PPG announced that it will increase the production of U.S. aerospace product to meet the growing market demand.
A major international award for Diab recognized a potentially game-changing innovation in aircraft cabin interiors at the heart of which is Intura, the latest interior coating system from AkzoNobel.
PPG will build a new site in Toulouse to allow faster product delivery to local customers.
The riblet films jointly developed by BASF and Lufthansa will be applied on the entire SWISS’ Boeing 777-300ER fleet.
AkzoNobel developed eleven special colours for Japanese regional airline AIRDO’s new Pokémon-themed livery.
Following the on-going dispute between Airbus and Qatar Airways over the surface degradation on the air carrier’s fleet of A350 aircrafts, Airbus announced that the company is preparing for an independent legal assessment.
Savroc and Boeing have signed a Purchase Contract to partner on the use of TripleHard chromium coating technology.
Sherwin Williams’ new calendar includes unique and classic aircraft paint schemes.
AkzoNobel's colour blending facility in Dongguan has been certified according to the AS9100:2016 standard for the Aerospace and Defense industry.
AkzoNobel has donated its expertise and solutions to Boeing’s technology and engineering-oriented school programme.
PPG has launched its “Virtual PPG Aerospace Academy Education Program” that provides resources and training on the company’s aerospace products.
The products developed by PPG were used to protect the ATLAS V 541 rocket that launched NASA’s Perseverance rover to the Red Planet.
Lufthansa Technik and BASF have successfully developed AeroSHARK, a surface technology that imitates the properties of sharkskin, allowing for an optimization of aerodynamics on flow-related parts of the aircraft.
A nano-level coating developed by Airbus and the University of Surrey can protect satellites in low-Earth orbit from ultraviolet radiation and atomic oxygen.
PPG recently supplied coatings and sealants to help restore a 74-year-old four-engine transport aircraft, the Douglas C-54 Skymaster, employed during World War II by the U.S. Army Air Forces.