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Chapter 8 Cold War 19451958

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US vs. USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) ... Encourage the development of airways, airports, and air navigation facilities. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 8 Cold War 19451958


1
Chapter 8Cold War (1945-1958)
  • Section A Resumption of Civil Aviation
  • Section B Commercial Aviation
  • Section C Hot Spots
  • Section D Rockets, Missiles, and Satellites

2
Cold War
  • From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the
    Adriatic an iron curtain has descended across the
    continent of Europe
  • - Winston Churchill
  • The Cold War was a rivalry of two superpowers
  • US vs. USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)
  • Dropping the A-bombs on Japan was a demonstration
    of the new weapon and a warning to Stalin.
  • A Cold War is a conflict short of combat, whose
    chief weapons were words compiled as porpaganda.

3
Section AResumption of Civil Aviation
  • Surplus aircraft flooded the market worldwide at
    the end of WW II. Military transports became
    available from the various combatant nations as
    soon as the war ended, because many nations
    demobilized except the Soviet Union. Airlines
    in government service during the war, either
    through nationalization or contractual
    arrangements, returned to commercial ventures.
    Customers worldwide bought war-surplus equipment,
    while others bought the old equipment being
    replaced by military and commercial operations.
    Civil aviation boomed.

4
International Aviation
  • Companies were planning the conversion from
    wartime to peacetime aviation.
  • Internationally, companies and govts discussed a
    wide range of options for postwar civil aviation.
  • Americanization vs. internationalization
  • Many conferences followed

5
Chicago Conference
  • In Nov/Dec 1944, the US hosted the International
    Conference on Civil Aviation.
  • Issues included
  • Rights of transit and landing, air routes,
    frequencies, safety, technical matters, and
    navigation.
  • Of the nations that attended, the Soviet Union
    did not.

6
Chicago Conference
  • The participants reached agreement on technical
    matters.
  • Accepting US standards for
  • rules
  • traffic control
  • communication practices
  • meteorological services

7
Chicago Conference
  • Two Freedoms was readily agreed upon
  • Right of Transit allowed a plane to fly across
    the territory of a foreign country.
  • Technical Stop the right to land for technical,
    non-traffic, non-commercial reasons, such as
    refueling or repairs

8
Chicago Conference
  • Britain disagreed with the USs final three
    freedoms of the air
  • The right to load passengers, mail, and cargo in
    the airlines country of origin and transport the
    same to a foreign country.
  • The right to load a plane in a foreign country
    and fly to the airlines country of origin.
  • The right to transport passengers, mail, or cargo
    from one foreign country to another foreign
    country beyond the carriers country.

9
Chicago Conference
  • The British feared that Americans could dominate
    international routes because of our large number
    of planes and pilots.
  • The US did have plenty of a/c, but lacked
    international network of air bases.
  • The war damaged Britain economy put the US in
    better position for production and contracts

10
Chicago Conference
  • The Chicago Conference failed to reach
    multilateral agreements on all Five Freedoms.
  • 1 2 freedoms The Air Transit Agreement
  • 3-5 freedoms The Air Transport Agreement
  • Only 12 agreed to all five, stating fear of US or
    British dominance.
  • 41 countries accepted the first two.

11
Chicago Conference
  • The Chicago Conference reached an Interim
    Agreement on International Civil Aviation.
  • Created PICAO (Provisional International Civil
    Aviation Organization) in 1945.
  • In 1946, the PICAO adopted the US radio and
    navigational aid system as the world standard,
    good for US electronics industry, but
    disappointed the Brits.

12
ICAO
  • Headquartered in Montreal
  • Purposes
  • To ensure safety.
  • Encourage civil aircraft design.
  • Encourage the development of airways, airports,
    and air navigation facilities.
  • Promote fair, safe, efficient, and economic
    operation of international airlines.
  • ICAO saw the need to standardization to achieve
    these purposes.

13
IATA
  • April 1945, after the Chicago Conference, reps
    from 44 airlines in 25 countries met in Havana
    and created the International Air Transport
    Association (IATA).
  • Focused on air traffic operations
  • Conferences to set fares.

14
Bermuda Agreement
  • Britain and the US resolved differences at the
    Chicago Conference.
  • Britain yielded on the frequency of service US
    airlines could offer
  • US yielded on the price of fares
  • Britain conceded more than the US because
  • Britain needed a loan
  • Britain need planes
  • Britain realized the importance of good relations
    with US.

15
Infrastructure
  • The Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA)
  • began its first airport construction program in
    1940
  • took over airport traffic control in 1941
  • and expanded air traffic to airways in 1942

16
Infrastructure
  • Aviation was the number one industry in the US
    during WW II, but dropped to 12th after the war.
  • The industry needed government help, but funding
    was being cut.
  • CAA used the designee program to designate
    factory employees, aircraft inspectors, and
    flight instructors.
  • Introduced the Technical Standard Order (TSO)
    that allowed manufacturers to certify their own
    parts.

17
Infrastructure
  • The US agreed to change the existing phonetic
    alphabet in exchange for the ICAO designating
    English as the international language of
    aviation.
  • WW II yielded two main landing systems
  • GCA (Guided controlled approach)
  • ILS (Instrument landing system)

18
Infrastructure
  • VOR (Very high frequency Omnidirectional Range
    system.
  • Replaced the four-course radio ranges, opposed by
    AOPA.
  • The Navy, Air Force, and CAA developed
  • DME
  • Approach/Runway lighting

19
General Aviation
  • In 1945 alone, the US awarded licenses to over
    250,000 private pilots
  • AOPA tried to argue for more GA airport stating
    that the ratio of airliner to small plane was
    1100. That didnt work and allocation of
    airport funds were set to a ratio of 29 small
    fields for every 1 airliner.

20
General Aviation
  • The port war sale of aircraft boomed, but only
    shortly.
  • Owning an airplane was still expensive, AOPA
    objected to new navigational aids because the
    equipment to be bought by pilots was costly.
  • One field did boom
  • agriculture flights or Crop Dusters

21
End of Section A
22
Section BCommercial Aviation
  • After WW II, commercial aviation worldwide
    experienced a substantial boom. Some historians
    call the increase in passengers and in mile flown
    a transportation revolution. During the postwar
    period, the US emerged as the clear leader of
    international aviation.

23
United States Airlines
  • BIG FIVE Airlines
  • American
  • Eastern
  • Pan Am
  • TWA
  • United
  • Smaller Airlines
  • Continental
  • Delta
  • Pennsylvania Central
  • Northeast

24
United States Airlines
  • Bigger and better planes emerged
  • Airlines competed for speed, distance, and
    service.
  • 25 August 1945, Lockheed first flew the
    commercial Model 049 Constellation
  • As competition heated up, Pan-Am tried to
    eliminate competition by cutting fares but it
    failed.

25
Airways Crisis
  • The heavy use of airways by commercial, private,
    and military planes
  • By 1955 only
  • 353 VORs
  • 167 operational DMEs
  • A few ASR systems
  • No enroute RADAR
  • Controllers relied on scribbled notes on vertical
    boards

26
Airways Crisis
  • To promote safety
  • controllers spaced airplanes how far apart???
  • 10 minutes apart!!!!
  • Margin of safety dropped
  • Boeing 707 set speed records (1st passenger jet)
  • Douglas built the DC-8
  • De Havilland Comet jet entered service.

27
Federal Aviation Agency
  • 1958
  • Congress passes and Pres Eisenhower signs
  • Federal Aviation Act
  • Creates the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA)
  • Independent department within the Executive
    Branch of the government
  • Today
  • Federal Aviation ADMINISTRATION (FAA)
  • Under the DOT within the Executive Branch

28
Great Britain Airlines
  • Great Britain lagged behind the US
  • They have not produced transport planes during
    the war.
  • Britain develops the Comet
  • 27 January 1949 1st place
  • 2 May 1952 became the worlds 1st regular
    passenger jet service.
  • 6 Comets crash in 1953-1954
  • Britain becomes leader in air accident
    investigation

29
Soviet Union Airlines
  • After the Comet, the Soviet Tupolev became the
    second jetliner to go into commercial service
  • The Tu-104, a derivative of a wartime bomber
  • 1st flight 1955
  • Entered service with Aeroflot in 1956

30
End of Section B
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