• HOME
  • Aircraft
    • AIRFRAMES
      • Proud to fly a Turboprop: Q400 vs ATR72
      • Airbus A320 Experience
    • SYSTEMS
      • Pratt and Whitney PW1100G Geared Turbofan Engine
      • Winglets and Sharklets
      • Cockpit Design: EPR v/s N1 indication
      • Boeing’s MAX, Southwest’s 737
      • GPS to the rescue!
    • ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS
      • LOT 767 Gear Up Landing
      • Iran Air 743:Partial Gear Up Landing
  • AIRLINE
    • ANALYSIS
      • IndiGo performs well in Q3’16, but is outshone by Q1’16
      • SpiceJet: Q1’16 Operational Financials Forecast
      • Vistara – Review & Analysis
      • AirAsia India – Q2FY15 performance and outlook
      • Q2 results and Prof. Sanjiv Kapoor’s introductory class on Airline Economics
      • SpiceJet in Q(2) – Great Performance in Testing Times.
      • Could SpiceJet have been profitable in FY2013-14?
      • Interlysis – AirAsia India and Mrithyunjaya Chandilya
      • A glimpse of Tony’s AirAsia India, and his success mantra
      • Interlysis with Shyson Thomas – Air Pegasus, Unplugged.
    • EVENTS
      • AirAsia India-and the competition-gets real
      • Spicejet’s inaugural Bangalore-Bangkok Run
      • Spicejet unveils the Q400s
    • HUMAN FACTORS
      • Dissatisfied Flightcrew
      • Love is in “the air”
      • Captain Dad and kid First Officer
      • Cathay’s Young Cabin Crew!
  • AVIATION
    • The Indian Aviation 2015 growth story deciphered
    • National Civil Aviation Policy 2015
      • Safety
      • Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS)
      • The 5/20 Rule
      • Route Dispersal Guidelines
      • Scheduled Commuter Airlines (SCAs)
      • Aviation Education & Skill Development
    • 2014: A year flown by
    • 2013: A year flown by
    • Training
      • Familiarization Flights for ATCOs
      • A320 FFS LOFT Session
      • HINDUSTAN GROUP OF INSTITUTIONS: AN AVIATION UNIVERSITY
        • Hindustan Institute of Engineering and Technology (HIET)
        • Hindustan Institute of Technology & Science (HITS): Hindustan University
        • Orient Flight School (OFS)
      • IGRUA
      • NFTI: Rising to the Top, and how
      • Aerospace Engineering in India: the Gaps
      • Chief Flying Instructors
    • PEOPLE
      • Radka Máchová
      • Rodrigo David: The man behind some of the best A320 flightdeck videos
    • TECHNOLOGY
      • GAGAN: India’s first step to a Future Air Navigation System (FANS)
  • PROJECTS
    • AIRBUS TECH
      • About PAT
      • AIRCON/PRESSURIZATION/VENTILATION
      • AUTOFLIGHT
      • COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
      • ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
      • FIRE PROTECTION SYSTEMS
      • FLIGHT CONTROLS
      • FUEL SYSTEMS
      • HYDRAULIC SYSTEMS
      • ICE AND RAIN PROTECTION
      • LANDING GEAR
      • LIGHTS
      • OXYGEN
      • PNEUMATICS
      • APU
      • DOORS
      • POWER PLANT (IAE)
    • ATR9X
      • About ATR 9X
      • Logbook
      • Introduction
      • Fuselage
    • General Aviation Flight Simulator
    • Dual Cyliner Rotax Electronic Engine-Kill Switch
    • Making a Lynx Micro Headset Charger on the Go!
  • ABOUT
    • About The Flying Engineer
    • Advertising
    • Merchandise

The Flying Engineer

~ Technically and Operationally Commercial Aviation

The Flying Engineer

Tag Archives: CEO

Indian Aviation: Stepping Forward and Backward, again.

28 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by theflyingengineer in General Aviation Interest, Operations

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Aviation, Bangalore, CEO, Exchange, GAGAN, HAL, Landing, Ministry, Night, VOBG

VOBG slips to darkness. Image: Google Earth

VOBG slips to darkness. Image: Google Earth

HAL Airport “went dark” for a few days; GAGAN system goes operational; Aviation Ministry holds “CEO Exchange” discussion with airline and airframe representatives.

HAL Airport (ICAO: VOBG) had slipped into darkness for a few days. The airport, which belongs to HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Limited) and formerly served as the domestic and international airport in addition to supporting HAL’s and other various DRDO (Defence Research Development Organisation) arms’ test flights, did not support night operations.

A HAL official stated that there was an issue between Airport Authorities of India (AAI) and HAL, which resulted in the temporary “blackout” of night operations, for a “few days”. Runway lights, and apron lights were reportedly* not “available”. As a result, pilots, especially those operating charter and private jets, which usually use HAL airport as it is in the heart of the city, were forced to fly (and plan) to Bangalore’s Kempegowda International Airport (ICAO: VOBL, IATA: BLR) if their arrival or departure was after dusk or before dawn.

During that period, HAL airport was rendered a “Day IFR field” for a while. Had this HAL-AAI issue continued, it would have been a sad state of affairs (or the lack of it at night) for the airport that made Bangalore the “Aviation Capital of India”.

Such a move, temporary or permanent, is viewed as retrograde, especially when the country is looking forward to progressing aviation.

A “CEO Exchange” discussion was held at the aviation Ministry (MoCA), today, bringing together high level representatives from IndiGo, SpiceJet, Air Costa, Air India, Go Air, Blue Dart, Boeing, Airbus, Embraer, and ATR, amongst others. The aim was to figure out ways to take aviation to the next level.

However, with the AAI taking actions that affect airfields such as HAL, and flight schools, such as Orient Flight School at Pondicherry, everyday aviation becomes more difficult for operators, and hoping for a step up to the next level is a challenge.

The more progressive face of AAI was seen when the GAGAN system, according to the General Manager, General Manager (CNS) heading the Ground Based Elements of the GAGAN Project at Bangalore, India, Mr. C R Sudhir, “has been put into operation on 14.02.14 at 1000 hrs IST to support RNP0.1 operations in en-route phase of flight over entire Indian Flight Information Region.”

This opens up GPS as a primary navigation aid for enroute navigation, allowing for more direct or shorter routes to be introduced in the Indian airspace. This saves fuel, may help increase aircraft utilization, and support higher air traffic density, which can boost passenger traffic if the savings are passed on to passengers. It also can give a boost General Aviation by allowing airplanes to fly lower on airways, as there no longer is a need for higher altitudes to receive land based radio navigation signals.

Mr. Sudhir also stated, “work is on to achieve APV 1/1.5 certification by fourth quarter of this year.”

*Source: Flight crew operating into HAL/ VOBG.

Capacity in the Indian Market, and where the CSeries CS300 can fit in

15 Wednesday Jan 2014

Posted by theflyingengineer in Manufacturer, Operations

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

A320, BELF, CEO, CS300, CSeries, factors, Indigo, Load, NEO

CS300_BW

“I remember when we had very strong demand for A319s, then it shifted to the larger capacity A320 version…and we’re now seeing very, very strong demand for A321s”, explained John Leahy, Airbus’ Chief Operating Officer – Customers, during the 2013-2032 Global Market Forecast press briefing in September, 2013.

Almost a month later, the US Based carrier JetBlue Airways, deferred deliveries of its 100 seat Embraer 190 aircraft, ordering instead 35 Airbus A320 family aircraft: 20 A321NEO and 15 A320CEO aircraft. The airline seeks to reduce costs with the Airbus A320 aircraft which burn less fuel per seat, but with a largr capacity: 150 passengers for the A320 and 190 passengers for the A321.

Back home, and one month before JetBlue’s decision to focus on larger capacity aircraft, the “JetBlue of India”, IndiGo, opted for 20 Airbus A321NEO aircraft, of its 180 all A320 order back in 2011, exercising the option that was inked in the deal.

Airlines, which stayed away from the A321, which accounts for 20% of all Airbus A320 family (A318, A319 CEO+NEO ,A320CEO+NEO, A321CEO+NEO) orders, are now leaning toward the A321NEO because it promises the affordable operating costs that otherwise kept airlines at bay: different aircraft sub-type, and higher operating cost. Suddenly, the A321NEO’s reduced operating costs, thanks to the fuel saving sharklets and the PW1100G Geared Turbofan Engine, make the added 20-30seats affordably attractive.

To the airlines, higher seat capacity at reduced operating costs means higher profit potential. Note potential.

Statistically, the best performing airline in the country, IndiGo, has the best load factors,: an average of 81.4% over 5 years from 2009-2013, with the highest being 83.8%  in 2010. IndiGo’s added capacity, and demand has grown, but the effect on load factors has been nil; the average load factors remain more or less constant. So getting larger airplanes will not have a significant impact on load factors, but may slightly increase profits per flight on account of the reduced operating cost per seat.

Indigo’s single-type fleet of Airbus A320 aircraft can accommodate 180 passengers. 83.8%  load factor corresponds to 150 seats. So why not replace the fleet with A319s?

A 150 seat airplane like the Airbus A319, or its direct competitor, the Boeing 737-700 is costlier to operate, per seat, as a shorter aircraft isn’t as optimized as the longer aircraft it was derived from. But what if you had an aircraft with a cost per seat as much as that of the A320NEO (which is claimed to be 15% more efficient than the A320 CEO), but with 150 seats? This would make the aircraft cheaper to operate, have lower capacity but push load factors closer to 100%, while keeping the fares low, or possibly lower than the competition.

The smaller, efficient aircraft, like what Bombardier claims of its CSeries CS300, has lesser seats to sell to break even, has the same cost per seat as the A320NEO, costs lesser to operate, but doesn’t have to fly with many empty seats if the tickets are priced low, or lower than the competition, and the brand marketed well.

Assuming that the breakeven load factor (BELF) for a particular, fixed operating environment is 70% for the Airbus A320NEO, and assuming that the CSeries CS300 fitted with 150 seats has a similar BELF, then with the A320NEO, the airline must sell 126 seats to break even, while sell only 105 seats on the CS300 to break even. Considering the average of 150 seats occupied, per flight, on average, the A320NEO flies 24 passengers contributing to the airline’s profits, while the CSeries CS300 flies 45 passengers contributing to the airline’s profits. Of course, if both aircraft flew with 100% load factors, on a dense route, the A320 gets 54 passengers contributing to profits, but that is only a potential, not a guarantee.

Unfortunately, airline pricing and BELF aren’t so simple, but this gives you a rough idea of what is possible with the CSeries CS300 in the Indian market.

For those who didn’t get it: What’s possible is an all CS300-fleet airline, that shoots right into profitability, defeating the competition. Is it this simple? Only IF Bombardier delivers its promise of meeting the projected costs per seat, and if Bombardier’s not-that-great image relating to aircraft dispatch reliability and maintenance issues are sorted: something that will be a challenge considering that almost everything about the aircraft, including the very design, is new, and without decades of airframe maturity like that of Airbus’s or Boeing’s narrowbody market leaders.

The conundrum: Increase capacity and increase both the profit potential as well as the risk of a loss on a route, should the loads go either ways. Decrease capacity and introduce a stronger element of predictability and control, but lowering the profit potential.

What would you choose?

First Major A320NEO airframe component starts taking shape

10 Sunday Nov 2013

Posted by theflyingengineer in Manufacturer

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

A320, Airbus, Assembly, CEO, First, Flight, NEO

PylonAirbus has assembled the first major airframe component assembly: the engine pylon for the first A320neo to fly. The pylon  was assembled at the dedicated pylon facility in St Eloi in Toulouse.

In parallel with this pylon construction, other major NEO components and subassemblies will shortly be taking shape in factories across various countries. For example, in Hamburg the centre wing-box will soon arrive from Nantes to be integrated in the fuselage, and also the rear fuselage will begin assembly there. In St. Nazaire, the forward fuselage will start assembly in January 2014.

The Pratt & Whitney PW1100G Engine, which will power the A320NEO (New Engine Option) family, first flew on the 15th of May 2013. The Winglets, referred to as Sharklets by Airbus, are already mature and flying attached to most recently produced A320 aircraft, henceforth known as A320CEO (Classic Engine Option) family.

There will be no significant changes to the flight deck avionics and airframe.

Final NEO assembly is expected to start in the spring of 2014, followed by the aircraft’s first flight planned next autumn.

Referred by:

Referred by:

Project:

Project:

In Depth Articles:

In Depth Articles:

In Depth Articles:

RSS Feed

RSS Feed RSS - Posts

RSS Feed RSS - Comments

The Flying Engineer’s tweets

  • Foreign brands delight. Airlines partnering with non-Indian brands (eg - in flight amenities) elicit a great respo… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 22 hours ago
  • @Rishul93 Same same, but cleaner. And I mean aerodynamically. No vortex generators near the leading edge. E190-E2. https://t.co/UKnsdLkxq1 1 day ago
  • @gurupratap @27saurabhsinha Bingo. 1 day ago
  • @DelhiSpotter @embraer @OfficialStarAir Love your eye for angles. 4 days ago
  • Realising Premium Economy is far from premium with a middle seat, Vistara 's collateral has deleted the middle seat… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 6 days ago
Follow @TheFlyingEnggnr

Visit our Facebook Page

Visit our Facebook Page

Blog archives of The Flying Engineer

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 17,611 other subscribers

Site Statistics

  • 2,472,203 views

Top Posts & Pages

  • Pratt and Whitney PW1100G Geared Turbofan Engine
    Pratt and Whitney PW1100G Geared Turbofan Engine
  • Winglets and Sharklets
    Winglets and Sharklets
  • Cockpit Design: EPR v/s N1 indication
    Cockpit Design: EPR v/s N1 indication
  • LANDING GEAR
    LANDING GEAR
  • Proud to fly a Turboprop: Q400 vs ATR72
    Proud to fly a Turboprop: Q400 vs ATR72
  • AUTOFLIGHT
    AUTOFLIGHT
  • FUEL SYSTEMS
    FUEL SYSTEMS
  • HYDRAULIC SYSTEMS
    HYDRAULIC SYSTEMS
  • Southwest 4013: Pilot Error? Unlikely.
    Southwest 4013: Pilot Error? Unlikely.
  • FLIGHT CONTROLS
    FLIGHT CONTROLS

Recent Posts!

  • IndiGo receives its first Airbus A320neo at Toulouse
  • On the A320 Neo, if you’re unlucky, you’ve got the last row
  • Why the FIA’s case against the removal of the 5/20 rule is unjustified
  • Why the 90 seat Q400 had to be announced at the Singapore Air Show
  • Analysing IndiGo’s performance in Q3’16
  • Deciphering the 2015 Indian Aviation growth story
  • Air Costa receives its third Embraer E190 at Jordan
  • Why Jet Airways meant much for Brussels
  • Same aircraft family, different hands: Boeing 737NG flown by the Air Force and an airline
  • IndiGo to fly India’s longest daily domestic flight effective 7th January 2016

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • The Flying Engineer
    • Join 396 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The Flying Engineer
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...