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June 7, 2019

Bombardier Global 6000 Premier Cabin Business Jet Design Tour – AINtv

Bombardier’s forthcoming flagship Global 7000 represents the pinnacle of the Canadian airframer’s home-in-the-sky concept. However, the company isn’t abandoning the smaller Global 5000 and 6000; it’s upgrading them with the new Global 7000-influenced Premier cabin interior. Tim Fagan, industrial design manager at Bombardier, gave us a tour of the new cabin on board a Global 6000, and discussed the thinking behind the design changes. More on https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIGd6S0sSPU
May 27, 2019

Flying while pregnant

It’s absolutely safe to fly throughout most of your pregnancy. If this is your first baby, now’s your chance to enjoy the luxury of uninterrupted time alone, with your partner or with friends. It’s also a last opportunity to make the most of travelling light. For the next few years, you’ll have to take a car seat, pushchair, nappies and toys with you wherever you go! Follow our tips for a relaxing and safe flight. Is it safe to fly during my first and second trimesters? Yes, but check with your doctor before flying if you’ve had medical problems during […]
April 20, 2019

Five myths about private jets

If you’ve ever spotted a private jet in flight or on the tarmac, you’ve probably wondered which celebrity it belonged to. The fact is that many jets are chartered, not privately owned by a fat cat or pop star, and they’re mostly used for business, not lavish vacations. It’s a world shrouded in mystery, so here are five myths about private jets. More on USA Today
April 19, 2019

The Biggest Private Jet Stories For 2019 Predicted

Private jets were already in the news this year when reports that as many as 1,500 would descend on the World Economic Forum in Davos drove a number of stories highlighting one of the agenda items was global warming. We asked a variety of leaders from business aviation what they believe will be the biggest headlines for the industry in 2019. Answers ranged from green fuel and alternatively powered aircraft to Brexit, China, the pilot shortage, new models, a tightening market of used aircraft available for sale, the government shutdown, consolidation, shared charters, the cost of capital, technology, weather and regulations that could ground older jets. Here’s what these […]
April 10, 2019

5 Expert Recommendations For Your First Private Jet Trip

The appeal of private jet travel can’t be ignored: a luxurious and peaceful flight, a large network of easily-accessible airports, quiet terminals, no long waits or long lines, reliable departure times and a wide range of charter services. For many years, enjoying such privileges, came at a high price. More at https://www.aworldtotravel.com/expert-recommendations-for-your-first-private-jet-trip/
April 5, 2019

Some history on the Jet Aircraft

Whereas the engines in propeller-powered aircraft generally achieve their maximum efficiency at much lower speeds and altitudes, jet engines and aircraft achieve maximum efficiency (see specific impulse) at speeds close to or even well above the speed of sound. Jet aircraft generally cruise at faster than about Mach 0.8 (609 mph, 981 km/h or 273 m/s) at altitudes around 10,000–15,000 metres (33,000–49,000 ft) or more. Frank Whittle, an English inventor and RAF officer, developed the concept of the jet engine in 1928,[1] and Hans von Ohain in Germany developed the concept independently in the early 1930s. He wrote in February 1936 to Ernst Heinkel, who led the construction of the world’s first turbojet aircraft and jet plane Heinkel He 178. However, […]
March 29, 2019

The 10 Largest Airports in the World

Below you’ll find interesting aerial photos of the 10 largest airports in the world—largest defined by the number of people passing through each year. Read the original article here 1. Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Doc Searls, Flickr // CC BY 2.0 2. Beijing Capital International Airport Wikimedia Commons // CC BY 3.0 3. London Heathrow Airport Konstantin Von Wedelstaedt, Wikimedia Commons // GFDL 1.2 4. O’Hare International Airport Wikimedia Commons 5. Tokyo International Airport © National Land Image Information (Color Aerial Photographs) via Wikimedia Commons 6. Los Angeles International Airport Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 4.0
March 27, 2019

Supersonic jets are booming back into style

You might not remember, but there used to be a jet called the Concorde that had a cruising speed of 1,354 mph, which is twice the speed of sound. New York City to London, typically a seven-hour flight, only lasted three-and-a-half hours on the Concorde. But the Concorde went bust in 2003, and supersonic jets fell out of favor. A new crop of aviation startups is hoping to resurrect it, and thanks to a new set of laws in the US, that comeback seems all but assured. From The Verge
March 20, 2019

Black Boxes: Why airplanes still manage to disappear?

Accidents such as Air France Flight 447 and Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 have reminded on just how vital flight recorders, better known as aircraft black boxes, are for accident investigation and improving aviation safety… if you can find them first. So now, companies are introducing solutions. It has been a week since Atlas Air Boeing 767 freighter fatal crash and investigators from the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) are still searching for missing flight recorders. Hopes are, they will help answer a question on what made the cargo aircraft make a steep descent. But to solve the mystery, investigators […]
March 17, 2019

Private Jets and Large Airports

Often, both due to airport rules and restrictions but also dense air traffic, smaller private jets are put on hold behind larger aircrafts, so you might experience a situation where your private jet might wait for a few more minutes on the air for larger airplanes to land first. Speed-wise and around technicalities, a small aircraft is not all that different from a larger one when landing and approaching the airstrip. There are times though when the air traffic controllers ask the private jets pilots to keep their speed high even on approach and in landing to avoid congestion with […]
March 12, 2019

Is one pilot greater than two?

Aviation evolves and some things that were deemed as necessary are no longer needed. Regulations tend to lag behind technological developments, so it often takes time before capabilities are implemented, even when it is technically possible. Other times the paradigm is what lags and old methods stay because of public reception. The next in commercial aviation evolution will be the epoch when commercial flights only have one pilot in the cockpit, instead of today’s standard of two. But to make this a reality some technical and social hurdles need to be overcome. While two pilots in the cockpit are the […]
March 12, 2019

Fly to the 2019 Cannes Film Festival Award Ceremony

Cannes –  a glamorous and expensive seaside town considered to be one of the social hubs of Europe. Its moment to shine arrives in May as the venue for the Cannes Film Festival, entertaining the rich and famous. During the festival, fans can see actors, celebrities, and directors up close and in person on the famous steps of the Palais des Festivals at the end of La Croisette.
March 4, 2019

50 years ago, the maiden flight of the Concorde

Sometime around 1955, the first lines of a supersonic commercial plane were put on paper on both sides of the English Channel. For France and the United Kingdom, the objective was not to fall behind the United States in the aviation market. In France, Sud Aviation (later Aerospatiale, EADS and now Airbus) and Générale Aéronautique Marcel Dassault (today known as Dassault Aviation) used their respective knowledge of commercial and supersonic aviation to come up with a design. The “Caravelle” of Sud Aviation was already an iconic figure in the market. As for Dassault, it had already envisioned the idea of […]
December 14, 2016

Lear 35 Winter Escapes

We are excited to announce that an aircraft ideal for our winter operations has just joined Air Business International and Greek Air Taxi Network’s fleet. The Lear 35 9H-MRQ has recently returned from a successful completion of a 12-year inspection at the MCM – Maintenance Centre Malta and is now ready for take-off. The aircraft can also be used for aeromedical flights. Read more on Air Business International
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