permission from The Convention News Co.,
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2008.
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