American Eagle ERJ-145 Incident at Durango-La Plata County Airport

On January 6th, 2012, an American Eagle regional jet with 38 passengers and a crew of three had a failure of its flaps and declared an emergency while operating a flight from from Dallas/Fort Worth to Durango Colorado. The aircraft landed safely and no one was injured.

American Eagle ERJ-145

American Eagle ERJ-145

Afterwards,  the aircraft was flown back to Dallas/Fort Worth for needed repairs.

American Eagle, is a regional network carrier affiliated with American Airlines and started its Durango-Dallas/Fort Worth service in June of 2011.

Bombardier Flight Test Program for CSeries Announced

With the first flight of the CSeries CS100 currently scheduled for the end of 2012, Bombardier announced its flight test programme that will certify the CSeries aircraft by the end of 2013.

Bombardier CSeries Aircraft

Bombardier CSeries Aircraft

The 2,400 hour CS100 flight test programme, will be operated by a total of five airframes. The first airframe will be the CS100’s Complete Aircraft Static (CAS) test article, followed by five flight test vehicles (FTV) and the structural fatigue airframe.

FTV1, which is slated to fly by the end of 2012, will investigate the CS100’s operating envelope and undertake aeroelastic flutter evaluations. FTV2 will focus on systems integration, including the jet’s avionics and fly-by-wire flight control systems certification program. FTV3 will test the performance of the aircraft and its Pratt & Whitney PW1500G engines. FTV4 will duplicate the workload of FTV2, splitting the systems certification process between the two test aircraft. FTV5 will be the cabin demonstrator, and also will be the aircraft that will be used for systems functionality and reliability (F&R) and extended operations (ETOPS) testing.

Bombardier’s stated goal is to deliver the CS100 aircraft certified for 120 minutes ETOPS operations at entry into service at the end of 2013. A further six-month ETOPS testing program will extend the aircraft’s ETOPS certification to 180 minutes.

Systems commissioning for Aircraft 0 is currently underway at Bombardier’s complete integrated aircraft systems test area (CIASTA) at its Mirabel, Quebec facility outside of Montreal, with its production standard pedestal, throttle quadrant and Full Digital Authority Engine Control (FADEC) software having been activated before the end of 2011.

Bombardier has not yet finalised the required ground test hours for certification as it seeks to conduct tests that would otherwise be completed by the FTVs by employing CIASTA’s Aircraft 0.

The last two test aircraft, FTV6 and FTV7, will be employed for the larger CS300’s flight test certification due in to be completed in 2014.

Bombardier also plans to deliver the majority of the flight test aircraft to customers for revenue service. However, FTV5 will be retained to understand the dispatch reliability of the new narrow-body aircraft and its systems and to provide a platform for future upgrades that may be considered for the CSeries program.

Bombardier announces CSeries production rates and plans

With over 300 orders and commitments for CSeries CS100 and CS300 aircraft, Bombardier has announced that it is now sold out of delivery slots in 2014 and 2015 and 60% sold out in 2016.

Bombardier CSeries Aircraft

Bombardier CSeries Aircraft

The program has its first delivery set for the end of 2013 with plans to deliver 40 aircraft in 2014, followed by 80 in 2015 and 120 in 2016 as it ramps its production to ten aircraft per month, delivering 240 aircraft during its first three full years of production.

The planned CSeries final build rate is to be 20 airframes per month, or one aircraft completed every manufacturing day.

RwandAir looking to replace CRJ-200 Aircraft

RwandAir, the national carrier of Rwanda,  is looking to replace its two Bombardier CRJ200s with brand new regional jets from an undisclosed manufacturer.

Rwandair CRJ200s

Rwandair CRJ200s

According to reports, RwandAir has reached an agreement to sell the two CRJ-200s currently in their fleet to a buyer willing to take delivery of the planes immediately. The two aircraft were purchased in 2009 at the start of RwandAir’s fleet renewal process, but the airline has decided that they require aircraft with a larger capacity on their short and medium length routes.

The airline is looking to replace the CRJ200s with other regional jets, with a stated preference for a 70 – 110 seating capacity to be delivered by mid-2012.

RwandAir’s fleet will consist of two Next Generation Boeing 737-800s, two Boeing 737-500s, and one Dash 8 Series 100 aircraft after the two CRJ200s leave the fleet.