May 2, 2007

Etihad Airways Flies into 2007 Following Highly Successful 2006


For Immediate Release: 04/30/07>

Boeing Delivers 777s Equipped with Electronic Flight Bag to Continental Airlines
A First for North American Carriers Boeing and Continental Airlines today announced that the airline will be the first U.S. carrier to use the Boeing Class 3 Electronic Flight Bag (EFB) on its 777s.

Wed, 02 May 2007 00:00:00 EST
Boeing Co files SEC Form 4
Boeing Co Files SEC Form 4 - Statement of changes in beneficial ownership of securities…

Tue, 1 May 2007 19:42:17 EDT
Rada Cutlery Quick Edge Knife Sharpener with Hardened Steel Wheels (Designed for Rada Knives)
Rada Cutlery Quick Edge Knife Sharpener with Hardened Steel Wheels (Designed for Rada Knives)
Two specially hardened steel wheels are positioned at the optimum angle for quickly restoring a sharp edge. Specifically designed for Rada Cutlery’s enormously popular kitchen knives. All you need to do is pull the blade through the wheels a few times and like magic, a sharp edge is restored!
Misc.: 
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Company: Rada Manufacturing 

List Price: $6.60
Amazon Price: $3.00

See Why South African Airways Offers Top Rated Service

Travelers are notorious for rating service in part because ratings serve as a means of expressing pleasure or displeasure for their experience but also in part because rating a service can be of great value to the next user of that service. First Class seating on South African Airways has been modeled after the highly rated Swissair First Class seat and has achieved top rankings in recent In-flight Research Surveys.

Saga Airlines’te heyecan

Boeing CEO says plane maker on pace to overtake Airbus
Boeing Chief Executive Jim McNerney said Monday the aerospace company “turned the corner” in 2006 and is on pace to overtake ……

Tue, 1 May 2007 07:34:39 EDT
navel-gazing 2.0?is that lint in there?
Nora wonders whether its vain or just good marketing to change your own wikipedia entry. Cathi looks at Boeings experiments in fuel cell aviation (via gizmag) And shes jonesing for the new wii gun adaptor for first person shooters. Speaking of navel gazing, heres Noras article on Philip K. Dick in the Globe and Mail.

Tue, 24 Apr 2007 11:43:03 EDT
AIR FRANCE AIRBUS A 340-300 SAFETY CARD
US $5.00 (0 Bid) End Date: Wednesday May-02-2007 6:25:18 PDTBuy It Now for only: US $6.00Bid now | Buy it now | Add to watch list

Wed, 25 Apr 2007 06:25:18 PDT

Next-Generation 737 landing gear overhaul/exchange agreement signed by Boeing and Air Pacific

AIRLINE INDUSTRY INFORMATION-(C)1997-2007 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD

Aircraft manufacturer Boeing Co (NYSE: BA) has said that Boeing Commercial Aviation Services, a unit of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, has signed Fiji-based Air Pacific for Boeing’s Next-Generation 737 landing gear overhaul and exchange programme.

Under the terms of the agreement Boeing will cover the entire fleet of Air Pacific’s Next-Generation 737 fleet.

Air Pacific is the first customer for the programme. No financial terms were disclosed.

((Comments on this story may be sent to aii.feedback@m2.com))


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At The Controls: The Smithsonian's Air & Space Museum Looks At Cockpits Opens at the California Oil Museum, Santa Paula, CA, on Feb 11, 2007

The traveling exhibit from the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum, “At The Controls,” will open with a reception from 1 to 3 p.m., Sunday, February 11, 2007, at the City of Santa Paulas California Oil Museum (1001 E. Main St., Santa Paula, 805-933-0076, $4 Adults, $3 Seniors, $1 Children). All are welcome and refreshments will be served. The exhibit presents extraordinary 4- by 7-foot color images of the cockpits of the worlds most famous aircraft and space vehicles (http://www.sites.si.edu/exhibitions/exhibits/controls/main.htm). The Oil Museum is adding an additional component to the exhibit, an Aviation Cockpit Demonstrator from the NASA Langley Research Center in Virginia. The exhibit runs through Sunday, June 24, 2007.

Santa Paula, CA (PRWEB) January 5, 2007 — New Museum Exhibit:

“AT THE CONTROLS: The Smithsonians Air & Space Museum Looks At Cockpits.”



The traveling exhibit from the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum, “At The Controls,” will open with a reception from 1 to 3 p.m., Sunday, February 11, 2007, at the City of Santa Paulas California Oil Museum (1001 E. Main St., Santa Paula, 805-933-0076, $4 Adults, $3 Seniors, $1 Children). All are welcome and refreshments will be served. The exhibit presents extraordinary 4- by 7-foot color images of the cockpits of the worlds most famous aircraft and space vehicles (http://www.sites.si.edu/exhibitions/exhibits/controls/main.htm). The Oil Museum is adding an additional component to the exhibit, an Aviation Cockpit Demonstrator from the NASA Langley Research Center in Virginia. The exhibit runs through Sunday, June 24, 2007.



The “At the Controls” exhibition features 20 large-format color photographs of historically significant cockpits, such as the Wright brothers 1903 Flyer; the “Enola Gay,” a Boeing B-29 Superfortress; the Mercury “Friendship 7″ and the space shuttle “Columbia” (a complete list is below). Using a 4 by 5 camera with 120-degree wide-angle lens and a variety of lighting techniques, photographers Eric F. Long and Mark Avino have created unique images that contrast the simplicity and complexity of cockpits throughout aviation history.



Measuring approximately 4 by 7 feet, the images depict in rich and precise detail the evolution of the controls, instruments and displays used to fly these air and spacecraft. The cockpits in the exhibition were selected because their instrumentation panels vividly illustrate the development and refinement of aviation technology. Additional information and complete views of the air and spacecraft accompany each photograph.



The Aviation Cockpit Demonstrator from the NASA Langley Research Center will enable visitors to see what it is like to fly a plane, even in bad weather. The one-seat interactive demonstrator incorporates NASAs weather-in-the-cockpit technology and is handicapped-accessible (http://oea.larc.nasa.gov/Exhibits/details.cfm?id=222).



A companion to the exhibition, “At the Controls: The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Book of Cockpits,” edited by Thomas M. Alison and Dana Bell, includes 45 of these images of aviation cockpits. The book is available through Boston Mills Press ($39.95).



“At the Controls: The Smithsonians National Air and Space Museum Looks at Cockpits” was developed by SITES and the Smithsonians National Air and Space Museum. Eric Long is a senior photographer for the Smithsonians Office of Imaging, Printing, and Photography at the National Air and Space Museum. During his 19-year career at the Smithsonian Institution, he has documented collections, exhibits and events for museum research and publications, and has participated in historical documentations including three presidential inaugurations and an oral history of Southern agriculture. Mark Avino is a chief photographer for the Office of Imaging, Printing, and Photography at the Air and Space Museum. Also with the Smithsonian Institution for 19 years, Avino has directed and supervised staff photographers who specialize in reproduction and documentation of the museums collections, created exhibition displays, and arranged special research and publications events. Avino has also served as guest speaker and judge for Gallaudet University Department of Photography photo contests.



The Smithsonians National Air and Space Museum memorializes the national development of aviation and space flight. The museum maintains the largest — more than 33,500 objects — and most diverse collection of historic air and spacecraft in the world. For more information, please visit www.nasm.edu.



Each year, SITES shares the wealth of Smithsonian collections and research programs with millions of people outside of Washington, D.C. One of the Smithsonians four National Programs, SITES makes available a wide range of exhibitions about art, science and history, which are shown not only in museums but also wherever people live, work and play, including libraries, science centers, historical societies, community centers, botanical gardens, schools and shopping malls.



Publicity Photos:

Photo 1: Spirit of St Louis.jpg - In the cockpit of the Spirit of St. Louis, Charles Lindbergh flew the first trans-Atlantic light from New York to Paris in 1927. The retractable periscope (top center of photo) gave him forward visibility. He spend 33 hours in the cockpit before completing the flight.

Photo 2: Mustang,jpg - The P-51 Mustang was considered the finest fighter plane of World War II. Inside the cockpit, the gun trigger is on the control stick (lower center) and the canopy ejection control is the horizontal red level on the right (right center of photo).

Supplier Excellence Alliance (SEA) Appoints Liaison to Aerospace Industries Association (AIA)