Flight FJ922/923, a late-night Saturday service, will be dropped from 25 April, leaving the regular daily service in place. The carrier is also suspending its Tuesday flights from Nadi to Dallas-Fort Worth between 5 May and 16 June.
Want to see more stories from trusted news sources? Make Australian Aviation a preferred news source on Google. Click here to add Australian Aviation as a preferred news source.
With women holding only around 5 per cent of aviation positions worldwide, the sector has a long way to go to increase female representation – but companies such as Leidos are proving to be real success stories, with Leidos recently celebrating a miles…
Inside the US Air Force’s next-generation adaptive propulsion program For decades, propulsion has been the quiet determinant of air combat supremacy. While stealth, sensors and weapons often capture public attention, the jet engine ultimately defines h…
The future of VTOL autonomous fighters in the Indo-Pacific In October 2025, US start-up Shield AI unveiled X-BAT, a radical new jet-powered “loyal wingman” drone intended to fly autonomously alongside manned fighters. The company, known for its Hivemin…
How cyber security resilience is a growing necessity for the modern aviation sector, the impacts of threat activity on air travel – and travellers – and what Australian organisations can be and are doing to stay safe. If it can be argued that modern Au…
Getting a closer look at America’s next-gen air superiority fighter In the shadowy world of military aviation, where secrets are currency and superiority is survival, a tantalising glimpse has emerged from the fog. Defence giant Raytheon, the powerhous…
In this section of the magazine, our contributors offer their thoughts and insights into industry issues that matter most to them. In this issue, Jake Nelson warns the aviation sector that high-speed rail may be more than a pipe dream, Steve Kuper argu…
In this extract from his book, Damien Lay imagines the final moments of the Lady Southern Cross and its pilots Sir Charles Kingsford-Smith and Tommy Pethybridge as they went down over the Gulf of Martaban in 1935. ‘Charles!’ Tommy screamed, his voice …