MADRID (MarketWatch) — Prices for gold climbed for a second session on Tuesday, continuing to bounce after the metal resisted falling through a key support level following last week's strong U.S. jobs data. Gold for August delivery (CNS:GCQ3) rose $14 …
Over the years, I've been approached by a few companies asking me to endorse their products. One of the hardest and most-frequent pitches was from Rosland Capital, Goldline and some of the other gold and silver-related firms out there who wanted me to …
The Boeing 777's engines are still being examined, but they appear to have been receiving power normally. And the flight's pilots didn't … The wide-bodied jet should have been traveling at 158 mph as it crossed the runway threshold. Instead, the …
Seconds before the Boeing 777 crashed, a member of the flight crew made a call to increase the jet's lagging speed, Hersman said. Then came a warning that the plane was about to stall and cockpit communication that the crew wanted to abort the landing …
If a typical wide-body jet carrying 300 people crashed and everyone aboard died, that would be enough to pay $5 million per person in claims, says Brad Meinhardt, a managing director with AIS Gallagher, an aviation insurance broker in Las Vegas. … It …
India's civil aviation authority, DGCA, has approved a Flight Simulation Technique Centre (FSTC) as a training organisation for the Airbus 320 and Boeing 737 NG family of airplanes. The move has been termed a significant achievement for FSTC, which is …
Honeywell International Inc.'s aerospace business will complete a study by the end of July to plan an expansion in the $45 billion market for aircraft mechanical parts, said Tim Mahoney, the unit's CEO. Honeywell, which last year had $1 … The number …
TOKYO — A Japan Airlines Boeing 777 bound for San Francisco returned to Tokyo early Tuesday after a warning flashed in the cockpit saying the jet's hydraulic fluid level was low. The plane carrying 236 passengers and 13 crew had departed around …
"I can't imagine how anyone would be willing to accept a personalized airfare," says Nora Graves, a computer programmer based in Purcellville, a Virginia town in one of the most affluent counties in the United States. "I can picture the scenario now …