Flight International 2016 12 April
Flight International 2016 12 April
Flight International 2016 12 April
STABILISER MOVED
TO NOSE-DOWN AT
900M, PROBE SAYS
REPORT P7
DAHER DELIVERS
SOFIA SO GOOD
Bulgarian government
approves fighter renewal,
but waits on parliament
for final go-ahead 20
FLIGHT
INTERNATIONAL
ACQUISITION
CALIFORNIA
DREAMING
ISSN 0 0 1 5 - 3 7 1 0
3.60
1 5
770015 371280
96
participating
countries*
$204
BILLION
of orders and
commitments placed*
84
FLIGHT
INTERNATIONAL
NEWS
SOFIA SO GOOD
THIS WEEK
6 Pegasus upset by C-17s turbulence
7 Details emerge of Rostov go-around.
Kuwaiti order increases Typhoons Gulf presence
8 MRJ readied for US transfer.
Evaluations begin for hostile fire indication system.
TAP Portugal to be first to accept Airbus A330neo
9 Daher expands family with TBM 930
Bulgarian government
approves fighter renewal,
but waits on parliament
for final go-ahead 20
FLIGHT
INTERNATIONAL
ACQUISITION
CALIFORNIA
DREAMING
AirTeamImages
ISSN 0 0 1 5 - 3 7 1 0
3.60
1 5
770015 371280
COVER IMAGE
Agency AirTeamImages
provided this stunning shot
of an Alaska Airlines Boeing
737-800 departing from
Anchorage International in
the carriers heartland P11
FIN_120416_301.indd 1
07/04/2016 09:48
AIR TRANSPORT
12 Second A320neo arrives at Lufthansa.
Nesma ATR 72s ready for Saudi launch.
Estonia grounds Avies as safety concerns mount
13 Near-miss with snowplough prompts safety call.
Ryukyu has freight expectations from new Q400s.
Air France finds compromise on Iran dress code
15 Keflavik reviews testing role.
Let L-410 for Chinese market with 20-unit deal
SHOW REPORT
16 Start-ups move to shake-up seating
17 In-flight internet rivals spar over speed, service
US Navy
FLYDUBAI CRASH
DAHER DELIVERS
STABILISER MOVED French airframer unveils
TO NOSE-DOWN AT its latest evolution of TBM
900M, PROBE SAYS turboprop and looks to
further expand family 9
REPORT P7
COVER STORY
11 Virgin upsets the balance at Alaska Planned
acquisition will see Boeing stalwart gain first
experience of Airbus narrowbodies, but may revert
to single-type fleet
FEATURES
DEFENCE
18 DARPA assembles Gremlins partners.
US Marine Corps deploys its Harriers with BAE
laser-guided rocket system.
More powerful engine sought for Shadow v2
19 Work starts on new Osprey.
Software update helps RAAF Hornets to fight
fatigue as operations increase.
Clean release kicks off JSOW F-35 test effort
20 Bulgaria looks west for new fighters.
Gearbox issues to blame for latest CH-53K delay
BUSINESS AVIATION
21 Traveller moving as Tecnam prepares for flight.
JetSuite gets to point with refurbished ERJ-135s.
Challenger deal is a timely boost for Bombardier
REGULARS
OBITUARY
36 Ed Strongman
5 Comment
35 Straight & Level
38 Classified
40 Jobs
43 Working Week
Daher, Lufthansa
Daher unveils addition to single-engined turboprop family P9. Lufthansa takes delivery of second A320neo P12
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CONTENTS
IMAGE OF
THE WEEK
flightglobal.com/
flight-international
1%
106.4m
26%
Boeing
TOTAL
VOTES:
Ryanair
103km
62%
Depends
on the
airline
9,173
12%
Airbus
Blue Origin
Flightglobals premium news and data service delivers breaking air transport stories with
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COMMENT
Limited logic
Foreign ownership restrictions are based on a myth that control by citizens ensures patriotic
governance. Dynamics at Virgin America show how the rules have unintended consequences
REX/Shutterstock
In 2006, the US Department of Transportation rejected Bransons initial ownership structure for Virgin
America, which would have left the start-up effectively
in his financial control via a series of US-based subsidiaries. A few months later, the DOT accepted Virgin
Americas revised ownership structure, under which
Bransons Virgin Group would hold only 22% of the
shares and have little influence on decision-making.
Virgin America emerged from the financial crisis in
2008 smaller than originally planned, but with a strong
product that provided a valued alternative to US-based
competition. If Branson, a foreigner, were allowed control, Virgin America would likely still be focused on
growing slowly into a West Coast equivalent of JetBlue.
In this case, we see how ownership restrictions can
have unintended consequences, such as allowing
hedge funds to hijack governance structure over an otherwise committed foreign owner. Unless airlines are
allowed greater access to sources of capital, the Virgin
America example is likely to be repeated.
See News Focus P11
Hamburgs revolutionaries
A
flightglobal.com
THIS WEEK
BRIEFING
FIRST ON-WING ENGINE RUN FOR EMBRAER E2
US Air Force
PROPULSION Embraer has started the engines for the first time on
the wing of an E190-E2, with the Brazilian manufacturer announcing
the milestone on 4 April. The E190-E2 is powered by two Pratt &
Whitney PW1900G turbofans that are rated at up to 23,000lb-thrust
(102kN) each for take-off power. The 73in (185cm)-fan-diameter
PW1900Gs replace the lower-bypass GE Aviation CF34 engines on
the second-generation regional jet. P&W delivered the PW1900G as
a minor derivative of the PW1500G, which powers the Bombardier
CSeries family. The PW1900G will also equip the stretched E195-E2.
Pegasus upset by
C-17s turbulence
Otherwise smooth aerial refuelling demonstrations for new
tanker spoiled by bow wave effect from strategic airlifter
IMPACT
Boeing says it is working to
resolve the issue and will have a
better understanding of any programme impact shortly.
The KC-46A has demonstrated
boom refuelling of the F-16, as
well as the Boeing F/A-18 and
AV-8B via the wing-mounted and
centreline hose-and-drogue systems. It has also received fuel
from a Boeing KC-10.
The first 19 aircraft must be
delivered to US Air Mobility
THIS WEEK
Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Eurofighter
SYSTEMS
in-service support.
Eurofighter first revealed
Kuwaits selection of the Typhoon
in September 2015, three years
after the previous export order for
the type, from Oman.
The other Gulf customer for
Typhoon is Saudi Arabia, while
Austria, Germany, Italy, Spain and
the UK also operate the fourth-generation combat aircraft.
THIS WEEK
SCHEDULE
DAVID KAMINSKI-MORROW LONDON
FTV-1 has completed 17 test sorties reaching 35,000ft and Mach 0.65
Mitsubishi Aircraft
and
ammunition
establishment in Meppen, in the
north of the country. Two further
evaluations are scheduled for
2017, with the results due by the
end of next year.
Airbus Helicopters heads a
consortium
of
companies
involved in the project, including
Airbus Defence & Space,
Rheinmetall
Defence
and
Fraunhofer FKIE.
flightglobal.com
THIS WEEK
Yesterday we were
a single product
manufacturer.
Now we have an
aircraft family
ICOLAS CHABBERT
N
Senior vice-president, airplane business
unit, Daher
Daher
French manufacturer unveils second single-engined turboprop with touchscreen flightdeck and advanced safety features
Baseline TBM 900 will still be produced alongside the new model
two aircraft underscores [our]
sustained ambition in business
aviation, and is a message to our
customers that we continue to invest to expand and further improve our TBM family.
FEEDBACK
Customer feedback has guided
the TBMs evolution, adds Chabbert. The product line began in
1991 with the first-generation
TBM 700. Since then, five versions have been brought to market including the TBM 850 in
2006 and the series is now approaching its 800th delivery.
With enhanced resources provided by the Daher Group for
technical studies, design and pro-
www.cmcelectronics.ca
flightglobal.com
#ABStrats
In Association With
NEWS FOCUS
Second A320neo
arrives as Lufthansa
expands network
AIR TRANSPORT P12
CONSOLIDATION JON HEMMERDINGER & EDWARD RUSSELL WASHINGTON DC
Virgin America
leases the vast
majority of its fleet,
so we can transition
to a single fleet
BRANDON PEDERSEN
Chief financial officer, Alaska Airlines
Seattle airline says the deal will enable it to begin flying highly-competitive transcontinental routes
different direction, he says.
Alaska has a different approach
to Virgin America, with the vast
majority of its 737s owned.
It operates 151 examples of the
Boeing narrowbody: 26 737-400s
(including combis and freighters);
13 -700s; 61 -800s; and 51
-900/900ERs, Fleets Analyzer
shows. Only 20 13% are leased.
Alaska has orders with Boeing for
26 737-900ERs and 37 Max 8/9s.
EVALUATION
We like a single fleet, yes, says
Ben Minicucci, chief operating
officer of Alaska. However, he is
quick to say echoing fellow executives that it is keen to learn
about the Airbus and will evaluate whether it wants to keep the
fleet or transition back to a single type.
The Airbus is a proven airplane. We are going to learn from
it and go from there, says Alaska
chief executive Brad Tilden.
Alaska sees its planned acquisition as a means of gaining a substantial foothold in California and
Virgin America
AirTeamImages
BIG BUCKS
Alaska will also shoulder about
$1.4 billion of Virgin Americas
debt and aircraft leasing expenses,
bringing the total cost of the deal
to $4 billion, it says. The combined company would be led by
Alaskas executive team and
based in Seattle.
Tilden calls the merger the culmination of a hard-fought competition with New York-based
JetBlue Airways.
Though the projected timeline
is not firm, Alaska expects Virgin
Americas
shareholders
to
approve the deal by June and US
regulators to green-light the merger in the third or fourth quarter of
2016. This would put the carriers
on track to move to a single operating certificate by 2018.
Alaska, meanwhile, continues
to weigh up the Bombardier
CRJ900 and Embraer 175 for a
planned 30-aircraft order for
wholly-owned regional subsidiary Horizon Air, which it announced in January. The aircraft
will replace at least 20 of the carriers 52 Q400 turboprops.
We are going to go forward
with our regional jet order, says
Mark Eliasen, treasurer of Alaska,
with an announcement expected
in the next few weeks.
AIR TRANSPORT
REGULATION
DAVID KAMINSKI-MORROW LONDON
Lufthansa
Flag carrier will receive three more of the re-engined type this year
A350s at Munich, and has orders
for 25 of the type.
Lufthansa says it will continue
to operate A330s with first-class
seats from its secondary hub.
It adds that the A350s will be
operated by the mainline carrier
rather than a subsidiary. Regional
unit CityLine is already operating
A340-300s from Frankfurt with a
denser cabin layout with no
first- and fewer business-class
seats under the mainline brand.
Flightglobals Fleets Analyzer
database shows that Lufthansa
has 20 A340-600s in service, built
between 2003 and 2009.
ATR
Estonia grounds
Avies as safety
concerns mount
AIR TRANSPORT
Keflavik reviews
testing role
AIR TRANSPORT P15
UNIFORM
DAVID KAMINSKI-MORROW LONDON
Widere
S
Pilot brought taxiing Widere turboprop to abrupt halt after late sighting of vehicles crossing path
INQUIRY DAVID KAMINSKI-MORROW LONDON
reduced visibility.
personal values.
UNAC says that reserve crew
will also have the option of
avoiding the route, but will be
put back on reserve status if they
choose not to work it.
Air France says its A330s will
carry eight cabin crew and its
A340s will have 10.
flightglobal.com
Bombardier
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and built upon an unmatched level of quality data.
Find the next deal in aviation and quickly access the most
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AIR TRANSPORT
AIRCRAFT
INTERIORS 2016
SHOW REPORT P16
SALES
Cultura/REX/Shutterstock
Icelandic airport is popular location for certification trials due to presence of predictable crosswinds
SAFETY DAVID KAMINSKI-MORROW LONDON
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
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SHOW
REPORT
AIRCRAFT INTERIORS 2016
BillyPix
PASSENGER COMFORT
STRETCHING OUT
Italian seating firm Geven
showed a prototype of its Sofa, a
row of four seats that converts to
a bed; the headrests clip off the
seat backs and onto the front of
the cushions to form a couch big
enough for two adults or, if only
two or three are converted, for
children. Line-fit-ready versions
will be delivered to Airbus in October, for launch customer South
African Airways.
Another Italian specialist, Avio
Interiors, is looking to break into
the growing market for premium,
economy seats with a low-price
option that the company hopes
will attract airlines who have yet
to commit to the new cabin class.
While most premium economy
seats sell for $12,000 to $24,000,
Avios C4 will cost $5,000.
flightglobal.com
AIX 2016
DARPA assembles
Gremlins partners
SHOW REPORT
DEFENCE P18
CONNECTIVITY
In-flight internet
rivals spar over
speed, service
n-flight entertainment and connectivity has become a lightning
rod for competing claims over
what type of system and method
of delivery is best, a fact that was
clearly apparent at this years Aircraft Interiors event.
Disagreements over satellite
capacity, the familiar embeddedversus-portable IFE debate, and
the Ku- or Ka-band question were
all in abundance, with claims
and counter-claims bandied
about throughout the show.
Satellite company ViaSat
kicked things off with a confident
assertion that its latest superhigh-capacity satellite, ViaSat-3,
will blow seatback IFE out of the
water when it is launched into
orbit in mid-2019.
Don Buchman, vice-president
and general manager of ViaSats
commercial mobility business,
believes the significant amounts
of capacity offered by ViaSat-3,
combined with growing passenger demand to stream content of
their choosing to their own devices, will eventually sound the
death knell for embedded IFE
systems.
ViaSat-3 is really going to
usher in the age of no seatback,
says Buchman.
He is keen to point out that the
satellites used by competitor Inmarsat for its soon-to-launch
Global Xpress (GX) Ka-band connectivity service offer significantly less capacity. However, Inmarsat refuses to be drawn into a
numbers comparison game. Inmarsat Aviation president Leo
Mondale tells Flight International the capacity figures given by
ViaSat are theoretical, adding:
Im not going to compare my
apple with their orange.
As Inmarsat prepares for GX
service entry, which Mondale
flightglobal.com
Im confident our GX
service will meet
growing passenger
demand for the next
five years and more
LEO MONDALE
President, Inmarsat Aviation
Gogo
BillyPix
Gogo brought its own 737-500 to Hamburg so prospective customers could try 2Ku at 30,000ft
12-18 April 2016 | Flight International | 17
DEFENCE
PROPULSION
AE Systems laser-guided
Advanced Precision Kill
Weapon System (APKWS) rocket
has been d
eployed on the Boeing
AV-8B Harrier, seven months after
it was requested by the leadership
of the US Marine Corps.
The semi-active-laser-seeking
70mm (2.75in) rocket, enabled by
BAEs mid-body guidance and
control section, is already integrated on US Navy, Marine Corps and
Army attack helicopters, but will
soon become standard on the
fixed-wing AV-8B.
US Naval Air Systems
Command (NAVAIR) is delivering 80 units initially to Marine
Attack Squadron-223 (VMA223), which is deployed to an undisclosed location, likely somewhere in the Middle East.
NAVAIR declines to say if the
VMA-223 Harriers were currently engaged in combat against the
Islamic State terrorist organisation in Iraq and Syria, but the
quick delivery supports combat
US Navy
More powerful
engine sought
for Shadow v2
Test flights took place prior to the weapons fielding on the AV-8B
operations. The first fixed-wing
variants were delivered to theatre
in April.
The intent of this requirement
was to quickly provide the AV-8B
with a low-cost, low-collateral
damage, high-precision weapon
in support of combat operations,
says Capt Al Mousseau, who
heads NAVAIRs munitions
acquisition office.
NAVAIR confirms that a s eries
of qualification flights took place
DEFENCE
Bulgaria looks
west for new
fighters
DEFENCE P20
ARMAMENTS
JAMES DREW WASHINGTON DC
Clean release
kicks off JSOW
F-35 test effort
T
Commonwealth of Australia
US Navy
Service will use the tiltrotor for carrier onboard delivery mission
ffice in Amarillo, Texas, which
o
covers non-recurring engineering
services associated with the development of the capability for the
navy variant of the V-22.
NAVAIR confirmed that it covers
the design changes for all three
modifications, including the
extended-range fuel system.
More than 70% of the work will
be done in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, where Boeing fabri-
2020.
DEFENCE
Alexander Mladenov
IN ASSOCIATION WITH
w w w. f l i g h t g l o b a l . c o m / w a f
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BUSINESS AVIATION
Flying with
turbulence
SPECIAL REPORT P25
CONTRACT
STEPHEN TRIMBLE WASHINGTON DC
Challenger deal
is a timely boost
for Bombardier
Tecnam
JetSuite
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CONTENTS
GENERAL AVIATION
SPECIAL REPORT
MONEY WEIGHS
HEAVY ON SMALL
EURO-FLYERS
Flight Design
flightglobal.com
GENERAL AVIATION
AERO FRIEDRICHSHAFEN
CERTIFICATION STANDARDS
Bowles is the driving force behind a bold
industry initiative to introduce proportionate
certification standards for CS-23 and US
Federal Aviation Administration Part-23
aircraft which covers most piston, turboprop and light turbine aircraft.
In an advanced notice of proposed amendment (A-NPA), issued a year ago, EASA
described the proposed new certification
Aero Friedrichshafen
There is a correlation
between new licence holders
and aircraft purchases
MARTIN ROBINSON
Chief executive, AOPA UK
FLYING IN CRISIS
While this major initiative has been
welcomed by the GA industry, many believe
the s ector cannot make a full recovery until
flight activity grows.
There simply arent enough people flying
and the knock-on effect of this inactivity is
reverberating across the industry, from aircraft manufacturers and flight training
schools to flying clubs and aerodromes, says
Martin Robinson, senior vice-president of the
European arm of the International Council of
the Aircraft Owner and Pilot Associations.
IAOPA represents the interests of more than
23,000 members at regulatory bodies, including the European Commission, EASA and Eurocontrol.
His view is illustrated by the latest market
data released by GAMA. The association
reveals Europes installed base of single and
twin-engined aircraft weighing under 5,700kg
has been declining for years. The Netherlands
saw its fleet fall from 654 aircraft in 2008 to
497 at the end of 2015. The German inventory
fell from 7,532 to 7,340 over the same period
and the Republic of Ireland saw its tally slide
from 253 in 2011 to 195 at the end of last year.
Flying doesnt have the appeal it once
had, says Robinson, who is also chief executive of AOPAs UK branch.
Although the country is home to one of the
largest populations of aircraft and pilots in
Europe, the number of private pilot licenses
(PPL) newly issued for light aircraft in all
categories has fallen from around 3,300 per
year in 2005/2006 to under 2,500.
There is a correlation between new
license holders and aircraft purchases, he
says. Only one in 10 PPL license holders
own their own aircraft in the UK. This ratio is
much greater in the USA.
OTHER CONCERNS
He is not surprised by these statistics. When
people are worried about their jobs and mortgages, thats what they will prioritise first,
Robinson says. While the idea of learning to
fly is still attractive, they are not prepared to
make that investment right now.
The decline in flying activity is also threatening the long-term viability of many aero-
12-18 April 2016 | Flight International | 27
GENERAL AVIATION
dromes. The situation is particularly
acute in the UK where, unlike in many European countries, these sites are not considered
public amenities and therefore many are not
protected under the law.
According to GAMA there are 4,130 paved
and unpaved runways in Europe. Of these, the
UK is home to 272 and 190, respectively a far
cry from the 680 recorded in the mid-1940s.
John Gilder, vice-president of the UK
General Aviation Awareness Council, says the
countrys housing crisis has placed aerodromes in a precarious position. The governments determination to build more homes
has left many of these sites vulnerable, he
says. A number of sites have been sold in the
last few years, including Manston airport,
150km from L
ondon, in 2014. It is a big deal
for the industry because Manston is a substantial, and largely irreplaceable, capital asset
that should not be wasted, says Gilder.
He cites up to 30 aerodromes and landing
sites under threat.
It is a worrying time for GA with airfields
open-season for the developers, he adds.
There is little comfort to be found at the
larger airports, Robinson adds: Light aircraft
have long been regarded as noisy and intrusive to the local community, while large international airports, mindful of the small return
from GA traffic, have largely driven smaller
aircraft out.
Even at regional airports, landing fees
have become so expensive it is no longer
viable to operate in and out of these sites.
The GA community is frustrated at the lack
of UK government support or recognition for
the industry, despite it garnering much praise
in a 2015 Department for Transport-funded
report by York Aviation.
How can our government ignore the economic significance of our aviation industry,
as now evidenced by the York report, and fail
to support it? he says.
The study estimates the GA industry contributes around 3 billion ($4.2 billion) to the
UK economy and supports around 38,000
jobs. The report which includes all non-military and non air transport-related activity
also found that nearly 10,000 jobs are supported by activity at aerodrome level.
Reviving the GA sector to 2005 levels
could add a further 700 million to the UKs
economic footprint, says the report.
Not surprisingly, York cites a healthy flight
training industry as the essential ingredient
for its rejuvenation.
Training is a critical component of the
health of the GA sector, it concedes.
Without new student pilots feeding through,
the industry may continue to decline.
Aerodrome movement data issued by the
UK Civil Aviation Authority in 2014, for
example, revealed a decline in aero club and
28 | Flight International | 12-18 April 2016
Textron Aviation
SPECIAL REPORT
Cessna 172: a favourite of that cash-pressed and dwindling breed known as private flyers
private flying of around 45% since 2005.
The fall in hours flown by light aircraft was
particularly marked, with fixed-wing models
weighing between 751kg and 5,700kg down
by 50%. Anecdotal evidence suggests little
has changed since.
Government should consider ways in
which it can support GA training providers
and make it easier for student pilots to take up
flying, says York.
Robinson agrees. A starting point could
be lifting VAT [value added tax] on flying
training and on the cost of fuel. This would
bring down the price markedly. He concedes, however, this will not be sufficient to
revive the industry. We are not attracting
enough people. These are tough times. When
people look at what they can do with their
money, paying 400 an hour to fly in a Cessna
172 is not at the top of their list.
Robinson says the introduction of very
light aircraft, such as LSAs and homebuilds, has helped slash the costs of flying,
but this has not been sufficient to attract
new entrants.
RIDE-SHARING REVOLUTION
Europes nascent online ride-sharing market
could change all this.
By giving owners and operators of noncomplex aircraft with fewer than six seats a
platform to share the costs of their flight with
fellow passengers, it is hoped the appeal and
demand for private flying will escalate.
Skyber Europes first pan-European ven-
ture launched its online and mobile platform in August, and has already secured registrations from 2,000 pilots and 14,000 riders,
who have shared around 500 seats.
The cost of the flight which includes
landing fees and fuel is evenly split between
the riders which, depending on the number of
occupants, can be very affordable indeed,
says Skyber co-founder Carlos Oliveira. This
offering is also fully compliant with EASAs
cost-sharing principles.
Skyber isnt designed as a money-
making venture [for pilots]; rather a matchmaking exercise, Oliveira explains. It is a
way to offset some of the costs of flying,
which is very expensive in Europe, and
encourage people to fly. He hopes by lowering the price of entry, this distinctive and
under-utilised mode of transport will become
accessible to a much wider audience.
Skybers focus until now has been mainly
on training schools and aero clubs in Europes
largest markets of France, Germany and the
UK. It is now planning to extend its reach
throughout the continent. We have spent the
last few months perfecting the platform and
getting the funding in place to accelerate our
growth to market, Oliveira says. We now
plan to widen our marketing effort to aero
clubs around Europe, with a view to adding
50,000 pilots to the platform.
For AOPAs Robinson, the ride-sharing market is a welcome fillip for the light aircraft
industry. If it attracts new entrants and recharges the sector, it has to be a positive.
flightglobal.com
GENERAL AVIATION
COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS
Quest Aircraft
SINGLES SET
AT EASA
Europe looks ready to follow the USA and let turbine singles fly instrument-conditions
and nighttime commercial services so aircraft makers are gearing up for a sales boost
DAVID LEARMOUNT LONDON
fter two decades of European resistance to permitting commercial single-turbine operations at night or in
instrument meteorological conditions (SET-IMC), the European Aviation Safety
Agency is drawing up the final regulation that
would approve it across all contracting states.
For small or isolated communities that
need reliable air links, air taxi services and
would-be operators of commercially marginal
scheduled air services, this looks like excellent news. Continual disappointment over the
years, however, means some operators may
wait for the final rule before making any business expansion decisions. Others, however,
are starting to prepare for the new status quo.
For producers of appropriate aircraft types,
the permission could herald a sales bonanza.
The General Aviation Manufacturers
Association (GAMA) hints as much in its
GENERAL AVIATION
SPECIAL REPORT
ENTHUSIASM
Pilatus Aircraft, maker of the PC-12, which,
arguably, stands to gain most from the larger
potential market the new rules would usher
in, has declined to comment on its prospects;
likewise Cessna about its Caravan series. But
at a recent discussion at the British Business
and General Aviation Association (BBGA) on
the proposed CAT SET-IMC rules, Edwin
Brenninkmeyer, chief executive of UK Pilatus
distributor Oriens Aviation, chaired a session
that voiced considerable enthusiasm for the
prospects once the approvals come through.
At the same meeting Geoff Parker, head of
the UK Civil Aviation Authority flight opera-
Operations must be
on routes with safe
forced landing areas
flightglobal.com
GENERAL AVIATION
COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS
flightglobal.com
COMPLIANT
Several operators in Europe are already flying
aircraft and crews compliant with the
demanding technical and operational requirements EASA expects to formalise, but at present they are cleared for operations under national exemptions for limited SET-IMC
operations. These operators are based in
Pilatus
Textron Aviation
perhaps they were not. It had become increasingly obvious old twin piston-engine aircraft
which retained the rights to carry out CAT
SET-IMC were becoming less safe than the latest generation of single-turbine types.
US-based Quest Aircraft, builders of the
Kodiak utility SET aircraft, points out many
countries operate the same type of specifications for SET-IMC operators, and Quest does
not believe this makes it un-viable. It points
out the Kodiak is approved for US Part 135
operations, and this will carry over to our
EASA certification. Like all other stakeholders, it says it is expecting the final EASA rule to
be implemented in the first half of 2017.
GENERAL AVIATION
SPECIAL REPORT
ELECTRIC POWER
STILL CHARGING
Advances in battery technology have opened the way to impressive performance, but
regulators and operators still need convincing that alternative propulsion is ready
Yuneec International has backed off development of its e430 electric aircraft to focus on recreational unmanned systems
BREAKING THROUGH?
EAA and others continue to try to find a
consensus solution, but [there are] no breakthroughs yet, Knapinski says. There are
also some incidents of tangential connection
from the commercial air world that weave
into the conversation as well, including
battery fires and battery technology aboard
passenger aircraft. While its not directly
Yuneec International
flightglobal.com
GENERAL AVIATION
Pipistrel
ELECTRIC AIRCRAFT
Pipistrels Alpha Electro battery-powered trainer began its production run this year
to light aircraft, but have had the unintended
effect of limiting the use of electric motors.
Improvements in battery power remain
incremental rather than groundbreaking,
flightglobal.com
PC-Aero
CERTIFICATION HURDLES
Recent years have seen much work on technology demonstrators and experimental aircraft, but the costs involved in developing
and certificating aircraft demand a really
strong business case, says Wulff.
The shortage of future pilots makes the
trainer market a potentially strong niche that
could support such a case. Airbus certainly
agrees: its e-Fan is a prototype for a trainer.
The aircraft that are closest to commercial
applications have focused on that trainer
market, says Wulff. With much lower operating costs, no requirement for long-range flight
and the ability to swap battery packs quickly,
electrically-powered aircraft are ideal for
circuits, she explains. For aircraft that need to
go further, hybrid power is probably the only
option. Larger, longer-ranged aircraft using
only electric motors will require advances in
technology, such as improved batteries or
battery-management systems.
Unlike Knapinski, however, she detects
flexibility in the FAAs approach to regulating
electrically-powered aircraft. I think what
we have now is a workaround, she says. Its
true that the language that was developed for
certification for fixed-wing airplanes was
A 2015 trans-Alpine flight bought credibility for electric power and Elektra One Solar
12-18 April 2016 | Flight International | 33
GENERAL AVIATION
improved significantly in a couple of
years, says Bye. Theres been a great deal of
progress in the technology and were taking
advantage of this to create the Sun Flyer.
Most training and most flyers of this
category [of aircraft] enjoy flying in sunny
VFR [visual flight rules] conditions, so the
addition of the solar energy power into the
overall propulsion system is very nice.
The wings solar cells effectively act as a
trickle charger for the electric motor, says
Bye, which should provide a useful extension to the Sun Flyers performance. On
battery power alone, the aircraft will stay
aloft for 2.5h to 3h. The solar cells should
add a further 30m to 1h of flying time,
depending on the strength of sunlight.
The proof of concept prototype arrived at
Centennial Airport, near Denver, in early
March. The aircraft is being developed by
Aero Electric Aircraft Corporation (AEAC),
which was launched by Bye Aerospace two
years ago; Bye is AEACs chief executive.
We should have power on the aircraft for
static and taxi tests in Q2. There will be a two
to three-year process for certification and of
course there are many variables that can
impact that. The Sun Flyer will be certificated under FAR Part 21 and Very Light
Aircraft criteria. While it is too early for him
to give a precise price for the Sun Flyer, Bye
reckons it will be in the range of $250,000.
He is generally upbeat about prospects.
Im definitely more optimistic than two
years ago regarding both the propulsion [system] and the market, he says.
POSITIVE OUTLOOK
The chief executive of Germanys PC-Aero is
also reasonably confident of market prospects
for electrically-powered aircraft, but believes
it is a market that has to be helped along.
In reality, the market must be created by
the manufacturer, says Calin Gologan. We,
as manufacturers, need to not only build the
aircraft but convince people that this
technology is viable and reliable.
One of the best ways of convincing the
marketplace is to make demonstration flights
and set records that grab attention from
potential purchasers, he says.
In that, Airbus, with e-Fan, was not alone
last year; PC-Aeros Elektra One Solar crossed
the Alps. A 2.5h flight from Unterwssen in
Bavaria to Lienz in East Tirol over the 3,800m
(12,500ft) G
rossglockner mountain was the
subject of a television documentary that had a
positive reaction from the public and suppliers, Gologan says.
The Elektra One Solar has 6m2 of solar
cells on the upper wing surface, which provide in excess of 1.34hp (1kW) for flying,
with high energy density Li-ion batteries providing the rest of the energy.
34 | Flight International | 12-18 April 2016
Kent Media/REX/Shutterstock
SPECIAL REPORT
Airbus e-Fan made a splash in 2015 with the first-ever electric crossing of the English Channel
It is a development of the Elektra One, a
single-seater with a cruising speed of 86kt
(160km/h), more than 215nm (400km)
range and 3h flying time. Batteries power a
18.1hp brushless electric engine.
PC-Aero has built six examples of the
Elektra One and the aircraft is ready for certification. We know a single-seater is only
the first step for the real market, which is a
two-seater, says Gologan.
With that in mind, PC-Aero is developing
the Elektra 2 side-by-side trainer. Importantly, this would be powered by a dual-
redundancy powerplant, with two batterypowered motors coupled together. In the
event of one failing, the other would have
sufficient power to allow the aircraft to continue to climb.
We manufacturers need to
make aircraft and convince
people that they are safe
CALIN GOLOGAN
Chief executive, PC-Aero
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