Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) AUG. 16 - 19 — National Defense Industrial Association’s 13th Annual Space and Missile Defense Conference and Exhibition, Huntsville, Ala. For more information call (256) 382-5823 or go to www.smdconf.org Aug. 24 - 27 — AUVSI’S Unmanned Systems North America 2010, Colorado Convention Center, Denver, Colo. For more information go to www.auvsi.org

Graham Warwick
Following an initial hour-long, battery-powered flight, AeroVironment’s Global Observer unmanned aircraft is beginning a test program planned to culminate in a week-long flight in the stratosphere using liquid-hydrogen fuel. The flight debuts an innovative approach to persistent surveillance and marks a dramatic departure for a company that dominates the market for small, hand-launched UAVs.

Staff

Michael Mecham
MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. — NASA’s Lunar Science Institute at Ames Research Center here brings the same interdisciplinary approach that the center’s Astrobiology Institute has pursued over the past decade as it seeks to understand the origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe.

Staff
BUILDING SPURT: The majority of long-lasting facilities for the Afghan National Army and the Afghan National Police are scheduled for construction over the next three to four years, with $5.3 billion budgeted by the U.S. military in Fiscal 2010 and 2011, according to the Pentagon. The building spurt reflects the accelerated growth of up to 171,600 Afghan soldiers and 134,000 police under U.S. plans, yet officials are still working on how to transition control of the facilities to Afghans.

Michael Bruno
BOMBS AWAY: The U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) has dismantled the last W62 nuclear warhead, officials announced Aug. 12. “Completed a full year ahead of schedule, the W62 dismantlement program safely and securely took apart the retired 1970s era warhead, which will never again be a part of the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile,” according to NNSA. The U.S. produced the W62 for the USAF Minuteman III ICBM fleet in the 1970s, and the warhead remained in service until recently.

Amy Butler
Boeing will not protest its loss in the U.S. Air Force competition to design a 250-lb. weapon capable of striking moving targets through weather. “Boeing does not intend to protest the Small-Diameter Bomb II contract award,” says spokesman Damien Mills. Company officials were debriefed on their loss Aug. 10; the contract announcement took place a day earlier. Boeing had 10 days to file a protest with the Government Accountability Office.

Enterprise Florida
Download the free white paper at: www.eflorida.com/uas Florida. Innovation Hub of The Americas. eflorida.com Click here to view the pdf

David A. Fulghum
EIN SHEMER AB, Israel — The German air force is sending about 35 pilots and sensor operators through a UAV training program at Ein Shemer AB as they spin up their unmanned intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance unit in Afghanistan. They fly Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) Heron 1s both in training and operations. About half of the trainees are veteran Tornado reconnaissance crews, and at least one will make his debut as a UAV operator and mission commander on his sixth tour in Afghanistan. Others come from helicopter and transport units.

The National Academies
Click here to view the pdf

Staff
SHIPMATES: Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding — which the company is considering selling — is hosting conferences with its supply chain. Northrop spends more than $2 billion annually for materials and services with the community, according to the unit’s president, Mike Petters. Of that, more than $713 million has been spent since 2008 through partnerships with nearly 400 different suppliers from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland. Peters met Aug. 12 with representatives of many suppliers in Philadelphia.

Robert Wall
LONDON — Stealing a page from across the Atlantic, U.K. Defense Secretary Liam Fox has unveiled an ambitious effort to reform the operations of his ministry and the armed forces. A special review team will spell out a “blueprint for reform,” due for completion by September 2011, Fox announced on Aug. 13. The steering group, headed by Peter Levin, chairman of insurance group Lloyd’s, will comprise “internal and external experts,” Fox said in his speech to the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors.

Staff
MRO MILITARY EUROPE 2010 ExCeL, London, UK September 29-30, 2010 Learn to maintain military assets longer; sustain aircraft beyond forecast; recover from budget cuts, delays and program cancellations, and develop new strategies required to deliver and support equipment. Learn more at www.aviationweek.com/events Click here to view the pdf

By Maxim Pyadushkin
FARNBOROUGH — The Russian air force will take delivery of its first Su-35S fighter by the end of 2010, with a Libyan deal for the aircraft also anticipated to be concluded in the same time frame

Amy Butler
Boeing is assessing whether to protest the U.S. Air Force’s $450 million contract award to Raytheon for the Small Diameter Bomb II. Deliveries of the 250-lb. GBU-53/B are slated to begin in 2013. Raytheon and a Boeing/Lockheed Martin team had been developing competing designs of the weapon, which must meet the outer mold lines and weight characteristics of Boeing’s original SDB (a weapon optimized for fixed targets) and integrate with the BRU-61 carriage system (Aerospace DAILY, Aug. 10).

David A. Fulghum
Saudi Arabia wants 84 new F-15S strike-fighters to replace some of its oldest F-15s, but it also wants an advanced radar that will be similar to the radar on the F-35 that the Israelis plan to buy.

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — With flight trials complete, the downselect process has begun for the six candidate fighters in India’s Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) program, a competition with a $10 billion-plus payday for providing 126 aircraft. Opinions vary widely among observers on how long it will take to narrow the field to two finalists from among the MiG-35, Dassault Rafale, EADS Eurofighter, Saab Gripen, Boeing F/A-18 and Lockheed Martin F-16.

Michael A. Taverna
Inmarsat’s decision to go with Boeing Satellite Systems (BSS) for its Global Xpress deal marks a major step forward in the aerospace giant’s goal to return in force to the commercial satellite business.

Michael A. Taverna
Loral Space & Communications says it is exploring the possibility of beefing up or selling off its Space Systems/Loral (SS/L) satellite manufacturing unit. In a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission 10Q filing made public on Aug. 9, Loral said “it is evaluating other strategic alternatives” for SS/L in addition to an initial public offering (IPO) for up to 19.9% of stock announced in the second quarter. The offering is intended to boost working capital, and for general corporate use.

Michael Mecham
SBSS SLIPS: The U.S. Air Force launch team at Vandenberg AFB, Calif., says corrective action on “certain connectors used on flight avionics components” aboard an Orbital Sciences Minotaur IV launch vehicle mean launch of the Space Based Space Surveillance (SBSS) satellite will take place no earlier than late September. The launch was set for July 8, but a software glitch prompted the delay. Inspection of the connectors is underway on the pad at Vandenberg. Officials said there are no issues with the Boeing/Ball SBSS spacecraft, which is in storage.

Anantha Krishnan M.
Bengaluru, India — India’s Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) is coming to the defense of its flagship rotary-wing aircraft, the Dhruv Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH), following a critical report from India’s Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG). A senior HAL official, part of the Dhruv project for more than two decades, says that it is “extremely unfair” to write off the Dhruv, which according to him is the best in its class (5.5 tons).

Staff
GUSSIED UP: U.S. Navy engineers based in Dahlgren, Va., completed the fourth “limited objective experiment” on the Ground Unmanned Support Surrogate (GUSS) vehicle recently during the Rim of the Pacific exercise, which ended Aug. 1. GUSS is a remotely operated vehicle that can carry up to 1,800 lb. at about 5 miles per hour, and provide an “immediate” means for evacuation of combat casualties. “We are optimistic that this technology will bring a capability to the warfighter in the very near future,” says Brent Azzarelli, GUSS project manager.