Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
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U.S. Department of the Navy
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Andy Savoie
E-6B SUPPORT: DRS C3 & Aviation Co. of Herndon, Va., has been awarded a $43,525,578 firm-fixed-price contract for logistics services in support of E-6B aircraft, including management of government-owned inventory and material support of aircraft, the Defense Department announced Nov. 18. The work will be performed at Tinker Air Force Base, Okla.; Naval Air Station, Patuxent River, Md.; Travis Air Force Base, Calif.; and Offutt Air Force Base, Neb. It is expected to be completed in November 2011.

Staff
ZHUHAI, China—As Superior Aviation Beijing ramps up its general aviation activities in China, the company also is working on developing an unmanned aircraft helicopter with potential use for site surveillance or on ships. The V750 is based on a Brantly B-2B helicopter design and is being developed by the Weifan Freesky Aviation Industry Co. The system is designed for more than four hours of endurance, with a 3,000 meter service ceiling, 757 kg. maximum takeoff weight and 80 kg. mission payload.

Robert Wall
LONDON—The U.S. Air Force has lost another F-22 to an accident, this one crashing during a training mission while operating from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska. The fate of the pilot was not yet known. The F-22, on a nighttime training mission, lost contact with air traffic control on Nov. 16. The crash site was found 100 mi. north of Anchorage, the USAF says.

By Bradley Perrett
Beijing—The first satellite based on the CAST DFH-5 bus should be launched in 2016 or 2017, addressing the active market for large spacecraft platforms. Development is scheduled for the next five-year economic plan of the Chinese government, covering 2011 to 2015, says Chinese Academy of Space Technology (CAST) President Yang Baohua.

David A. Fulghum
The lightning rod for rapid fielding of directed energy (DE) weapons and advanced sensors will be the military’s next-generation jammer programs that exploit technologies like active electronically scanned arrays (AESAs) antennas and high-power microwave (HPM) capabilities, say senior U.S. government and industry officials at the 13th Directed Energy Conference.

Michael Fabey
With serious U.S. Defense Department budget decisions about to be made in the coming months, the big question for the U.S. Marine Corps’ Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle (EFV) is whether the service can finish key program testing before the Pentagon decides whether to keep or ax the vehicle.

Staff
ZHUHAI, China—Zhuhai Yintong Energy is promoting its high-power lithium ion batteries at Airshow China. Yintong’s Aviation Supplies unit is promoting small lithium ion battery electric unmanned aerial vehicles capable of carrying high-resolution imaging equipment to altitudes of 4,000 meters, or more than 13,000 ft. A typical Yintong UAV measures 1.56 meters in length (5 ft. 1 in.) and weighs 5.5 kg. empty (12.1 lb). Maximum payload is 5 kg.

Andy Nativi
GENOA—Italy is boosting defense modernization spending even as other elements of its defense budget suffer. So far there are no signs the political turmoil in Italy, with the future of prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s government in doubt, is threatening to undo the fact that military spending is being shielded from wider budget cuts. For 2011, the defense ministry has submitted a request for €20.49 billion ($27.9 billion), an 0.6% increase from 2010, with the core defense budget of €14.3 billion up only 0.2%.

Mark Carreau
NASA is both a bureaucracy of too much and of too little, according to Inspector General (IG) Paul K. Martin’s 2010 annual report outlining the 52-year-old space agency’s top management and performance challenges. It is the latter that is perhaps best known, including the challenge of transitioning from the space shuttle to a commercial space transportation initiative for moving cargo and astronauts to and from orbit, as well as corralling a recently disclosed, $1.5 billion cost overrun for the James Webb Space Telescope.

Staff
Sukhoi plans to hand over a new batch of Su-34 fighters to the Russian air force by year-end. The aircraft are currently undergoing flight testing at the Novosibirsk NAPO assembly facility, company officials say. Although they would not specify the total number, four aircraft are believed to be involved. This will be the first batch to be handed over since the contract signing in 2008, which calls for the delivery of 32 fighter bombers through 2013. The air force already operates five Su-34 strike aircraft from the preproduction batch.

By Guy Norris
Los Angeles—The U.K. government has been briefed by Boeing on its ongoing production line rescheduling for the C-17, and given detailed options for potential acquisition of an eighth airlifter.

Mark Carreau
Three U.S. and Russian astronauts, the last members of the International Space Station’s Expedition 25 crew, will descend to Earth four days early to accommodate a request from the Kazakhstan government to clear the airspace around the capital of Astana, host for a summit of the 56-member Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe on Dec. 1-2.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS—SES Astra has agreed to provide technical support for initial operation of Europe’s Galileo satellite navigation system. An affiliate, Astra TechCom Space Services, agreed to provide engineering and in-orbit testing support to SpaceOpal, a joint venture of the German space center unit DLR GfR and Finmeccanica’s Telespazio. Last month SpaceOpal was awarded a contract to develop Galileo services.

Anantha Krishnan M.
A high-tech coastal surveillance system that can detect movement up to 20 km. (12.5 mi.) offshore is ready for installation in India. The system was indigenously developed by Bharat Electronics Ltd. (BEL) and will be used by the Indian coast guard. The entire data link will be networked to a command-and-control center in New Delhi. The Phase 1 order is worth Rs 600 crore ($132.4 million).

GAO
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By Irene Klotz
NASA plans to release this week a draft cooperative agreement notice for a non-profit organization to manage the U.S. portion of the International Space Station it does not need for its own programs.

Amy Butler
Los Angeles AFB, Calif.—Hardware changes are unlikely to be necessary for the second Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) satellite prior to its launch based on the findings of an anomaly review into why the liquid apogee engines (LAE) on the first of the Lockheed Martin satellites failed, says David Madden, who oversees military satellite communications programs for the Air Force.

Amy Butler
Los Angeles AFB, Calif.—U.S. Air Force officials say the sensor payload on the first-of-a-kind Space-Based Space Surveillance (SBSS) satellite is performing beyond expectations, as the first images from the satellite continue to flow to operators on the ground.

Andy Savoie
METALS MERGER: Specialty metals supplier Allegheny Technologies (ATI) has reached a deal to buy Ladish for $778 million, equally divided between cash and stock. The acquisition would broaden ATI’s position in the aerospace supply chain by allowing the Pittsburgh-based company to sell complex aerospace parts made by Ladish, a supplier to Rolls-Royce, GE Aviation and Pratt & Whitney. Wisconsin-based Ladish derives 90% of its sales from jet engines, airframes and helicopters, and 55% from outside the U.S. It will operate as a unit of ATI.

By Bradley Perrett
Zhuhai, China—The CALT Long March 7 medium-heavy space launcher will go into production in 2014, according to current plans, completing a new family of Chinese rockets with new fuels and engines. The Chinese rocket, sized between the Long March 5 and 6, will offer up to 720 tons (1,590 lb.) of liftoff thrust from six engines fed by liquid oxygen and kerosene.

Robert Wall
ZHUHAI, CHINA—China’s version of the Yak-152 basic trainer, the L-7, is due to complete its first flight next month. The piston-engine aircraft is making its first public appearance here at Airshow China. The aircraft is designed to replace the ChuKiao-6 in the Chinese air force (Plaaf) inventory.

Anantha Krishnan M.
Bengaluru—India’s state-run Bharat Electronics Ltd. (BEL) has announced that it will double its investment in research and development (R&D) activities. The company, which until last year invested 4-5% of its turnover in R&D, is expected to devote 8-10% in the next two years. BEL’s R&D director, I.V. Sarma, told Aviation Week on Nov. 16 that the additional investment would be made available for critical areas like radars, command and control systems, and electro-optics.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS—Germany has approved a plan to kick off development of the space segment of Eumetsat’s Meteosat Third Generation weather satellite system, setting the stage for final approval by all the Eumetsat states next month.