Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Mark Carreau
KRAFT HONORED: NASA’s Mission Control Center in Houston was named for Christopher C. Kraft, Jr., the agency’s first flight director and a key figure in the success of the Apollo moon landings, in ceremonies on April 14 at Johnson Space Center. Kraft, 87, joined NASA’s forerunner, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, in 1945, and later served as flight director for each of NASA’s Mercury missions and several Gemini flights. NASA’s Mission Control Center Houston opened in 1965 for the Gemini IV flight, which featured America’s first spacewalk.

Amy Butler
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. James Cartwright says the Pentagon is beginning the long process of revamping its weapon system requirements formulation process because the current system “has been gamed to death” by industry and the military services.

Staff
May 10-12, 2011 Washington, D.C. Washington Marriott at Metro Center Air Transportation Modernization Conference Join us in 2011 as we align NextGen stakeholders to accelerate NAS modernization. Click here to view the pdf

Robert Wall
RIO DE JANEIRO — The Brazilian air force is expanding its F-5 upgrade program, with a decision to have Embraer modify 11 more of the fighters. Brazil acquired the fighters used from Jordan. Discussions over expanding the core F-5M program had been under way for about a year. Deliveries under the contract are to begin in 2013, Embraer says. The contract also covers delivery of an additional flight simulator.

Frank Morring, Jr.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — China’s space industry remains hopeful it can do business with the U.S., despite a renewed chill in relations. But executives at China Great Wall Industry Corp. are finding it hard to believe that California-based Space Exploration Technologies Inc. (SpaceX) is offering lower launch prices than they can.

Robert Wall
RIO DE JANEIRO — The Brazilian military is considering formalizing a requirement for a ground-launched cruise missile associated with the Avibras Astros II artillery rocket system. An industry official says preliminary work on the weapon already has begun and that a pending requirements statement should see the program to completion. Development would take several more years, with the exact timeline driven by funding.

Michael Bruno
The formal request for proposals (RFP) for the U.S. Army’s multibillion-dollar Joint Air-to-Ground Missile contains no major surprises, meaning the winner between a Raytheon-Boeing team and competitor Lockheed Martin could be determined by the long-term lifecycle costs of their respective pitches.

Staff
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Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — U.S. researchers are reaching beyond traditional agency-to-agency channels to obtain access to the range of medical and behavioral data coming from Russia’s 520-day Mars mission simulation through cooperative agreements that could help the two spacefaring pioneers and others prepare for future deep-space expeditions.

By Maxim Pyadushkin
MOSCOW — Helicopter orders from the Russian military are up and commitments for new types are on the horizon, marking a stark turnaround from the days when military orders were unable to sustain Russia’s domestic manufacturing industry.

Robert Wall
RIO DE JANEIRO — The Brazilian government is in the early stages of developing a hypersonic waverider demonstrator, with the goal of completing the first flight test next year. The operational concept is for a Mach 14 scramjet-powered vehicle that could deploy microsatellites, says a Brazilian air force official.

Mark Carreau
LONGER STAY: Shuttle Endeavour’s final flight has been extended to 15 days, a 24-hr. addition, to allow more time for the shuttle crew to assist with upgrades of the U.S. carbon dioxide removal system onboard the International Space Station. The STS-134 mission, the 25th trip to orbit for Endeavour, is tentatively scheduled for liftoff from Kennedy Space Center, Fla., on April 29 at 3:47 p.m. EDT.

Michael Bruno
UAV SUSTAINMENT: While annual sustainment spending for U.S. manned fighters will remain around $1 billion or even decline for the rest of the decade, UAV sustainment will grow to nearly $3 billion a year by 2018, according to Hal Chrisman, a principal at AeroStrategy. Moreover, operators are beginning to look for alternative providers to the original equipment manufacturers, he says.

Michael Fabey
When it comes to the gathering of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) data, the U.S. Navy’s Virginia-class submarines are proving to be a star. Thanks in large part to the vessel’s photonics mast, the submarine is able to gather images, electronic signals and other data beyond what the Navy had initially envisioned, according to defense analysts and Navy program brass.

Robert Wall
RIO DE JANEIRO — The Brazilian government is spelling out major emerging acquisition plans that include new satellites, an intelligence aircraft, armored vehicles and ships. The broad outlines of the massive spending initiative are presented in a document the Brazilian defense ministry released at the LAAD Defense & Security show. The document also shows that the country is targeting 2019 for development of an indigenous fighter, the F-XBR.

Leithen Francis
SINGAPORE — Indonesia plans to order the Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) T-50 jet trainer and is now poised to discuss the terms of the deal. A letter was sent to KAI informing the company that the T-50 is the preferred choice and that Indonesia is ready to begin the negotiation phase, says an official in South Korea familiar with the situation.

Robert Wall
LONDON — Swiss aircraft maker Pilatus delivered strong performance last year in both the military and civil sectors, with the United Arab Emirates’ order for 25 PC-21s — deliveries are due to begin this year — and the Swiss air force placing a supplemental order for two more of the turboprops. The company is also planning to introduce a new general aviation aircraft next year and add workers this year to support its development. The PC-24 would augment the PC-12, which itself recently underwent a major upgrade into the PC-12NG.

By Jay Menon
GRENADE LAUNCHERS: As part of its $1 billion infantry modernization program, the Indian army is seeking to equip its infantry units with new, semi-automatic 40-mm magazine grenade launchers (MGLs). “India’s Ministry of Defense has invited bids from global firms for the acquisition of these weapons. We are looking to purchase around 1,500 units to be supplied within 12-16 months of signing the contract,” an official of the Indian defense ministry says. The official declined to release financial details.

David A. Fulghum
The murky deal between the U.S. Navy and Air Force over who provides airborne electronic attack and from where is beginning to take form. The arrangement answers the sticky question of why the Next Generation Jammer (NGJ) is being put in an underwing pod that a stealthy aircraft cannot carry without making itself vulnerable to radar.

Robert Wall
RIO DE JANEIRO — U.S. Air Forces Southern (Afsouth) lists money for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) assets and exercises among its top unfunded needs. Speaking on the sidelines of the LAAD Defense & Security exhibition here April 12, Lt. Gen. Glenn Spears, Afsouth commander, says ISR assets — both manned and unmanned — are high on his priority list to support U.S. Southern Command requirements.

By Guy Norris
LOS ANGELES — Lockheed Martin is studying “good candidates” for initial airframe weight savings of 100 lb., plus an additional 100 lb. in added engine thrust as part of plans to increase vertical-lift bring-back margin on the F-35B short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing (Stovl) variant.

Michael Bruno
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — Forget insourcing; “affordability” is preoccupying the U.S. military maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) mind-set, according to the sentiment at Aviation Week’s Military MRO conference this week. “What we’re after is moving toward judgments based on affordability,” says John Johns, assistant deputy undersecretary of defense for maintenance. “That is a huge change.”

Robert Wall
RIO DE JANEIRO — Embraer and Elbit Systems’ AEL Sistemas are setting up a joint venture to develop unmanned aircraft for the Brazilian market. Embraer will have a 51% share in the yet-to-be-named business. As part of the deal, Embraer also could take a minority equity stake in AEL, although the size of the holding has not been set, says Luis Carlos Aguiar, president of Embraer Defense & Security. Also still to be defined is how the board of directors will be set up and who will choose the CEO of the new business.

Frank Morring, Jr.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Fresh from an inflight demonstration on the Prisma orbiting testbed, the Swedish Space Corp. group of companies — rebranded as SSC — is offering its non-toxic satellite propulsion technology worldwide as a way to simplify spacecraft ground handling.

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