Mar
11
    
Posted (Aurus) in on March-11-2008 | 454 views
f-117.jpg

After 27 years in the Air Force arsenal, the world’s first attack aircraft to employ stealth technology will be put in mothballs next month in Nevada.

The Air Force is retiring the F-117 Night Hawk to save the expense of its daily maintenance for buying new planes that have advanced stealth capacity and firepower, according to General Bruce Carlson, commander of the Air Force Materiel Command located at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio.

An informal, private ceremony was held on Tuesday at Wright-Patterson with military leaders, base employees and representatives from Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico.

The remaining F-117s at Holloman will leave the base on April 21, stop in Palmdale, California, for another retirement ceremony, and arrive on April 22 at Tonopah Test Range Airfield in Nevada, where the jet made its first flight in 1981.

The F-117 made its flights in secret for years, and the Air Force didn’t publicly acknowledge the aircraft’s existence until 1988. The F-117s will be replaced with F-22 Raptors, which have defensive systems and longer-range weapon delivery capability along with advanced stealth technology, Air Force officials said.


 
Mar
10
    
Posted (Marianne) in on March-10-2008 | 219 views

After rolling out the China-built Cessna SkyCatcher and the first home-grown Xiang Feng regional jet, China is now planning to build jumbo jets. The success of these aircrafts was sought and China Aviation Industry Corps are planning to widen their range, making it less dependent on Boeing and Airbus.

The plan marks a step forward in China’s long term quest to design and build a large aircraft, referred to in Premier Wen Jiabao’s speech to the national legislature.

France-based airplane maker Airbus forecasts that China’s domestic market is expected to increase fivefold by 2026. Airbus and Chicago-based rival Boeing share a duopoly on the market for commercial airplanes carrying 100 passengers or more.


 
Mar
10
    
Posted (Jules) in on March-10-2008 | 223 views

On February 28, 2008, USS Russell, USS Paul Hamilton, USS Chafee, USS Hopper, USS Lake Erie and other Pearl Harbor-based ships were awarded the Battle “E” award by Commander, Naval Surface Forces.  The Battle “E” is annually awarded to ships and crews that present the maximum condition of departmental readiness and superior capability to perform their wartime tasks. The Battle “E” award does not go to the ship itself, but the crew.   According to Cmdr. Jeff Weston, Russell’s commanding officer,

“It’s a great honor for the ship, but it’s not the ship that deserves it, it’s the crew.  The Battle “E” belongs to the crew and is a compliment to the job they’ve done all year.”

The Battle “E” eligible ships are the best ships throughout the fleet and must maintain a high level of excellence throughout the year.  Lt. j.g. Kate Suthers, Russell’s training officer said,

“We’ve had a great year.  The crew responded to every challenge and met and exceeded every one of them.  The Sailors motivate and look out for each other to ensure that everyone does what they’re supposed to do and that is what helps a ship win the Battle “E”.

The Battle “E” award recognizes sustained superior performance in the following six excellence categories: Maritime warfare, engineering and survivability, command, control, communications and information warfare, logistics management, Commander Naval Surface Force Safety Award and the Efficiency Award.    


 
Mar
06
    
Posted (Nina) in on March-6-2008 | 151 views

Are you an avid traveler? Do you want everything to be organized when it comes to your vacation and business trips?

TripIt is the answer. Tripit is a personal travel assistant that automatically organizes all your travel plans. TripIt is free and makes it easy to quickly organize your vacation and business travel – no matter where you book. It automatically get itineraries with all your plans, weather, maps, restaurants and more. Moreover, it could easily access your itineraries via paper, email, personal calendar or mobile device. TripIt makes it easy to share your trips and see where you overlap with friends and colleagues.

TripIt is a tidy, paperless way to keep track of everything from flight reservations to OpenTable dinner plans, this site extracts travel details from the booking confirmations that you forward by e-mail, then organizes them all on a private Web page. Bonus: it automatically adds trip-specific SeatGuru tips, weather reports and Google Maps.

Be organized in your flight details now by visiting their website: www.tripit.com