Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Amy Butler
The U.S. Army is considering accelerating the production decision for its Sky Warrior system, noting that experience flying variants of the Predator-based unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) abroad should provide the Pentagon’s test and acquisition community enough information to proceed with buying it early, according to program officials.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON – Britain will receive the first of three life-extended C-130K Hercules transport aircraft in the third quarter of 2009, with the aircraft to enter service at the beginning of 2010. The U.K. Defense Ministry has selected L-3 Communications subsidiary Spar for its Hercules outer-wing replacement project. The original intent had been to decide on a supplier in the third quarter of 2007, following the invitation to tender issued in May 2007.

Frank Morring, Jr.
International Launch Services is preparing to launch Canada’s NIMIQ 4 commercial communications satellite, now that it has returned to flight with the Aug. 19 liftoff of Inmarsat-4 F3. The NIMIQ 4 spacecraft, built for Telesat by EADS Astrium, is set for launch in September, marking the Canadian firm’s fifth use of the Proton vehicle. The Breeze M upper stage that will be used in that launch reached the Baikonur Cosmodrome on Aug. 17, and the Khrunichev team that will mate the stage with its Proton M booster is scheduled to begin work “soon,” ILS said.

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Bettina H. Chavanne
STOP AND STARE: The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has awarded AeroVironment (AV) $4.6 million to fund the development of a small Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) with the ability to “hover/perch and stare.” The Stealthy Persistent, Perch and Stare (SP2S) UAS is based on AV’s Wasp UAS, a one-pound, 29-inch wingspan, battery-powered air vehicle being procured and deployed by both the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Marine Corps.

Bettina H. Chavanne
BRITE STAR: Northrop Grumman has completed the first test flight of its MQ-8B Fire Scout Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (VTUAV) equipped with the BRITE Star II electro-optical/infrared payload using a Tactical Common Data Link (TCDL). The flight took place Aug. 9 at Webster Field, Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Md. For shipboard use, the airborne TCDL will communicate with the ship’s TCDL terminal. A Fire Scout payload interface unit allows the TCDL and payload interface to remain independent of flight-critical functions.

Amy Butler
The Pentagon is considering extending the turnaround time for proposals from the teams vying for $35 billion in aerial refueling tanker work to 60 days, according to program sources. The Defense Dept. also is conducting its third round of meetings with teams led by Boeing and Northrop Grumman/EADS North America on the KC-135 replacement program today at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Ohio, the site of the Air Force’s KC-X program office.

By Guy Norris
EDWARDS, Calif. – NASA and Northrop Grumman are starting construction of a Global Hawk Operations Center here at Dryden Flight Research Center from which science flights of the long-endurance unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) will be controlled.

By Jefferson Morris
Managers with NASA’s Constellation program say the Ares I rocket design still has about 6,600 pounds of performance margin after the addition of hardware to dampen vibrations during its ascent. The vibration fixes are estimated to cost the Ares system about 1,200-1,400 pounds to orbit. The fix hardware itself will weigh about ten times that, but since it’s discarded with the first stage, the mass penalty is not a one-to-one ratio, NASA officials said during a teleconference Aug. 19.

Bettina H. Chavanne
CAIMAN MRAP: BAE Systems has completed the installation of its 500th enhanced armor kit for Caiman Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles. BAE Systems has been awarded a total of 2,868 Caiman MRAPs, 1,694 of which will be equipped with the new kits, which are to be delivered in November 2008. The kits are being installed in Orangeburg, S.C., to meet the need for rapid installation.

Michael Mecham
An Alliant Techsystems ALV-X1 launcher is set to carry two hypersonic and re-entry experiments on a suborbital mission from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia on Aug. 22. The 55-foot tall, two-stage ALV-X1 will carry the Hypersonic Boundary Layer Transition (HyBolt) experiment for NASA’s Langley Research Center and the Sub-Orbital Aerodynamic Re-entry Experiment (SOAREX) for Ames Research Center on a 1,000-mile flight downrange. Part of NASA’s Fundamental Aeronautics Program, HyBolt will study boundary layer heating.

Bettina H. Chavanne
HEAT SEEKER: Lockheed Martin received an $8.9 million production order for 150 Integrated Dewar Cooler Assembly thermal cameras from Gyrocam Systems. This initial order is the first of 500 projected systems under a U.S. Army contract. The cameras are designed into Gyrocam systems and will provide thermal capabilities to the U.S. Army’s Vehicle Optics Sensor System for mine protected vehicles. The multi-sensor camera system is mounted on a telescoping mast that is gyro-stabilized for operations on the move.

John M. Doyle
The next U.S. president must pursue development of a wide range of counterinsurgency and irregular warfare tools that could cost as much as $2 billion, says the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee.

Lee Ann Tegtmeier
GD BUYS: General Dynamics signed a purchase agreement Aug. 18 to acquire Jet Aviation for $2.25 billion. The companies expect to close the deal by the end of the year. General Dynamics plans to retain the Jet Aviation and Midcoast Aviation brands, and operate them at least initially as a third prong of its aerospace business (the others being Gulfstream Aerospace and General Dynamics Aviation Services), according to a General Dynamics spokesman.

By Guy Norris
PALMDALE, Calif. – Lockheed Martin plans to conduct more test flights of the first short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing (STOVL) F-35B this week to evaluate propulsion systems doors and nozzles in flight before temporarily grounding the aircraft until early next year, pending installation of a redesigned Pratt & Whitney F135 engine.

David A. Fulghum
Russian military officials, in writings that are catching U.S. analysts’ attention, are concluding that Russia’s offensive into Georgia was morally justified but poorly organized and executed in the opening phases due to surprise.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The Defense Department’s tactical radio needs may not be met, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) says, if it does not address growing development and production costs. DOD’s tactical radio program has grown from a predicted $3 billion investment in 2002 to nearly $12 billion. But much of that money has been spent on legacy radios, with only a part of the funds going to Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) development.

Douglas Barrie
LONDON – The British Defense Ministry and BAE Systems on Aug. 20 struck a $3.8 billion deal covering munitions supply that may finally help close what has been a vexing chapter for both. The government and BAE signed off on an arrangement known as Munitions Acquisition – the Supply Solution (MASS) worth between £2 billion – £3 billion over a 15-year period.

Craig Covault
Iran’s flight test of a space launch vehicle failed Aug. 17, according to radar tracking by a U.S. Navy destroyer and infrared data from U.S. Air Force Defense Support Program (DSP) missile warning spacecraft. Key data on the failure were provided by the USS Russell, an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer patrolling the Persian Gulf. Other U.S. intelligence assets gave the Russell and missile warning satellite system advanced notice of the test, enabling extra preparation for tracking its outcome.

Amy Butler
The U.S. Air Force is still confident a design will be selected as planned this fall for the armed service’s controversial rescue helicopter replacement program, even though forthcoming draft findings of a Defense Department inspector general (IG) investigation could slow the process of announcing a winner.

By Jefferson Morris
When shuttle Discovery blasts off on STS-119 next year, three of the astronauts’ chairs will have instruments installed to gather data for the Ares/Orion programs on the intensity of vibrations during ascent. Slated for no earlier than Feb. 12, 2009, STS-119 will install the final truss element and final set of solar arrays on the International Space Station. The mission will lift off with three mission specialist seats equipped with triaxial accelerometers that will be removed and stowed after the shuttle reaches orbit.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The U.S. Army released a revised schedule to competitors Aug. 19 for its Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) program, with an October date given for the announcement of three contract awards. Teams were anticipating a decision on JLTV from DOD in June, but the Army pushed that decision back until fall, when a 27-month Technology Development phase will be awarded on the $40 billion program (Aerospace DAILY, July 7).

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Bettina H. Chavanne
ITT AWARD: ITT Corporation was awarded a five-year Foreign Military sales (FMS) contract by the U.S. Army Communications Electronics Command (CECOM) to deliver communications and electronics equipment and services with a potential value of $490 million. The contract contains an option for a sixth year, and affords foreign clients the opportunity to order products and services directly from ITT. “The contract smooths the process,” ITT spokesperson Tim White said.