Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff

Marc Selinger
The first RQ-4B Global Hawk, which Northrop Grumman Corp. is building in Palmdale, Calif., is starting to look like a finished product, a company official said Aug. 26. The high-altitude, long-endurance (HALE) unmanned aerial vehicle is "about 70 percent assembled," with the engine, landing gear, tail section and wings all installed, said Ed Walby, director of business development for HALE systems at Northrop Grumman.

Rodney Pringle
The Defense Information Systems Agency will re-examine its Net-Centric Enterprise Services (NCES) program in order to better explain the nine technology services that the effort provides for the Global Information Grid (GIG), according to Air Force Lt. Gen. Charles Croom, DISA's new director.

Staff
The U.S. Navy's research office has turned to Alaska Ship and Drydock Inc. of Ketchikan, Alaska, to build a prototype vessel to test various technologies for their usefulness in potential naval ship designs in a deal worth up to $30 million. The Office of Naval Research awarded Alaska Ship an initial $9.7 million contract in response to a broad agency announcement, the Navy said late Aug. 25. The company will build its prototype in Ketchikan by October 2007, or 2010 with contract options.

Staff
The independent Base Closure and Realignment panel reviewing the Defense Department's recommendations to alter domestic military facilities has decided against the Pentagon's proposal to move several defense research offices out of Arlington, Va. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Office of Naval Research, Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Army Research Office will remain in Arlington, also home to the Pentagon.

Staff

Staff
UUV PROPULSION: The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Naval Undersea Warfare Center in Newport, R.I., are soliciting industry and academia to assist in an ongoing effort to develop Hybrid Aluminum Combustor systems for submarines, torpedoes and unmanned undersea vehicles. Partners are being sought to assess the feasibility of manufacturing HAC systems as well as the underwater propulsion systems that would incorporate them. Proposals are due by Oct. 12, with roughly $400,000 in contracts to be awarded in November.

By Jefferson Morris
The first operational flight for Boeing's Delta IV Heavy Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle has slipped to January 2006 as a result of recent technical problems with the Delta rocket family, according to the Air Force. "Boeing has had ... various technical issues they've had to solve on other Delta rockets this summer, which has kind of delayed the whole manifest," EELV System Program Director Col. John Insprucker told The DAILY.

Staff
Alliant Techsystems said Aug. 25 that it has received contracts worth $126 million to manage and modernize the Radford Army Ammunition Plant and to produce various medium-caliber ammunition and rocket propellants. The contracts' total value with options could reach about $427 million. Minneapolis-based ATK's contract to manage the Radford AAP in Virginia is a five-year deal worth $23.3 million in its first year. An additional $29.6 million was provided to modernize the facility, and future awards could reach $55 million, the company said.

By Jefferson Morris
Army Chief of Staff Gen. Peter Schoomaker says he's confident that the restructured Future Combat Systems program has enough leeway built in to compensate for unforeseen developmental problems. "We have some insurance here in terms of where there may be risk," Schoomaker said during a Defense Writers Group breakfast in Washington Aug. 25. "I'm very comfortable that the way we restructured it gives us a heck of a lot better chance of accomplishing it."

Staff
ViaSat Inc. will provide an avionics testing simulator for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program under a $19.8 million contract from Lockheed Martin, the company said Aug. 24. The company's Communication Navigation and Identification Function Stimulator will produce simultaneous signals, allowing the program to test the individual aircraft systems and see how they interact. The new system will be added to Lockheed Martin's Mission System Integration Lab in Fort Worth, Texas.

Staff
Osprey No. 21, an MV-22 attached to the Integrated Test Team based at Patuxent River, Md., conducts the first phase of in-flight refueling developmental testing using a KC-135. The V-22's refueling probe is plugged into the KC-135's basket. The testing is to determine the basic flight characteristics of the V-22 behind the KC-135, as well as describe the initial operating envelope. Later tests could include sending fuel from the KC-135 to the V-22 (DAILY, Aug. 25).

Staff
Thanks mostly to shipments to defense customers, sales and net earnings for electronics products provider LaBarge Inc. of St. Louis rose sharply in fiscal year 2005, the company said Aug. 25. Net sales soared 39% in FY '05, climbing to $182.2 million compared with $131.5 million the year before. Net earnings increased 58% percent, from $6.8 million the year before to $10.8 million.

Michael Bruno
The independent Base Closure and Realignment Commission has approved the Defense Department's request to consolidate Army and Marine Corps ground vehicle development and acquisition activities (D&A), including unmanned vehicles and robotics, at the Detroit Arsenal in Warren, Mich. The BRAC Commission approved the move Aug. 24 as it began final deliberations on the Pentagon's proposals for closing and realigning domestic military facilities. Panel Chairman Anthony Principi proposed adopting the plan.

Staff
Elbit Systems Ltd. has finished the second stage of its plan to buy shares of Tadiran Communications Ltd. from Koor Industries, the Haifa, Israel-based company said Aug. 25. The defense electronics company now owns 26% of the military communications company's shares. Koor Industries, also of Israel, simultaneously purchased share equity in Elbit, bringing its total Elbit holdings to 7%. The share-buying move, announced in July, is part of a larger consolidation within Israel's defense industry (DAILY, July 8).

Staff
SHIP PROTECTION: The Naval Sea Systems Command has decided on Northrop Grumman Corp.'s Shipboard Protection System to boost naval vessels' self-protection while moored to a pier, at anchor or during restricted maneuvering.

Staff
The Government Accountability Office has denied the protest of an Army contract to provide intrusion detection services at Fort Hood, Texas. Evergreen Fire and Security protested the award to Shane Gelling Co. for intrusion detection work that included maintaining electronic entry control systems, radio frequency identification systems, forward-looking infrared cameras and other equipment.

Marc Selinger
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - The U.S. Missile Defense Agency is restructuring itself to make better use of its money and to strengthen ties among its programs, according to the head of MDA.

Michael Bruno
The Base Closure and Realignment Commission has rejected an effort to consolidate six U.S. facilities supposedly associated with air and space C4ISR research and development into just two. Commissioners and their staff said they found that most of the affected facilities and their workers actually dealt with acquisition and ongoing operations. "This is just not an accurate description of what these people do," commission Chairman Anthony Principi said, before leading a move to strike the proposal.

Staff
Shadow tactical unmanned aerial vehicles have amassed more than 50,000 hours of total flight operations, nearly 80% of them in combat missions in Iraq, Shadow builder AAI Corp. said Aug. 25. The 50,000-hour milestone was reached Aug. 9 during a flight operated by a U.S. Army unit supporting a ground mission in Iraq, the company said, although further details of the flight were not released. Thirty-one Shadow systems have been delivered since the end of 1999, out of a total of 56 systems - including 220 air vehicles - the Army has ordered.

Staff
CREW HONORED: NASA has changed the name of the National Scientific Balloon Facility in Palestine, Texas, to the Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility, after the seven Columbia astronauts killed in 2003. The NSBF provides complete balloon operation services and engineering support to the scientific community in the U.S. and several other countries.

Staff

Staff
General Dynamics U.K. Ltd. will demonstrate an in-hub electric drive and related systems for the United Kingdom's Future Rapid Effect System, the company said Aug. 24. The work on the Chassis Concept Technology Demonstration Program is to "provide a baseline" for using such technology in FRES, the company said. FRES is similar to the U.S. Army's Future Combat Systems. The contract is for an 18-month-long program to demonstrate the drive and the integration of electronic systems into a vehicle chassis.