Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Fabey
Northrop Grumman -- whose active electronically scanned array (AESA) radars anchor sensor suites for the F-22 Raptor and F-35 Joint Strike Fighter -- sees a domestic and international market for retrofitting older aircraft such as F-15s and F-16s with AESAs, said John Johnson, vice president and general manager of the Aerospace Systems Division.

Michael Bruno
Implementing long-term plans for developing, testing, and buying weapon systems and other equipment would necessitate spending, excluding warfighting and other related cost growth risks, of at least $195 billion in 2013, the Congressional Budget Office projected last week. If reasonable cost growths were accounted for, the investment bill could hit as much as $224 billion in the same year, the nonpartisan CBO report said (DAILY, Oct. 20).

Staff
PROGRESS LAUNCH: Launch of the next Russian Progress unmanned resupply vehicle to the International Space Station is set for 9:41 a.m. Eastern time Oct. 23 from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The vehicle is set to dock on Oct. 26, carrying propellant, oxygen, and dry cargo. High-priority items being brought include parts for the finicky Russian Elektron oxygen generation system, research payloads and spacewalk equipment.

Michael Fabey
TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. -- The F-22's data fusion is so powerful and efficient that Raptor pilots want the aircraft's sensors to collect even more combat and situational data -- and they want to be able to transmit even more detailed information from the plane, U.S. Air Force Maj. Shawn "Rage" Anger says. "We want even more information," Anger said during an Oct. 17 preflight briefing. "We can handle it." As a Raptor officer with the 43rd Fighter Squadron, Anger's job is to train Raptor pilots, or, as he puts it, "Graduate F-22 warriors."

Staff
UAS PLAN: The multinational Joint Air Power Competence Center, headed by the U.S. Air Force, is developing an unmanned aerial system (UAS) "flight plan" which will review UAS in NATO, identify gaps in requirements and capabilities and suggest answers and organizations best suited to solve problems. The center's director, Air Force Gen. Tom Hobbins - also commander of U.S. Air Forces Europe and the Air Component Command in Ramstein, Germany - said more than 40 countries are operating more than 80 types of UAS, with the U.S. fleet of 3,000 counting at least 18 variants.

Staff
LAS CRUCES, N.M. -- Armadillo Aerospace fell short on its first attempt at a NASA Centennial Challenge prize for lunar lander technology when its lox-ethanol vehicle broke a leg on landing. Judges said the impact also triggered a small fire in some of the circuitry and it was unclear if the vehicle could be repaired to fly again over the weekend.

Staff
The U.S. Navy Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center has awarded General Dynamics Robotic Systems a $12.7 million contract for four unmanned surface vehicles (USVs) for the Littoral Combat Ship program's antisubmarine mission module. The award comes as the Navy is pushing USV development and deployment as a major component of the LCS system, as well as to make up for a shrinking naval personnel force (DAILY, Aug. 28). 'Highly efficient'

Staff
ROTATING RIG: Pratt & Whitney has transferred a large-scale rotating rig to India's National Aerospace Laboratories for use in collaborative turbo machinery projects. Pratt and NAL have collaborated on projects for the past five years.

Staff
SLEEPLESS NIGHTS: Whether or not the Chinese and South Koreans search ships leaving North Korea for weapons of mass destruction (WMDs), the U.S. has other ways to prevent shipment. So says Mario Mancuso, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for special operations and combating terrorism. He says that special operations forces have the capability to derail shipments intended to proliferate WMDs. Moreover, the U.S. also has far broader capabilities. "We're doing things across the spectrum," Mancuso says.

Staff
TOURIST CLASS: NASA will probably buy seats on commercial suborbital space vehicles, Administrator Michael Griffin says. He tells a group of space entrepreneurs and financiers in Las Cruses, N.M., that it would be logical for the agency to buy the commercial services both for microgravity experiments and astronaut training on vehicles such as Virgin Galaxy's planned Space Ship Two, provided the nascent industry literally gets off the ground.

Staff
TRADING PLACES: No matter which party wins control of the House and Senate next month, there will be new leaders running several committees and subcommittees. Thanks to the term limits rule imposed by Republicans, veteran leaders like Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John Warner (R-Va.) will have to step aside. Also leaving leadership posts because they've hit the six-year maximum: Rep. Don Young (R-Alaska), chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, as well as that panel's aviation subcommittee chief, Rep. John Mica (R-Fla.).

By Jefferson Morris
Moving to a collaborative digital design process has helped reduce scrap and rework rates for structural parts an estimated 40-50 percent on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program as compared to previous efforts, according to Lockheed Martin JSF Program Deputy Mike Walters. The multinational fighter program, which is still in its system design and development (SDD) phase, currently has more than 1,000 suppliers. That number will continue to expand globally as the program ramps up into full-rate production during the next decade.

Staff
MANPADS DEVELOPMENT: EDO Corp. said it has received a $20 million, five-year contract from the U.S. Army's Project Director for Aircraft Survivability Equipment for continued development of its Common Missile Warning System currently used on Army helicopters to defend against man-portable air defense systems. The newly acquired EDO-CAS business unit has been selling CMWS since 1994.

Staff
The British destroyer HMS Manchester is ready for sea trials this month following a multimillion pound upgrade, the U.K. defense ministry says. The seven-month project included installation of a new torpedo defense system, communications advancements, new reverse osmosis plants to produce fresh water, and a 'transom flap' to improve fuel efficiency, a news release said. Devonport Management Limited (DML) in Devonport Dockyard conducted the project.

Staff
Britain's troops in Afghanistan are set to receive a powerful new battlefield weapon, the Automatic Lightweight Grenade Launcher, the U.K. defense ministry said Oct. 19. The weapon can fire up to 340 of the 40mm high explosive grenades per minute as far as 2,000 meters (2,187 yards), a defense ministry news release said. The grenades can be used against both enemy troops and light armor, and may be fired either automatically or in single shots.

Staff
CAMERAS: Gyrocam Camera Systems of Sarasota, Fla., has been awarded a $51.7 million contract to provide the U.S. Navy with 140 camera systems and related parts and support to help perform counter improvised explosive detection missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Defense Department said Oct. 19. The work is set to be complete by October 2007. The Marine Corps Systems Command, Quantico, Va., awarded the contract.

Staff
HI GAINS: Honeywell International said Oct. 19 that its sales and net income both grew in the third quarter of 2006. Sales increased from $6.9 billion last year to $7.95 billion, a 15 percent improvement. Net income jumped 17 percent, from $464 million to $541 million.

Michael Bruno
Current plans to boost acquisition of new or costlier military equipment in coming years, as well as burgeoning operations, maintenance and personnel costs, will require an annual defense budget of about $492 billion, according to congressional budget officials.

Amy Butler
Officials at Boeing and a Northrop Grumman-EADS North America team - both vying for the U.S. refueler contract - are expecting a new draft request for proposals for the multibillion tanker project. A new draft RFP could further delay the project, which has been under unprecedented scrutiny since the Darleen Druyun scandal.

Michael Fabey
TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE, Fla.- Maintaining F-22 Raptors requires greater emphasis on avionics training and care - and relatively little concern for engines - than legacy aircraft like F-15s, say those in charge of keeping the aircraft mission ready.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA's Constellation program, which includes the Ares rockets and Orion spacecraft design to return astronauts to the moon, is in the midst of a system requirements review (SRR) that should be complete by the end of November, according to agency officials.

Staff
ARMY RADIOS: The U.S. Army has awarded Raytheon Co. a $36 million contract to supply the Army with 746 multiband, multimission radios, the company said Oct. 19. The AN/PSC-5D radios will be used to communicate with satellites that provide warfighters with enhanced voice and data capabilities for beyond line of site communications. The radios can be either carried by soldiers or housed in vehicles, and the contract includes 432 kits that can switch the soldier-carried radios to the vehicle configuration.