Tag Archives: London Heathrow

Japan Airlines flight for Tokyo returns to Boston

A Japan Airlines Boeing 787 that left Boston for Tokyo on Thursday returned to Boston “due to aircraft maintenance”, the company said on its website without elaborating.

Japan Airlines has one of the largest fleets of the Boeing 787 and has had several problems with the new-generation Dreamliner plane since it was allowed to resume flying after being grounded between January and April for serious battery problems.

The plane left from Boston at 12:57pm (1657 GMT) but returned to its airport of departure at around 6:00 pm.

“As a standard precautionary measure due to a maintenance message (fuel pump) indicator, JL007 bound for Tokyo-Narita decided to return to Boston Logan for check and landed safely,” Carol Anderson, a US-based JAL spokeswoman, told AFP in an email.

Boston Logan said on its Twitter site the 787 made “a precautionary return”.

“Flight has landed and is taxiing to gate,” it said.

JAL officials in Tokyo were not immediately available for comment.

Last week, another 787 used by Ethiopian Airlines caught fire at London’s Heathrow airport.

Japanese airlines Japan Airlines and ANA, which has the biggest fleet of the craft, have experienced around a dozen minor complaints with the 787 since it was allowed to resume flying after four months of being grounded.

After months of investigations, US authorities in April formally approved Boeing’s battery fix and Japanese regulators followed suit.

The battery supplier, Japan’s GS Yuasa, has voiced confidence that the system will never cause similar problems again.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Boeing fire probe says deactivate Dreamliner beacons

British authorities probing a fire onboard a parked Boeing Dreamliner at London’s Heathrow airport recommended on Thursday that Honeywell distress beacons on all 787 planes be deactivated pending further checks.

The Air Accidents Investigation Branch said it was not clear, however, whether the fire originated in the transmitter batteries or was caused by an “external mechanism such as an electrical short”.

Nobody was hurt in the fire last Friday on an Ethiopian Airlines plane, which was empty at the time.

But the incident is a blow to US planemaker Boeing, which withdrew from service its entire fleet of Dreamliners earlier this year due to separate concerns that lithium ion batteries on board could cause fires.

A total of 68 Dreamliners have so far been delivered, and the AAIB recommends to US aviation authorities that emergency locator transmitter systems in each of them be made inert.

“It is recommended that the Federal Aviation Administration initiate action for making inert the Honeywell International RESCU406AFN fixed emergency locator transmitter system in Boeing 787 aircraft until appropriate airworthiness actions can be completed,” the report said.

It also recommended that the FAA and other regulatory authorities “conduct a safety review of installations of lithium-powered emergency locator transmitter systems in other aircraft types and, where appropriate, initiate airworthiness action”.

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Batteries not to blame for Dreamliner jet fire

Investigators said there was no evidence to suggest that a fire onboard a Boeing 787 Dreamliner parked at London Heathrow Airport was caused by the next-generation jet’s batteries.

A team from Britain’s Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB) was deployed following the blaze on Friday on an Ethiopian Airlines plane, which was empty at the time.

The fire is a further blow for the jet, after Boeing temporarily withdrew all Dreamliners from service earlier this year due to concerns that batteries on board could cause fires.

However, the latest incident was not down to the batteries, said the AAIB, an agency of Britain’s Department of Transport ministry.

Following Saturday’s first stage of its probe, the AAIB found there was “no evidence of a direct causal relationship” between the batteries and the incident at Heathrow.

“The aircraft is currently located in a hangar at London Heathrow,” the it added.

“There has been extensive heat damage in the upper portion of the rear fuselage, a complex part of the aircraft, and the initial investigation is likely to take several days,” it said.

“It is clear that this heat damage is remote from the area in which the aircraft main and APU (Auxiliary Power Unit) batteries are located and at this stage there is no evidence of a direct causal relationship.”

Television pictures showed burn marks on the top of the plane near the back, just in front of the vertical stabiliser.

The US Federal Aviation Administration said it had also sent an official to Britain to gather facts for its own regulatory body, the US National Transportation Safety Board.

A spokesman for Ethiopian Airlines said it was investigating the incident but had no plans to ground its fleet of four 787 Dreamliners.

“Ethiopia’s Dreamliners will continue to fly,” Hailu Teklehaimanot told AFP in Addis Ababa.

“The incident at Heathrow is not being treated as flight-related as the incident happened after being grounded for eight hours.”

A global grounding order on the Dreamliner was issued in January after lithium-ion batteries overheated on two different jets, with one of them catching fire while the aircraft was parked.

The US aviation giant has since rolled out modifications it says will ensure the planes are safe.

Boeing’s shares closed 4.7 percent lower at $101.87 in New York trading on Friday, clawing back from a dive of more than seven percent.

Heathrow, the world’s busiest international passenger airport, shut down for 90 minutes following the incident, and there were still knock-on delays on Saturday.

A spokeswoman told AFP that about 40 flights had been cancelled throughout the day, largely due to aircraft being out of place, but said delays to other flights were “minimal”.

In a separate incident on Friday, a Dreamliner flying from Manchester in northwest England to Florida was forced to turn back after experiencing a “technical issue” after take-off.

It was operated by Thomson Airways, which only three days earlier had become the first British airline to fly the plane.

The Dreamliner should have entered passenger service in 2008 but it was not until October 2011 that the first commercial flight was operated by Japanese …read more

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Investigators Begin Looking into Boeing Dreamliner Fire

By Reuters

ethiopian airlines boeing 787 dreamliner fire heathrow airport batteries technology

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AP

By Estelle Shirbon

LONDON — Investigators started work Saturday to establish the cause of a fire on a Boeing Dreamliner at London’s Heathrow airport, a new setback for the high-tech model after it was grounded at the start of the year over battery problems.

The fire broke out on the plane, operated by Ethiopian Airlines, Friday afternoon, when it was parked at a remote stand with no passengers on board, eight hours after arriving from Addis Ababa. No one was injured.

External scorching could be seen close to the plane’s tail, in a different area from the bays containing batteries. There was no official indication of what could have caused the fire.

“The aircraft has been moved to a secure hangar at Heathrow and the investigation has begun,” said a spokesman for Britain’s Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

The AAIB will lead the investigation, he said, working alongside the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board, Ethiopian Airlines and Boeing.

Analysts say Boeing (BA) will be keen to reassure airlines, travelers and investors over the cause of the fire as quickly as possible but it will be up to investigators to decide how much information to release and when. Under aviation rules there are restrictions on how much companies can say about the details of an ongoing accident investigation.

Meanwhile Ethiopian Airlines, one of Africa’s top five carriers, said it would continue to fly its Dreamliner fleet.

“We have not grounded any of our aircraft,” the carrier said in an emailed statement Saturday. “The incident at Heathrow happened while the plane was on the ground and had been for more than eight hours and was not related to flight safety.”

Separately, engineers from Britain’s Thomson Airways were inspecting their own Boeing Dreamliner after it had to turn back during a flight Friday from Manchester in England to Sanford, Fla., because of an unspecified technical issue. Thomson Airways is one of six European airlines owned by TUI Travel, the world’s largest tour operator.

Battery Problems

The two incidents are a blow for Boeing particularly as the entire global fleet of Dreamliners had to be grounded for three months, ending in April, after one high-tech battery caught fire and another overheated.

Boeing shares closed down 4.7 percent at $101.87 Friday, knocking $3.8 billion off the company’s market capitalization.

Quoting Mark Mangooni, Ethiopian Airlines’ senior manager in Britain, the Financial Times reported that airline staff had discovered a problem with the aircraft’s air conditioning system during a routine inspection and had seen sparks but no flames.

The report didn’t make clear when this had happened. Reuters couldn’t reach Mangooni for comment.

Heathrow briefly closed both its runways to deal with the fire, and a spokeswoman said Saturday that the airport …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Virgin Atlantic Welcomes Chase Ultimate Rewards Cardholders Onboard

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Virgin Atlantic Welcomes Chase Ultimate Rewards Cardholders Onboard

Chase Sapphire Preferred ® , Ink Plus ® and Ink Bold ® Cardholders Travel Worldwide in Comfort and Style with Newest Ultimate Rewards SM Point Transfer Partner

WILMINGTON, Del.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Chase Card Services, a division of JPMorgan Chase & Co., today announced the addition of Virgin Atlantic, Richard Branson’s trans-Atlantic airline, as its newest Ultimate RewardsSM point transfer partner. A premier rewards program for cardholders that seek travel redemption alternatives that offer flexibility, ease and value, Ultimate Rewards‘ new partnership allows cardholders to redeem points for travel on Virgin Atlantic and experience its innovative service and style to London and destinations all over the world.

“We are thrilled that Virgin Atlantic‘s Flying Club has joined Ultimate Rewards,” said Jennifer Roberts, president, Affluent & High Net Worth, Chase Card Services. “With Ultimate Rewards, our cardholders will now enjoy added flexibility that allows them to transfer and combine points with Virgin Atlantic miles. Virgin Atlantic Flying Club Miles can be used for flights, upgrades and even unique experiences in the UK to make a trip even more memorable.”

Under this new partnership, Chase Sapphire Preferred®, Ink Plus® and Ink Bold® cardholders will now be able to instantly transfer Ultimate Rewards points to Flying Club, Virgin Atlantic‘s travel rewards program. Points are transferred at full value – meaning one Ultimate Rewards point is equal to one Flying Club mile.

“We’re looking forward to welcoming Chase customers onboard and know that they’ll love to redeem points for travel with Virgin Atlantic. We like to give our customers an extraordinary experience — whether it’s our complimentary food and drinks service, our award-winning inflight entertainment or our phenomenal cabin crew,” said Alan Lias, Head of Loyalty & Ancillary Revenue Development, Virgin Atlantic Airways. “In addition, the partnership is coming at an exciting time, as we begin our first UK domestic flights, allowing our passengers to seamlessly travel from London Heathrow, onto Edinburgh, Manchester and Aberdeen.”

Points can be transferred in increments of 1,000 and there are no limits to the number of points cardholders can transfer to Flying Club. Once transferred, points can be redeemed for travel and upgrades on Virgin Atlantic, or one of many travel partners, including Air China, Air New Zealand, Cyprus Airways, Gulf Air, Hawaiian Airlines, Jet Airways, Malaysia Airlines, SAS, Singapore Airlines, South African Airlines, Virgin America and Virgin Australia.

In addition to the point transfer benefit to Virgin Atlantic and other travel partners, eligible customers can use 20 percent fewer …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Passenger flights set at new Dubai airport

Dubai aviation officials say scheduled passenger flights will begin in October from a new airport built with the goal of becoming the world’s busiest.

Dubai World Central, located about 60 kilometers (36 miles) southwest of the city’s current airport, covers a vast stretch of desert and is envisioned as becoming the main hub for air travel in Dubai in coming decades. But operations have ramped up slowly since cargo flights began in 2010.

Dubai Airports said Wednesday that scheduled passenger flights are scheduled to begin Oct. 27 with nasair, which flies to various cities in Saudi Arabia, and Wizz Air, a budget airline with connections in Europe.

Dubai International Airport handled more than 56.7 million passengers last year and is now the world’s second-busiest after London’s Heathrow.

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More delays at Heathrow as Britain hit by snow

Scores of fights have been canceled as snow and ice blanket much of Britain.

London’s Heathrow airport says it has canceled about 130 flights, 10 percent of the daily total, compared to 20 percent on Sunday.

Flights have been disrupted since Friday at Heathrow, Europe‘s busiest airport, which has seen long lines and stranded passengers camping out on its terminal floors.

Heathrow says it has spent millions improving its winter resilience since the airport was virtually shut down by snow for several days in December 2010. But it says low visibility means it must leave bigger gaps between planes, triggering delays and cancelations.

Train services are also disrupted, and hundreds of schools across Britain are closed.

There are also delays and cancelations Monday at airports in Paris, Amsterdam and Frankfurt.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News