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Sukhoi Superjet 100 Involved in Deadly Fire

This image taken from a video distributed by Russian Investigative Committee on Sunday, May 5, 2019, shows the Sukhoi SSJ100 aircraft of Aeroflot Airlines on fire, at Sheremetyevo airport, outside Moscow, Russia. At least 40 people died when an Aeroflot airliner burst into flames while making an emergency landing at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport, officials said early Monday. (The Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation via AP)

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — The Aeroflot-operated SSJ100 passenger jet that caught fire during an emergency landing in Moscow is part of Russia’s efforts to maintain a presence in civil aviation in a market dominated by companies like Boeing, Airbus and Embraer.

Here’s a quick look at the SSJ100 and the Russian company that built it, the Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company:

THE PLANE

The SSJ100, or Superjet 100, is a short- to medium-haul narrow body jet with two engines that can be configured to carry up to 103 people.

At that size, it’s intended to substitute for larger planes such as the Boeing 737 or Airbus 321 on shorter, less travelled routes and during slower travel seasons. Regional aircraft are an important part of Russia’s transportation system, given the country’s enormous distances and many remote towns. The Superjet succeeds older, Soviet-built planes such as the Tu-134 airliner.

The plane is built at the Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company’s plant in Komsomolsk-on-Amur in Russia’s distant Far East region. Although the design is Russian, the company says it uses the latest Western technology as well. The engines are made by PowerJet, a joint venture between France’s Safran Aircraft Engines and Russia’s Saturn.

The Sukhoi Superjet 100 aircraft of Airflot Airlines, center, is seen after an emergency landing in Sheremetyevo airport in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, May 5, 2019. (Moscow News Agency photo via AP)

The plane first flew in 2008 and entered commercial service in 2011. It is certified by the European Union Safety Agency but is mainly used in Russia and has not made much headway against international competitors, not just from Boeing and Airbus but also from Brazil’s Embraer.

Aeroflot is the biggest client with 50 of the planes. Mexico’s Interjet said Sunday it operated five of the planes “under the highest safety standards.”

Interjet earlier operated 22 Superjets but referred in a recent earnings report to the “gradual phase out of the fleet of SSJ100.” The company reported lost sales after the planes were grounded due to a defect in the tail section in December 2016 and said it was seeking “contractual recovery of amounts related to maintenance costs” for the planes.

Ireland’s CityJet, which supplies planes and crews to other airlines, stopped operating several Superjets in January.

People gather around the damaged Sukhoi SSJ100 aircraft of Aeroflot Airlines at Sheremetyevo airport, outside Moscow, Russia, Monday, May 6, 2019. Russia’s main investigative body says both flight recorders have been recovered from the plane that caught fire while making an emergency landing at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport, killing at least 40 people on Sunday. (AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin)

THE COMPANY

The Sukhoi Civil Aircraft Company bears the name of the legendary Soviet aircraft designer, Pavel Sukhoi, who was responsible for a series of Soviet military aircraft starting before World War II.

Today’s firm is part of Russia’s United Aircraft Company, which consolidated many of the legendary names of Soviet aviation such as MiG, Sukhoi, Tupolev and Yak. UAC was established by a decree from President Vladimir Putin in 2006 to promote the Russian aircraft industry, which is seen as essential for the security and defense of the country. Much of its production goes to the military, while the SSJ100 is the key project aimed at maintaining a Russian presence in civil aviation.

TROUBLES

On May 9, 2012, a demonstration flight hit Mount Salak in Indonesia, killing all 45 on board, after the pilot disregarded six alarms from the terrain warning system on the apparent assumption there was a problem with the terrain database, according to the report from Indonesia’s air safety regulator. The plane had unintentionally left a circling pattern after the crew was distracted by a prolonged conversation not related to flying the plane.

And a Superjet skidded off the runway at Iceland’s Keflavik airport in 2013 with landing gear up during flight certification tests involving landing on one engine; one crew member suffered minor injuries.

In this photo taken on Tuesday, April 30, 2019, the Sukhoi SSJ-100 aircraft of Aeroflot Airlines that made an emergency landing on Sunday, May 5, 2019 in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport, takes off from the Siberian city of Tyumen, Russia. Russia’s flagship airline Aeroflot says the plane that caught fire at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport, killing at least one person, had been forced to turn back after taking off for the city of Murmansk because of technical reasons. (AP Photo/Marina Lystseva)

Lockheed Martin Raises 2019 Profit Forecast, Shares Jump

FILE PHOTO: Lockheed Martin is seen at Euronaval, the world naval defence exhibition in Le Bourget near Paris, France, October 23, 2018. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo

(Reuters) – Lockheed Martin Corp reported a better-than-expected 47 percent jump in quarterly profit on Tuesday and raised its annual profit forecast, helped by strong demand for its missiles and fighter jets, sending its shares up more than 5 percent in pre-market trading.

U.S. weapons makers have been expected to benefit from stronger global demand for fighter jets and munitions and higher U.S. defence budgets in fiscal 2020 as they announce first quarter earnings this week.

Lockheed’s Missiles and Fire Control business, which makes missile defences like the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD), was one of its best-performing units.

On April 1, the unit was awarded a THAAD interceptor missile contract worth $2.4 billion, some of which are slated to be delivered to Saudi Arabia, which could boost earnings for the current quarter.

Overall, the Bethesda, Maryland-based company said its earnings rose to $1.70 billion, or $5.99 per share, in the first quarter ended March 31, from $1.16 billion, or $4.02 per share, a year earlier. That was partly helped by a $75 million dollar boost from additional tax deductions on foreign military sales.

Excluding that one-time gain, Lockheed reported $5.73 per share profit, well ahead of the $4.34 per share that Wall Street had expected, on average, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

Lockheed’s overall net sales for the quarter rose 23 percent to $14.34 billion. The company’s sales backlog grew to $133.5 billion, up 3 billion over the quarter.

Operating margins at the aeronautics division, Lockheed’s biggest, fell to 10.5 percent in the first quarter from 10.8 percent a year earlier, but sales were up 27 percent to $5.5 billion on demand for the F-35 jet and some classified contracts.

The United States is considering expanding sales of Lockheed-made F-35 fighter jets to five new nations including Romania, Greece and Poland as European allies bulk up their defences in the face of a strengthening Russia, a Pentagon official told Congress in early April.

(Reporting by Mike Stone in Washington D.C. and Sanjana Shivdas in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli and Bill Rigby)

CommutAir Plane Slides off Runway in Presque Isle Landing

Any landing you can walk away from is a good one, as the old saw goes—but it’s usually better when you don’t have to have emergency services personnel help you off the plane. And that goes double for times when the firefighters don’t need a ladder to reach the boarding door. Still, on the ground is on the ground—which is a place it seems likely that the passengers and crew of United Airlines Flight 4933 are very happy to be right now, after their commuter jet landed off the runway in rural Maine, ripping the landing gear off in the process.

The United Embraer EMB-145XR commuter jet, which was operated by regional carrier CommutAir under the United Express banner, took off from Newark Liberty International Airport this morning at 9:23am, according to Flight Aware, on a route that was scheduled to see it landing and at the gate in Presque Isle, Maine, at 11:30am.

Click the link below for the full story!

CommutAir plane slides off runway

CommutAir

 

Lufthansa A340 Damaged By Fire In Frankfurt

FRANKFURT (Reuters) – A Lufthansa Airbus A340-300 was heavily damaged and 10 people were sent to a clinic to check for potential respiratory issues after a towing truck caught fire at Frankfurt airport, the German airline said on Monday.

The 10 people include ground crew and fire brigade staff involved in putting out the blaze.

The fire occurred while the truck was repositioning the aircraft, which had no passengers or crew on board at the time, Lufthansa said in a statement.

“The aircraft is heavily damaged,” Lufthansa said, adding that it was due to be used on flight LH426 to Philadelphia on Monday.

Reporting by Frank Simon; writing by Edward Taylor; editing by Jason Neely

Home video of the incident has been posted on YouTube. Click on the link below to view!

A340 catches fire while being towed

Major Fire Erupts at Europa-Park

The Europa-Park theme park in southwestern Germany has reopened after a major fire. After hundreds of firefighters put out the blaze, the site was able to welcome visitors for a regular music event.

A televised music show went ahead on Sunday, but parts of Germany’s largest amusement park remained unusable following the huge fire which had taken well into Saturday night to extinguish.

Europa-Park attracts about 5.6 million visitors a year and, according to police estimates, some 25,000 people were at the park when the fire broke out. It is likely to have started in a warehouse and spread to the nearby “Pirates of Batavia” attraction. The cause of the blaze is not yet known.

Europa-Park’s managing director, Michael Mack, said the Norway-themed area had been “completely lost,” however many others had not been damaged.

Seven firefighters were injured due to smoke inhalation. 

Three of the park’s 100 attractions remained closed on Sunday. 

What happened:

– A building described as a warehouse caught fire early evening, prompting the evacuation of several attractions.

– Fire service crews were also called in from Karlsruhe and Freiburg, two major cities in Baden-Württemberg state, said local fire spokesman Michael Wege.

– Residents of Rust were asked to keep windows and doors shut, according to the newspaper.

What is Europa-Park:

The park has 15 European themed areas in which visitors can explore a minature vesion of several countries, from England to Russia.

The family-owned amusement park has over 100 attractions and fairground rides and includes five upscale hotels and camping grounds, according to its host town of Rust.

It ranks as Europe’s second most-visited amusement park, trailing only Disneyland in Paris. Opened in 1975, it now spans 995,000 square meters (235 acres) and is divided into 18 themed areas.

Click the link below for a YouTube video of the fire!

Fire at Eropa-Park

Boeing 777 engine catches fire again

Boeing 777 engine catches on fire again. For the second time in less than 9 months, a Boeing 777 engine caught on fire during the start of the planes takeoff roll. There were 302 passengers and 17 crew members on board the Korean Air 777, and they were all successfully evacuated from the airplane. The incident occurred at the Tokyo Haneda Airport on Friday, May 27, when the number one engine caught on fire. The twin engine plane was headed for Gimpo International Airport in Seoul, South Korea. Smoke was reportedly seen coming from the planes left engine just as it was about to takeoff. There are 19 people that were reportedly injured during the aircraft evacuation.

Boeing 777 engine warning had been issued by FAA

On September 8th, 2015, a British Airways 777 aircraft had an engine catch fire on takeoff from the McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada. It came to light following that incident that the FAA had warned Boeing four years earlier that the GE90-85B engine had an unsafe condition. They had discovered that the compressor could possibly disintegrate and cause an explosion. This type of explosion could potentially propel debris at a high enough rate of speed to endanger the entire aircraft. General Electric released a statement that the British Airways 777 in Las Vegas had a different version of its GE90-8FB engine than the one mentioned in the warning. The National Transportation Safety Board investigating the British Airways engine fire stated that that incident occurred in the same way as that previously mentioned in its warning. Boeing and General Electric both objected to that warning that was issued by the FAA, but were unsuccessfully to get it removed from the record. As to this date, I have not ever flown on a Boeing 777 aircraft. I have always thought since the first time I saw the aircraft that its engines were just way too big for my comfort level.

boeing 777 engine

Image from www.dailymail.co.uk

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