Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
Click here to view the pdf

Staff
MAKIN ACCEPTANCE: The Makin Island amphibious assault ship (LHD 8), which is expected to be delivered to the U.S. Navy later this year, passed its acceptance trials March 19 after three days at sea. The trials took place off the coast of Mississippi in the Gulf of Mexico. All major systems and equipment were tested by the Navy’s Board of Inspection and Survey. The Makin Island is powered by a unique system that uses two induction-type auxiliary propulsion system (APS) engines powered from the ship’s electrical grid.

Neelam Mathews
AIR CHIEF: Air Marshal Pradeep Vasant Naik, presently the vice chief of the Indian air staff, has been appointed as the next chief of air staff as of May 31. He will take over from Air Chief Marshal Fali Homi Major. Naik was commissioned as a fighter pilot and has 3,085 hours of flying to his credit. During his nearly 40-year career, including the Indo-Pakistani war of 1971, he has served in various command staff and instructional appointments. Before taking over as vice chief, he was air officer commanding-in-chief of the Allahabad-based Central Air Command.

Michael Fabey
Development of key components of the U.S. military’s beleaguered Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) will be less cash needy from here on in, claims a Boeing official responsible for the JTRS Ground Mobile Radios (GMR) program. “We definitely are on the down curve,” Boeing JTRS GMR Program Manager Ralph Moslener said March 19 during a press teleconference. Boeing organized the briefing after the recent delivery of the first two engineering development models (EDM) of the GMRs to the U.S. Army’s Future Combat Systems (FCS) program.

Staff
NUCLEAR REACTION: The British Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee is cautioning that the U.K. will have to manage challenging procurement issues if it is to deliver the country’s future nuclear deterrent on time and on budget. The U.K. needs to introduce a successor to the Vanguard class ballistic-missile submarine by around 2024.

Frank Morring, Jr.
JOHNSON SPACE CENTER, Houston Mission managers are carefully planning the space shuttle Discovery’s return from orbit to bring back some five months of biological samples from cold storage on the International Space Station (ISS) without letting them overheat.

Staff
READY TO ROAST: Lockheed Martin’s short takeoff and vertical landing (STOVL) F-35B has finally made it on to the hover pit at Fort Worth where it is being readied for the full-thrust powered-lift ground testing required to clear the aircraft to begin STOVL flight testing. The company expects the pit tests to take about a month, after which the propulsion system data will be analyzed and a flight readiness review conducted.

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicated new calendar listing.) Mar. 23 - 26 — The Aerospace Corporation’s 13th Ground System Architectures Workshop. Torrance Marriott South Bay Hotel, Torrance, Calif., For more information go to http://www.aero.org/conferences/gsaw/index.html

Staff
WIND OF CHANGE: Qinetiq is building a revised configuration of its Zephyr high altitude long-endurance (HALE) unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). It will likely fly for the first time early in 2010. Zephyr 7, as the latest variant is known, has several design modifications intended to improve its aerodynamic performance and potentially further increase endurance. Changes are thought to include a greater wingspan and modified wing-tip design, as well as a reconfigured tail.

Staff
S-92A ALERT: Service difficulties with the Sikorsky S-92A main gear box lubrication system has prompted Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. to publish a safety advisory informing operators of impending changes in the rotorcraft flight manual (RFM) procedures. The move was prompted by the March 12 crash of a S-92A (C-GZCH) operated by Cougar Helicopters. The aircraft was transporting workers from St. Johns, Newfoundland, to an oil platform in the Hibernia field. Shortly after departure, the crew reported mechanical problems and requested a return to St. Johns.

National Research Council, based on NASA data
Click here to view the pdf

Bettina H. Chavanne
LAUNCH COUNTER: The U.S. Air Force plans to launch the seventh Global Positioning System (GPS) IIR-M satellite aboard a United Launch Alliance Delta II rocket March 24 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. The launch window opens at 4:34 a.m. and will remain open for 15 minutes. The Lockheed Martin-built GPS IIR-20(M) satellite is the first to be launched this year, and offers improved accuracy, enhanced encryption, anti-jamming capabilities and a second civil signal to provide dual-frequency capability and improve resistance to interference.

Staff
RUBLE TROUBLE: In-year funding for the Russian air force’s fifth-generation fighter, known as PAK FA, may be cut by 940 million rubles ($28.2 million) as part of proposed cuts by the government to the country’s 2009 defense budget. First flight of the prototype is expected by the end of 2009, with state acceptance of the type completed by 2015. Budget documents also include increased expenditure for building a naval aviation training center at Eisk in the Krasnodar region, to replace the Saki facility in the Ukraine.

David A. Fulghum
Word on upcoming U.S. defense program terminations is expected late this week or early next week in the form of program budget decisions or program decision memorandums, according to an official with insight into major U.S. Air Force programs. “The final budget goes to [Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ office] on April 2nd and then it’s released on the 21st,” the official said.

Frank Morring, Jr.
The crew of the space shuttle Discovery installed the fourth and final solar array on the International Space Station (ISS) during a spacewalk March 19. Spacewalkers Steve Swanson and Richard Arnold bolted the S6 truss element onto the starboard end of the truss, completing the station’s 310-foot long backbone and providing a platform for the last 240-foot-long solar array wing, which is folded into the truss.

John M. Doyle
Three top U.S. commanders told a Senate hearing March 19 that they can’t be sure whether North Korea plans to launch a communications satellite or test an offensive missile during an announced missile launch next month. But the heads of Pacific Command, Strategic Command (STRATCOM) and Korea-U.S. Combined Forces Command said they believed the U.S. already has the capability to knock out an attacking North Korean missile.

Michael A. Taverna
BEAUCOUP BUCKS: French armaments agency DGA says a €2.3 billion ($2.9 billion) government economic stimulus package approved late last year will help boost military hardware procurement to the highest level in decades. DGA Chief Executive Laurent Collet-Billon says purchase authorizations will rise to €20.3 billion this year, more than double the €9.2 billion allocated in 2008. The extra funding will permit the acquisition of 60 additional Rafale fighters, five more EC725 transport/medevac/search-and-rescue helicopters and three Fremm multimission frigates.

Staff
Click here to view the pdf

Alexey Komarov, Michael A. Taverna
MOSCOW — A reduction in defense spending being considered under a revised federal budget plan threatens key Russian launcher and satellite navigation projects, even though space budgets are not expected to be impacted by the new plan.

Michael Bruno
Instead of trying to ban anti-satellite (ASAT) weaponry, the U.S. government should push an international “rules of the road” that outlines unacceptable actions, according to a group of scholars, including a former two-star U.S. Air Force general, testifying before the House Armed Services strategic forces panel. Meanwhile, U.S. deterrence against foreign harm to its space assets is possible, they said, although such planning is scant and current responsibility too diverse.

Bettina H. Chavanne
LOADS CALIBRATION: Boeing completed loads calibration testing of the first P-8A Poseidon test aircraft the week of March 9, which the company says was two weeks ahead of schedule. Loads calibration is one of the prerequisites for the U.S. Navy flight clearance process. During the tests, up to 80 percent of the highest expected flight loads were applied to the aircraft’s fuselage, horizontal stabilizers, vertical fin and wing structures. Completion of loads calibration ensures that test aircraft T-1 is ready for airworthiness testing, which will being later in 2009.

Bettina H. Chavanne
Sen. James Webb (D-Va.) is warning the Pentagon that a shortfall in U.S. Navy funding is the strongest argument yet for reversing the service’s recent decision to relocate the homeport of its newest carrier from Norfolk, Va., to Naval Station Mayport in Jacksonville, Fla. A former Navy secretary, Webb wrote DOD March 17 that the Navy’s $417 million shortfall in fiscal 2009 funding for ship maintenance and $4.6 billion unfunded budget requirements are justification for disapproving any funding request for the homeporting decision.

Paul McLeary
FACE-OFF: On the heels of the U.S. Government Accountability Office’s (GAO) scathing report that called for the Army to restructure its controversial $160 billion Future Combat Systems modernization program, the House Armed Services Air and Land Subcommittee is holding a hearing to bring the report’s author face to face with the Army brass heading up the program.

Graham Warwick
AeroVironment will fit a fuel-cell power system into its “all-environment” Puma AE small unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), giving the hand-launched, special-operations UAV a long-duration capability. Protonex Technology has been awarded a $3.3 million Defense Department contract to develop “a robust, deployable preproduction fuel cell power system” as a drop-in replacement for the rechargeable batteries used in the Puma AE.

Bettina H. Chavanne
HAND-HELD: Rockwell Collins has received a $450 million follow-on contract to provide Defense Advanced Global Positioning System Receivers (DAGRs) to the U.S. Air Force GPS Wing. The contract calls for Rockwell Collins to provide the hand-held GPS position and navigation receivers through 2016. The company has delivered more than 290,000 DAGR units and more than 1.5 million accessories since it was selected by the Air Force for full-rate production in 2003. This latest award brings the total value of the DAGR contracts to $1.15 billion.