Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
SWEET HOME: The U.S. Army plans to relocate the headquarters of its Army Contracting and Expeditionary Contracting commands from Fort Belvoir, Va., to Redstone Arsenal, Ala., by August 2011. Both contracting commands will co-locate with Army Materiel and Army Security Assistance commands, which are landing there under the 2005 base realignment and closure process (BRAC).

Staff
NEW FLECHETTE: In the first time the U.S. Navy Department has produced a new flechette warhead since the Vietnam War, Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR is introducing a new design for use by Marine Corps helicopters in Afghanistan. Vietnam-era flechette warheads — smaller munitions used against personnel and light-armored targets — were near depletion and becoming unreliable, officials say, so they have tapped General Dynamics for the 149 Mod 0 Flechette Warhead.

Staff
BIG DAY: Aerospace & defense companies are tallying up their sales and earnings as they prepare to issue their fourth-quarter and full-year 2009 results later this month. Boeing, General Dynamics and United Technologies should roll out their earnings on Jan. 27. But Wall Street analysts will be really busy the next day, when Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, L-3 Communications, Goodrich, Rockwell Collins and Teledyne Technologies are all expected to report. “January 28th,” says Jefferies & Co. analyst Howard A. Rubel, “is as crowded as a security line at an airport.”

Frank Morring, Jr.
Engineers at Johnson Space Center (JSC) have scheduled four days of testing with three different versions of NASA’s planned new spacesuit to begin melding the suit with the Orion crew exploration vehicle that is also under development there.

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — India’s Defense Ministry has sent a letter of request to the U.S. government for 10 Boeing C-17 strategic airlifters, via the foreign military sales (FMS) process. Boeing’s Jan. 8 statement follows immediately after the United Arab Emirates announcement of plans to purchase six C-17 Globemaster IIIs. The U.S has been in discussions with the Indian government and Boeing recently completed a series of C-17 demonstration flights in India. In November 2009 the U.S. Air Force flew the C-17 in Agra in a joint lift exercise.

Alon Ben David
NEVATIM AIR FORCE BASE, Israel — The Israeli Air Force is fielding an eighth KC-707 refueler and starting to push upgrades to the remaining fleet to bolster its strike capabilities at a time when military planners are focusing on how they might carry out an attack on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, if called on to do so. Israel Aerospace Industries has transformed the 707 airliner into the tanker under a $23 million contract awarded last year.

Robert Wall
PARIS — Fearful about the prospect of job losses, one of Airbus’s primary labor groups in France is urging governments to sustain the A400M military airlifter program. The labor group Force Ouvriere warns of “catastrophic consequences” if the program were terminated. It notes that 8,000 people are already working on the project, and the long-term jobs at risk could number 40,000 over the life of the program.

David A. Fulghum
The first CH-47D — newly modified with a laser defense system — has been saved during an attack by multiple infrared-guided missiles, U.S. Army officials say. “We had a success in a complex situation where a Chinook was engaged by multiple IR manpads [infrared man-portable anti-aircraft missiles] ,” says U.S. Army Lt. Col. Ray Pickering, product manager for infrared countermeasures (IRCM).

Bettina H. Chavanne
AUTO ID: The U.S. Coast Guard and Northrop Grumman have completed the critical design review of the core data exchange capability, which will serve as the foundation for a nationwide Automatic Identification System (AIS). The milestone demonstrates that design maturity has reached the point where it can proceed to full-scale fabrication, assembly, integration and test, according to officials and executives.

Bettina H. Chavanne
DESIGN REVIEW: Sikorsky Aircraft Corp announced that a recent Integration Design Review of its heavy-lift helicopter, the CH-53K, has paved the way for a Critical Design Review in 2010. In November, Sikorsky hosted a two-day meeting with members of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the U.S. Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) Technical Review Board and the NAVAIR/Sikorsky CH-53K team.

Michael A. Taverna
The European Commission (EC) is opting to dual-source the construction and launch of its Galileo satellite navigation satellites, and to acquire the spacecraft in competitive batches, as is done with the U.S. Global Positioning System. The Commission selected a team led by OHB System of Germany to build a first batch of 14 full-operating-capability (FOC) satellites for the system, which will allow Europe to provide global high-precision, guaranteed-performance timing and position location services to complement those supplied by GPS.

By Jefferson Morris
ENGAGE!: The short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing F-35B engaged its lift system in flight for the first time on Jan. 7 during a test sortie from Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md. Test pilot Graham Tomlinson engaged the shaft-driven lift fan at 5,000 feet and 210 knots, slowed to 180 knots, then accelerated to 210 knots and converted back to conventional-flight mode. The Stovl propulsion system was engaged for 14 minutes. On subsequent flights the aircraft will fly progressively slower, hover and eventually land vertically.

Robert Wall
The United Arab Emirates has been exploring commercial financing options for its substantial military outlays, with Waha Capital saying it has now closed a $1.8 billion debt deal to cover the purchase of C-17 transports and A330-200 multi-role tanker/transports. The Dubai-based financing institution says the capital will cover all six C-17s the UAE signed for this week (Aerospace DAILY, Jan., 7) as well as three A330 tankers.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Controllers at California Institute of Technology are calibrating NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) spacecraft, after commanding its telescope cover to open and using it to capture a first-light image of about 3,000 stars in the constellation Carina. “Right now we are busy matching the rate of the scan mirror to the rate of the spacecraft, so we will capture sharp pictures as our telescope sweeps across the sky,” stated William Irace of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the mission project manager, in releasing the first-light image.

Elyse Moody
Eurocopter’s Brazil subsidiary Helibras will upgrade 34 Brazilian Army Aviation AS365K Panther helicopters with new engines and avionics.

Michael A. Taverna
OmniGlobe Networks, a Montreal-based provider of very small aperture terminals and voice over Internet protocol services, says it is in advanced discussions with several suppliers to buy, launch and operate a Ka-band satellite to serve remote and rural areas in Canada. The satellite, Canuk-1, is to be launched in the third quarter of 2013. OmniGlobe declines to say how much it plans to spend on the satellite, which will be medium-sized.

Douglas Barrie, Robert Wall
LONDON, PARIS — A British conservative government would revisit Royal Air Force (RAF) transport and fast jet aircraft basing plans — and intended closures — including a move to consolidate all U.K. fixed-wing airlift at one hub.

By Maxim Pyadushkin
MOSCOW — Russian defense spending for 2010 is 1.25 trillion rubles ($43 billion), 3.4 percent more than 2009. The budget share going to defense in 2010 is 12.7 percent, up marginally from 12.2 percent the year before.

By Bradley Perrett
Japan is risking a rapid loss of fighter engineering skills, an official review of the industry warns, while urging the government to avoid fully importing combat aircraft. Estimates of future engineering effort starkly illustrate an unspoken argument for Japan to buy and develop advanced versions of the Eurofighter Typhoon, Boeing F-15 or Boeing F/A-18E/F to fill its requirement for 50 fighters.

Graham Warwick
GO FASTER: Piasecki Aircraft is to receive $8.9 million in congressionally directed funding to complete modification and conduct high-speed flight testing of its X-49A SpeedHawk compound helicopter. The X-49 is a prototype SH-60F Seahawk fitted with Piasecki’s vectored-thrust ducted propeller and a wing. Modifications for high-speed flight include adding a supplemental powerplant, fairing the rotor and retracting the gear. Piasecki is aiming to exceed 200 knots, having reached almost 180 knots in the first phase of flying.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — Arianespace head Jean-Yves Le Gall expects 2010 to be another busy year for the Paris-based launch provider, but warns that market conditions will “again be challenging.”

Staff
Crews moved the space shuttle Endeavour from the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center, Fla., to Launch Complex 39A on Jan. 6 in preparation for next month’s STS-130 mission to the International Space Station (ISS). The six-hour trip for the shuttle stack — orbiter, external tank and two solid-rocket boosters — started at 4:13 a.m. EST. Endeavour is scheduled to lift off at 4:39 a.m. EST Feb. 7 for a 13-day orbital sortie to the ISS.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The U.S. Army has seen 400 percent growth in UAV flight hours in the past decade, according to Lt. Gen. J.D. Thurman, the Army’s deputy chief of staff, who anticipates that number, and the number of unmanned platforms flying, to continue to increase. In a bid to give all of its brigade combat teams access to unmanned capabilities, the Army has made an unprecedented move. By Fiscal 2011, a combat aviation brigade (CAB) will receive Sky Warrior Extended Range Multi-Purpose (ERMP) UAVs. Currently, all UAVs resides within dedicated units.