Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
SATELLITE SPENDING: Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) included a provision in the fiscal 2006 defense authorization bill that requires the Defense Department to develop a revised strategy for acquiring commercial satellite communication services, as well as a "complete" spending analysis of its past and current acquisitions. The report would include DOD legislative proposals and account for various methods of combining purchases of satellite services and leveraging Pentagon purchasing power, including the use of multiyear contracts (DAILY, Oct. 6).

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Aircraft engine component maker Kreisler Manufacturing said its sales for the quarter ending Sept. 30 were up 33 percent to $4.1 million, and net income jumped from $115,000 in the same period last year to $191,000. Operating income went from $174,000 in 2004 to $295,000 for the quarter, the Elmwood Park, N.J.-based company said.

Staff
The U.S. Coast Guard will take over the mission of flying air interception sorties over the nation's capital from the Customs and Border Protection, a Homeland Security Department (DHS) spokesman told The DAILY. While both agencies fall under the DHS, the Coast Guard is an armed service and has a unique civilian relationship with the Defense Department, which is still responsible for combat air patrols. The Coast Guard has until early December to present DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff with a plan for carrying out the mission.

Staff
DRS Technologies will upgrade acoustic data recorders and analysis equipment for U.S. Navy P-3C Orion aircraft under a $6.8 million Navy contract, the company said Nov. 14. The Parsippany, N.J.-based company will upgrade more than 70 tape-based AN/AQH-13 ADR and ADR-D configurations to the new, hard-drive based AN/AQH-13B configuration and will replace obsolete parts and other components to increase reliability.

Michael Bruno
The Senate has agreed to several changes to the Defense Department's procurement policy to try to boost oversight and accountability as lawmakers and defense officials respond to acquisition problems and budget restrictions. The amendments were added to the Senate's fiscal 2006 defense authorization bill by unanimous consent agreements brokered last week by Senate Armed Services Committee leaders Sens. John Warner (R-Va.) and Carl Levin (D-Mich.). The chamber is supposed to finish considering amendments and vote on the final bill Nov. 15.

Staff
MORE SHARES: Spacehab said its shareholders have approved an increase in the number of shares of the company's common stock to 70 million shares, which the company has the authority to issue. The Houston-based company builds laboratory modules and cargo carriers for the space shuttle and for resupplying the International Space Station. The company recently reported that space shuttle program delays have hurt its bottom line for the first quarter of 2006 (DAILY, Nov. 10).

Staff
Engineers at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., have tested a 12-foot wingspan model of a blended wing body aircraft in Langley's 30 foot by 60 foot wind tunnel. The blended wing body largely resembles a flying wing, featuring a wide airfoil-shaped body for maximum lift and minimum drag. Technicians "flew" the model on a tether, kept aloft by the tunnel's wind stream. The flying wing is the biggest model ever free flight tested in the tunnel, NASA said.

Staff
The Senate on Nov. 10 confirmed Donald Winter to be secretary of the Navy, succeeding Gordon England, who is now the acting deputy defense secretary. Winter's confirmation indicates movement to confirm England for the No. 2 Defense Department slot, as Winter could not be confirmed until England formally left the Navy position.

Staff
AGREEMENTS: As soon as Nov. 15, the Senate could complete its work on the fiscal 2006 defense authorization bill. Senators will try to work through a final batch of amendments starting Nov. 14. Meanwhile, House and Senate appropriators and their staff are expected to meet during the week to negotiate a conference agreement on the accompanying spending bill. House lawmakers have been told to expect a vote on ratifying the deal - the Senate would be expected to do the same concurrently. A continuing resolution funding the federal government runs out Nov.

Staff
LITTORAL POWER: The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is having an industry day for the Sustained Littoral Presence program on Nov. 30 in Arlington, Va. SLP is aimed at developing microbial fuel cell systems capable of drawing power directly from elements in the water, as well as unmanned marine systems that could take advantage of such technology.

Staff
Nov. 14 - 16 -- Aviation Week Group presents A&D Programs & Productivity, Arizona Biltmore Hotel, Phoenix, Ariz. For more information go to http://www.aviationweek.com/conferences. Nov. 14 - 16 -- UKIP Media & Events Aerospace Design Expo, Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, Calif. For more information call +44 (13) 0674-1200 or go to www.aerospacedesign-expo.com.

Staff
AIR SHOW: Australia's air force will host a "Defense Force Air Show" at Air Base Pearce in Western Australia on Nov. 19-20, Australia's defense ministry says. Australia air force aircraft in the show will include Boeing's F/A-18 Hornet; General Dynamics' F-111; BAE System's Hawk 127; Lockheed Martin's C-130J Hercules and AP-3C Orion; Boeing's 707; Pilatus' PC-9/A; and Sikorsky's S76 helicopter. The Australian navy's S-70B-2 Seahawk, built by Sikorsky, will also be on display. International aircraft at the show will include Rockwell Collins' B-1B Lancer of the U.S.

Staff
The Australian navy's AUD 6 billion (USD $4.3 billion) Air Warfare Destroyer shipbuilding program will be headquartered in Adelaide in South Australia, the country's defense department said Nov. 10. The new AUD 30 million AWD Systems Center will manage the project's budgets, design schedule and work distribution, creating up to 200 new jobs, Defense Minister Robert Hill said in a statement. The center may also furnish integrated logistics support, test and evaluation, training and crew preparation.

Staff
A less favorable product mix, higher factory overhead and a first article rejection were blamed for decreases in revenue and net income for CPI Aerostructures in both the third quarter and first nine months of 2005. The Edgewood, N.Y., company, which produces structural aircraft parts for the U.S. Air Force and other service branches, said last week that third quarter revenue fell 18 percent to $6.4 million, compared to $7.8 million the year before. Net income declined from $1.3 million to $548,498.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Missile Agency's new sea-based radar is scheduled to make a stop in Hawaii during its first long trip, which will begin in Texas and end in Alaska, an MDA spokeswoman said Nov. 11. The Sea-Based X-Band Radar (SBX) is due to reach Hawaii's Naval Station Pearl Harbor by this winter and undergo inspections, maintenance and minor modifications there, according to the spokeswoman, Pam Rogers.

By Jefferson Morris
Rival systems for protecting commercial airliners from shoulder-fired heat-seeking missiles are gearing up for evaluations by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida in the coming weeks. The Eglin tests will complete Phase II of DHS' effort to counter the threat of Man-Portable Air Defense Systems (MANPADS) to commercial airliners, which began in January 2004. The systems use lasers to blind incoming missiles.

Staff
MATH MOVES: Raytheon has introduced MathMovesU, a program aimed at getting middle-school students interested in mathematics. The company plans to spend $1 million over the next year on grant and scholarship money for students, teachers and schools to promote the program, which taps celebrities like skateboarder Tony Hawk and soccer star Mia Hamm to tout math. It's also important for the aerospace industry's bottom line, the company says.

Staff
FUTURE FIREPOWER: One U.S. Navy Carrier Air Wing (CAW) alone should be able to strike 1,080 aimpoints in a single day by 2010, says Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments researcher Robert Work. That firepower would be an almost sevenfold increase from 1989, as well as almost twice that of today's CAW. Work says future challenges highlighted through the pending Quadrennial Defense Review - a rising China and anti-terrorism and anti-proliferation scenarios - put a premium on naval aviation's stealth, range and persistence.

Michael Bruno
The Senate has agreed to an amendment to its fiscal 2006 defense authorization bill that would force the Air Force to keep buying at least six new Boeing C-17 cargo jets annually despite a draft Defense Department study that concluded there is no need for the additional aircraft.

Staff
AEROSTAT RADAR: The Senate is suggesting the Defense Department install maritime radar on the tethered aerostat system in Lajas, Puerto Rico, to expand the DOD's ability to detect suspicious vessels in the eastern Caribbean. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) added the sense-of-the-Senate provision to the fiscal 2006 defense authorization bill.

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SECOND SPACEWALK: The Expedition 12 crew members aboard the International Space Station are preparing for the second spacewalk of their mission Dec. 7, when they will move a cargo crane adapter, collect science experiments from the hull of the Zvezda Service Module and hand-launch an expired Russian spacesuit into space that is outfitted with amateur radio equipment in an experiment called "Radioskaf." On Nov.

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STSS PAYLOAD: Raytheon Co., the sensor contractor for the U.S. Missile Defense Agency's missile-watching Space Tracking and Surveillance System (STSS), is expected to deliver the first payload by early December, MDA officials say. "We will be breaking thermal vacuum testing very shortly and will need to repair a couple of the payload components that had failed during the test prior to delivery" to STSS prime contractor Northrop Grumman Space Technology, an MDA official tells The DAILY.