Starting on March 1, passengers boarding flights in South Korea will be required to carry portable batteries and chargers, as well as e-cigarette,s on their person rather than storing them in overhead bins.
South Korea Brings In Portable Battery Rules After Air Busan A321 Fire 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 password
South Korea's Agency for Defense Development and Korean Air have rolled out a technology demonstrator for a new unmanned combat air vehicle (UCAV) at an unmanned air vehicle (UAV) show in Busan.
ADD said it aims to conduct the first flight of the Low Observable Wingman UAV System (LOWUS) technology demonstrator before the end of the year. A manned-unmanned teaming (MUM-T) flight is planned by 2027, the agency added.
South Korea's Agency for Defense Development (ADD) and Korean Air have unveiled the technology demonstrator of their jointly developed stealth ‘loyal wingman'
Eva Air will ban the inflight use and charging of power banks and spare lithium batteries beginning March 1. The move is for flight safety, the carrier said in a Facebook post on Wednesday. The airline noted that power banks and spare lithium batteries are prohibited in
Pyongyang blasted the U.S. "provocations," including last week's ICBM test-launch and a nuclear submarine's port call at Busan, South Korea.
On Dec 29, a Jeju Air passenger aircraft crashed during an emergency landing, resulting in 179 fatalities out of the 181 people on board. Though the exact reason behind the crash is yet to be confirmed, issues such as excessive flight frequency and inadequate safety maintenance were raised following the incident.
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