Author: FlyMarshall Newsroom
Southwest Airlines has renewed its lease and beefed up its flight schedules for the next year, reaffirming its commitment to be the dominant operator of Dallas Love Field (DAL) until at least the 2040s. The City of Dallas granted a 15-year extension to Southwest with significant improvements planned as well. According to reports, America’s largest domestic carrier is resuming two previously canceled routes while making three seasonal destinations part of the regular repertoire. The year of 2026 will see over 200 daily departures on peak days at DAL and over 10 million annual travelers are expected. Photo: Robin Guess |…
In Brief: Israel Sees First CH-53K Deliveries In 2028 | Aviation Week Network https://aviationweek.com/themes/custom/particle/dist/app-drupal/assets/awn-logo.svg Skip to main content Aviation Week Staff August 15, 2025 Israel expects its first Lockheed Martin CH-53Ks to be delivered in 2028. The country placed the foreign military sales order for 12 aircraft in 2022. At the time, Lockheed Martin said the “baseline” helicopters were due for delivery this year. However, in May Israel announced a contract with the… Subscription Required In Brief: Israel Sees First CH-53K Deliveries In 2028 is published in Aerospace Daily & Defense Report, an Aviation Week Intelligence Network (AWIN) Market Briefing and…
From 2024 (YouTube Edition): Clinic Aimed to Promote Safe Aircraft Control The EAA Pilot Proficiency Center hosted an angle of attack (AOA) training clinic during the 2024 Oshkosh Airventure. The event aimed to teach attendees about what AOA indicators are and how they can be used to improve flight safety. AOA indicators have been around from the beginning. Even the Wright brothers had their own makeshift version: a piece of yarn fastened to the leading edge of the wing. As flight has grown more advanced, aviators realized how crucial AOA indicators are and began to install them in modern aircraft.…
Aero Linx: Civil Aerospace Medical Institute (CAMI) The FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Institute (CAMI) is the medical certification, research, education, and occupational health wing of the FAA’s Office of Aerospace Medicine. The goal of our activities is to enhance aviation safety. The Institute’s people – researchers, physicians, and other medical specialists, engineers, educators, pilots, technicians, and communicators – all merged as a team in 1961 at our centralized Oklahoma City facility. Since then, the CAMI team’s synergistic products serve people everywhere as they safely and routinely achieve one of the oldest of human dreams: Flight!
Becomes Largest Global Operator Of The Type Diamond Aircraft announced the delivery of the fifth DA62 MPP, or Multi-Purpose Platform, to 2Excel Aviation, making the UK-based company the world’s largest operator of the aircraft and strengthening the partnership between the two companies.
First Red Flag Exercise In Three Years For 9th Bomb Squadron The U.S Air Force’s 9th Bomb Squadron, flying B-1B Lancers out of Dyess Air Force Base in central Texas, recently completed its first Red Flag exercise in three years at the Red Flag-Nellis 25-3, the Air Force’s premier combat training event held at Nellis AFB in Nevada.
Charles McCook MIA Since 1943 Mission Over Burma 1st Lt. Charles Woodruff “Woody” McCook was recently brought home to rest, 82 years after he was lost in a low-level mission over Burma on August 3, 1943, after heroically maneuvering his B-25 Mitchell bomber so that two of his crewmates could parachute to safety.
Wake turbulence and wingtip vortices are invisible phenomena that sometimes appear in the form of white trails tracing and spiraling from wingtips. Pilotsalso try to visualize the wake of these airflow disruptions in heavy traffic to ensure they fly far enough away for the vortices of other planes in tighter patterns or formations. They study how vortices behave and dissipate to predict their movement and avoid catching wake turbulence. Known as contrails, vortices create condensation trails when they remain suspended in the air at high altitudes. They move with the winds but often keep their shape. Pilots can observe the…
Jet Fuel Price Index, Week Ending August 8, 2025 | Aviation Week Network https://aviationweek.com/themes/custom/particle/dist/app-drupal/assets/awn-logo.svg Skip to main content Aviation Week Staff August 14, 2025 Subscription Required Jet Fuel Price Index, Week Ending August 8, 2025 is published in Aviation Daily, an Aviation Week Intelligence Network (AWIN) Market Briefing and is included with your AWIN membership.Already a member of AWIN or subscribe to Aviation Daily through your company? Login with your existing email and passwordNot a member? Learn how to access the market intelligence and data you need to stay abreast of what’s happening in the air transport community. source
STARLUX Airlines’ inaugural flight from Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport (TPE) to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA) received a traditional water-cannon salute as it taxied to the gate STARLUX Airlines added Seattle as its third North American destination on Aug. 16, 2024, following Los Angeles and San Francisco, which saw service starts in 2023. The fledgling Taiwan-based airline was launched in 2018, with its first services from Taipei to Macau, Penang, and Da Nang having started in 2020. The carrier positions itself as a luxury airline, with four service classes on each of its 23 aircraft. STARLUX’s Airbus 350-900s feature 306 seats,…
