Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
Lockheed Martin has delivered the first F-35 Lightning II Full Mission Simulator system to the 33rd Fighter Wing at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. Preparation and assembly is under way at the base’s F-35 Integrated Training Center for training to begin this fall. The simulator includes a 360-deg. visual display and can be reconfigured to represent any of the three variants of the stealthy fighter.

Staff
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Andy Savoie
ARMY SRCTec Inc., Syracuse, N.Y., was awarded on April 20 a $78,000,000 firm-fixed-price, time-and-materials, cost-plus-fixed-fee contract. The award will provide for the modification of an existing contract to include primary Duke V3 system spares and increase the ordering ceiling to $278,000,000. The work will be performed in Syracuse, with an estimated completion date of Aug. 24, 2014. One bid was solicited with one bid received. The U.S. Army Contracting Command, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., is the contracting activity (W15P7T-09-D-M615).

Andy Savoie
ARMY Oshkosh Corp., Oshkosh, Wis., was awarded on April 18 a $71,837,142 firm-fixed-price contract. The award will provide for the procurement of 417 different Medium Tactical Vehicles. The work will be performed in Oshkosh, with an estimated completion date of March 31, 2012. The bid was solicited through the Internet with three bids received. The U.S. Army TACOM LCMC, Warren, Mich., is the contracting activity (W56HZV-09-D-0159). AIR FORCE

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), the wife of shuttle Endeavour commander Mark Kelly, has been medically cleared to attend the April 29 launch of Kelly’s STS-134 mission from Kennedy Space Center, Fla., according to a television interview with the veteran astronaut.

David A. Fulghum
Advanced cybertraining is being shaped by rapid advances in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) gathering, information fusion and the immediate availability of data. The result is that in addition to standard cyberoperators and defenders, the cyber-career field needs intelligence, acquisition and engineering professionals that are cyber-focused for the majority of their careers.

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — India is poised to shortlist a manufacturer to provide much-needed basic trainer aircraft. The contenders — Grob’s G-120 TP, Embraer’s EMB-312 Super Tucano, Korea Aerospace Industries’ KT-1, Finmeccanica’s M-311 and Pilatus’ PC-7 — emerged following a request for proposals issued in early 2010. The deal is estimated to cost $1 billion.

By Jefferson Morris
Orbital Sciences Corp. reported year-over-year revenue growth for the first quarter of 2011, although its operating income took a hit from the early March failure of the company’s Taurus XL rocket. The March 4 fairing separation glitch claimed NASA’s Glory climate satellite, and echoed the 2009 loss of NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory , which also was lost when its Taurus XL fairing failed to open (Aerospace DAILY, March 7).

Staff
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Amy Butler
Vice Adm. David Venlet, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program executive officer, says he hopes that negotiations with Lockheed Martin on low-rate initial production (LRIP) lot V will progress more smoothly than they did for the previous lot. Lockheed is putting the finishing touches on its LRIP V proposal, which will comprise 35 aircraft. This will be the second fixed-price production contract for the company on the program. Protracted and contentious negotiations on LRIP IV took more than a year with a contract being signed in November.

Staff
MILITARY RESEARCH: The Defense Department is issuing 27 fiscal 2011 awards, totaling $191 million over five years, to academic institutions to perform multidisciplinary basic research under the Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) program. MURI supports research that intersects “more than one traditional science and engineering discipline in order to accelerate research progress,” the Pentagon says. The awards will be made by the Army Research Office, the Office of Naval Research and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

Michael Fabey
One of the most intriguing recent comments by U.S. Navy brass is that the service has determined it would be cheaper in the long run to rebuild superstructures on its aging cruiser fleet using traditional metalwork instead of composites.

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) Apr. 25 — Greater Washington Aviation Open 23rd annual golf tournament, Lansdowne Golf Resort, Lansdowne, Va. For more information email [email protected], or go to www.gwao.org

By Guy Norris
SAN FRANCISCO AND LONDON — German researchers hope the upcoming flight test of an ambitious hypersonic demonstrator will pave the way for follow-on flights of a small sub-orbital reentry vehicle in 2020.

U.S. Government Accountability Office
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By Joe Anselmo
France should be applauded for orchestrating the military campaign to stop Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi from butchering his own citizens. And U.S. President Barack Obama should be commended for having his nation take a back seat in the conflict. Libya, a former Italian colony, sits in the European Union’s back yard.

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — Russia’s trash-laden Progress M-09M/41P cargo capsule departed the International Space Station early on April 22, clearing the way for the April 27 launch of a new supply ship. The 41 Progress was released from the Pirs docking compartment of the station’s Russian segment at 7:38 a.m. EDT. The capsule, which arrived at the orbiting science laboratory on Jan. 30, has been instrumented to carry out a series of engineering tests before it makes a fiery decent into the Earth’s atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean on April 26.

U.S. Government Accountability Office
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Paul McLeary
ARTILLERY ORDER: Raytheon has announced a $173 million award from the U.S. Army (in fiscal 2010 dollars) for more 155-mm precision-guided Excalibur artillery rounds. The contract is the beginning of full-rate production for the Excalibur Ia-2. The company notes that since 2007, more than 300 Excalibur rounds have been fired in theater by the U.S. Army and Marine Corps, and that this latest order is specifically marked for in-theater use.

Staff
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By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.—Space Florida, a state-backed economic development agency focused on aerospace and spin-off technologies, plans to invest $1 million in a U.K.-based firm that has developed innovative ways to store hydrogen at ambient temperatures. The money is intended to help Cella Energy secure additional outside investment and expand its operations into Florida.

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING—Indonesia will pay $10 million to cover 20% of the cost of concept definition of South Korea’s proposed KF-X fighter, and will send 30 researchers to work on the project. Korea Aerospace Industries and missile and electronics systems maker LIG Nex1 are the preferred South Korean candidates for the program, while Indonesian Aerospace will also participate, according to the South Korean Defense Acquisition Program Administration.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The Swiss defense ministry is requiring the military to look at options to assure the country will not suffer an air defense gap, including the possible modernization of F-5 Tigers, after having put off replacement of the type.

David A. Fulghum
Predators are back in the skies over Libya for low-level, very detailed observations of government troops as they dig in close to civilian areas to avoid NATO air attacks. Manned aircraft will continue to bomb from medium altitudes, but the Predators were reintroduced to the fight strictly for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) gathering at low altitudes where the Libyan government’s advanced, Russian-made SA-24 man-portable anti-aircraft missiles create a zone of lethality.