Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Bruno
Teledyne Benthos Inc. recently completed a "very successful" test of an underwater wireless communications system via an underwater glider off the coast of Hawaii, Regional Sales Manager Richard Dentzman told a Navy Opportunity Forum in Washington on June 5.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA on June 5 announced the roles that its field centers will play in the agency's space exploration plans, which keep most of the centers' traditional human spaceflight duties intact while finding additional work for other centers to get them more involved in sending astronauts into space.

Staff
HELOS FOR LATVIA: AgustaWestland said June 2 that Latvia's interior ministry has awarded it a contract to provide the country's boarder guard with two A109 Power helicopters. Financial terms were not disclosed. The helicopters' procurement is being financed by the European Union with Schengen Facility program funds. Schengen Facility aid is an interim way to help new EU member-states with financing. The Latvian border guard's central board launched the helicopter contract competition in late 2005.

Staff
Bell Helicopter Textron has selected Aurora Flight Sciences of Manassas, Va., to provide the airframe for its small Eagle Eye unmanned aerial vehicles, which will be used by the U.S. Coast Guard's Deepwater system of future ships and aircraft.

By Jefferson Morris
Boeing Phantom Works will equip the ScanEagle unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to look for released biological agents in the wake of U.S. military strikes under an $8.2 million, two-year contract from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA). DTRA and Boeing will work with the U.S. Pacific Command and the U.S. Navy Third Fleet on the program, formally known as the Biological Combat Assessment System (BCAS) Advanced Technology Demonstration (ATD).

Staff
The South Korean government has awarded Eurocopter and the Korea Aerospace Industry a $6 billion-$8 billion contract to provide the country with 245 new KHP military transport helicopters, Eurocopter said June 2. The aircraft will replace South Korea's fleet of aging U.S. built transport and corporate helicopters. KAI will serve as the main contractor, while Eurocopter will provide technical assistance and produce some sub-assemblies.

Staff
CONFORMING CONVEYOR: Physical Science Inc. of Andover, Mass., is proposing a hull-conforming, conveyor ramp, launch-and-recovery system for the U.S. Navy's Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) program, but needs at least $21 million more to get its offering to the final technology readiness level (TRL) by June 2012, according to Mark Druy, a PSI representative.

Staff
RECERTIFIED: The Pentagon and the Air Force announced June 5 that both the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite system (NPOESS) program and the Global Hawk unmanned aircraft program have been recertified after breaching Nunn-McCurdy cost growth caps last year. The restructured NPOESS plan provides for two satellites with the option of buying two more in fiscal 2010. Global Hawk production will temporarily be limited to no more than five Low Rate Initial Production aircraft per year.

Michael Bruno
The market for U.S. Navy unmanned surface vehicles (USVs) is heating up as Chattanooga, Tenn.-based Accurate Automation Corp. is under a technology demonstration contract to provide five boats, including a so-called "go-fast" craft capable of speeds up to 100 miles per hour.

By Jefferson Morris
Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development and Acquisition (RD&A) Delores Etter has signed into effect a new policy that will try to "curb" contractors' and program managers' "optimism" - and thus, overruns - in software projects. The policy requires Navy software contractors to show their "maturity and the discipline and the experience" to predict software development costs and schedules, she told a Navy Opportunity Forum in Washington on June 5.

Staff
Britain-based Marshall Aerospace has been awarded a 1.52 billion pound ($1.94 billion) contract to provide support for the British air force's Hercules transport aircraft, the U.K. defense ministry said June 2. Marshall Aerospace will work with partners Lockheed Martin, Rolls-Royce, and the Defense Logistics Organization on the Hercules Integrated Operational Support program.

Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
ARMORED VEHICLES: BAE Systems will produce 378 Iraqi Light Armored Vehicles under a $180 million Foreign Military Sales contract, the company said June 5. Prime contractor BAE Systems and subcontractors Spartan Chassis Inc. of Charlotte, Mich., and Force Protection Inc. of Ladson, S.C., will build, test and provide logistics support. If all options are exercised, the contract could be worth up to $445.4 million with 1,050 vehicles being produced, BAE Systems said. The contract was awarded by the U.S. Army Tank-automotive and Armaments Command.

Staff
ESCAPE ROUTE: The Air Force has approved a fix to the canopy actuator system of its premier F-22 fighter devised after an incident in April, in which a pilot had to be cut free of the aircraft using chainsaws. The cause of the malfunction was a screw that vibrated loose, blocking the canopy actuator system. The fix involves a longer screw, epoxy and regular inspection, according to the Air Force. F-22s have begun receiving the modification, and installations will continue through fiscal 2007.

By Jefferson Morris
A June 1 letter report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to the leadership of the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Strategic Forces sounds a note of cautious optimism that the U.S. Air Force may be making progress in reforming its much-maligned space acquisition process.

Staff
THE QUEEN LIKES HIM: Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. T. Michael Moseley, whose uncommunicative ways make him no friends among reporters trying to cover the air campaign in Iraq and USAF issues since then, gets high marks from the chief U.S. ally in the war, the U.K. Like a fellow Texan, Army Gen. Tommy Franks, who directed the overall Iraq invasion, Moseley was knighted during a ceremony at the British embassy in Washington, receiving the honorary title of Knight Commander of the British Empire and member of the Order of the British Empire.

Staff
ISS RIDE: Malaysia has bought a ride to the International Space Station on a Russian Soyuz vehicle next year as part of a planned $1 billion order for Su-30 MKM fighters, according to the Itar-Tass news agency. A primary and backup Malaysian astronaut will be picked to begin training for the flight in the extra "taxi seat" on a Soyuz mission scheduled for September 2007.

Robert Wall and Michael A. Taverna
The French government appears to be moving closer to the U.K. on potential cooperation in the Watchkeeper unmanned aircraft project, although overtures to Germany are also under way. Government and industry officials indicate French plans for the cooperative European medium-altitude, long-endurance (MALE) system that was to be based on the Eagle-2 air vehicle, derived from the Israeli Aircraft Industries' Heron, are in flux as requirements have changed and Paris realizes it may not have the money for the so-called EuroMALE initiative.