Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

By Jefferson Morris
Representatives of the Bush and Kerry campaigns held a proxy debate in Washington Oct. 14, focusing largely on the implementation of the nation's vision for space exploration. Representing Sen. John Kerry's position was Lori Garver, vice president in charge of space program development at DFI International and former NASA associate administrator for policy and plans. Frank Sietzen, journalist and author of a recent book on the creation of NASA's new exploration vision, represented President Bush.

Staff
Goodrich Corp. of Charlotte, N.C., has won a contract from Honeywell Engines, Systems and Services to produce torpedo launch components for the U.S. Navy's Virginia-class submarines, Goodrich said Oct. 13. The lightweight structures help control water pressure used to eject torpedoes from the nuclear-powered, fast-attack subs, the company said in a statement. Production will start immediately at the company's Jacksonville, Fla., site. The first set of hardware will be delivered in early 2005.

Staff
NASA has begun a series of rehearsals for the space shuttle's return to flight, the agency announced Oct. 13. The rehearsals involve flight controllers, the astronaut crew, support engineers and training instructors simulating key portions of the mission. NASA plans roughly 200 hours of rehearsals, which will continue until just a few days before launch.

Staff
The United Kingdom Ministry of Defence (MOD) has selected MAN ERF for a 1.1 billion pound ($1.79 billion) contract to modernize the British military's fleet of military trucks and recovery vehicles. The Swindon, U.K.-based company, a subsidiary of Munich, Germany-based MAN has been named preferred bidder for the work, which the MOD said would create and support hundreds of jobs across the U.K.

Staff
Valdosta, Ga.-based Saft America has won a multmillion dollar, multiyear contract from Northrop Grumman Corp. to upgrade lithium ion (Li-ion) batteries for the next generation Global Hawk Unmanned Aerial Vehicle RQ-4B, Saft America said Oct. 13. Terms of the contract were not disclosed.

Marc Selinger
NEW FACILITY: American Eurocopter will inaugurate its manufacturing facility in Columbus, Miss., on Oct. 20, the EADS North America subsidiary announced Oct. 13. EADS executives, Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour and the state's members of Congress will attend the event.

Staff
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency's Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system has fired an interceptor missile to help pave the way for flight-tests to start in early 2005, prime contractor Lockheed Martin announced Oct. 13. Once the interceptor left the launch system Oct. 7 at Lockheed Martin facilities in California, a parachute deployed so the missile could land relatively intact and be used in future ground tests. Preliminary data show that all goals of the launch test were achieved, Lockheed Martin said.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Navy's Multi-mission Maritime Aircraft (MMA) program has decided to hold its first major design review about a year and a half from now. The key design event, or preliminary design review (PDR), is to occur in the second or early third quarter of fiscal 2006, according to a schedule recently released by Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR). The PDR will be followed by a second major design review, the critical design review, in the third or early fourth quarter of FY '07.

Staff
Israeli ballistic protection company Plasan Sasa won a Department of Defense contract worth more than $100 million as a subcontractor for Armor Holdings, Inc., Plasan Sasa said Oct. 12. The contract calls for Plasan to mount its advanced armor protection kit (APK) on 920 Oshkosh Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacements, which are scheduled to be fully deployed by the U.S. Marine Corps by 2005.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency's Airborne Laser (ABL) program has demonstrated it has solved a problem with one of the chemicals used in the ABL's kill laser, an MDA spokesman said Oct. 13. The spokesman told The DAILY that iodine flows in the kill laser were tested successfully the weekend of Oct. 9-10.

Rich Tuttle
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - North American Aerospace Defense Command is working on a document to guide efforts to defend against attacks by cruise missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles, according to Maj. Gen. Angus Watt, director of operations for NORAD. The Capstone Requirements Document will "define what the nature of the threat is ... the nature of the capabilities that we have now, and ... the nature of future capabilities that we could bring to bear against ... this threat," Watt said Oct. 13 at a conference here.

Staff
SUB DELIVERED: The U.S. Navy has received its first Virginia-class submarine from General Dynamics Electric Boat of Groton, Conn., the company said Oct. 13. The Virginia (SSN-774), the first naval combatant ship designed specifically for post-Cold War missions, will join the Navy's fleet in a commissioning ceremony on Oct. 23 at the Norfolk Naval Base, Va. Electric Boat and Northrop Grumman Newport News are under contract to build the first 10 submarines of a planned 30-ship Virginia class under a teaming agreement.

Staff
EXPANSION: Aviall Inc. has expanded its Aviall Services' central distribution facility and Aviall Inc. corporate headquarters in Dallas, the company said. The project began last spring and was finished in early September. The facility has grown from 280,000 square feet to 305,000 square feet. The expansion was undertaken because of Aviall's sales increases and expected future growth, the company said.

Staff
L-3 Communications will upgrade mission and communication-navigation systems for New Zealand's six P-3K maritime patrol aircraft, the New York-based company said Oct. 12. The upgrades include replacing data management systems, radars, electro-optical systems and communication and navigation systems. The work will be done under a contract worth about $200 million, L-3 said. "This win affirms our long-standing commitment to New Zealand," said Bob Drewes, president of L-3 Integrated Systems (L-3 IS), which will handle the work.

Marc Selinger
The Boeing Co. has made significant progress building the first of three X-45C air vehicles it plans to assemble for the Joint Unmanned Combat Air Systems (J-UCAS) demonstration program, a company official said Oct. 13. The center fuselage for the first plane is nearly complete structurally, and parts for the wings are flowing in to Boeing. Within the next month, the company expects to accept the first General Electric F404 engine that will power the X-45C.

Staff
General Electric Co. of Cincinnati has been awarded a $12.9 million U.S. Air Force contract for a program to demonstrate a multi-megawatt power system for military applications, the Department of Defense said Oct. 13. The work is for the Power and Thermal Technologies for Air and Space Multi-Megawatt power system, DOD said.

By Jefferson Morris
The Defense Department plans to release a broad agency announcement (BAA) later this fiscal year requesting ideas from industry on enabling technologies for a next-generation gunship to replace the AC-130. The U.S. Air Force recently completed an analysis of alternatives (AOA) for the next-generation gunship, which is projected to become operational by 2017. The AOA recommended a stealthy aircraft with a range of 400 nautical miles, 10 hours of endurance, and a gross takeoff weight of roughly 170,000 pounds.

Marc Selinger
Lockheed Martin and BAE Systems announced Oct. 12 that they have filed protests with the U.S. Air Force in light of recent revelations that Boeing may have received preferential treatment in a competition to modernize the avionics on C-130 transport aircraft.

Staff
J-UCAS: The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded Boeing a $767 million contract modification to build and flight-test three full-scale X-45C Joint Unmanned Combat Air Systems vehicles, the Defense Department said Oct. 12. DARPA also is funding competitor Northrop Grumman for similar work in the program (DAILY, Aug. 23).

By Jefferson Morris
The U.S. Defense Department's use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in the war on terrorism continues to expand, with hundreds of UAVs currently deployed with U.S. forces overseas, according to Dyke Weatherington, head of the Pentagon's UAV Planning Task Force.

Marc Selinger
Congress has agreed to drop Senate-proposed language that could have forced the Air Force to trim its next order of F/A-22 Raptors. The Senate version of the fiscal 2005 defense authorization bill would have cut F/A-22 procurement in FY '05 from 24 jets to 22 unless the program met its delivery schedule. But the final version of the bill, approved by a House-Senate conference committee Oct. 7 and the full House and Senate Oct. 9, does not contain the Senate restriction.

Staff
Congress approved wording in the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 that will benefit the aerospace industry, the Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) said Oct. 12. A House-Senate conference committee reached an agreement on the bill last week. The House approved it Oct. 7 and the Senate passed it Oct. 11.

Rich Tuttle
BAE Systems said it has received a five-year, $484 million U.S. Army contract for up to 484 Advanced Threat Infrared Countermeasures/Common Missile Warning Systems (ATIRCM/CMWS). The systems will be used to help defend aircraft against heat-seeking missiles. The contract is the largest the company has received for ATIRCM/CMWS, according to Chris Ager, business development manager for infrared countermeasures at BAE's Information and Electronic Warfare Systems unit in Nashua, N.H.

Staff
South Korea's navy has awarded Raytheon Co. a $25 million contract to provide three KDX-3 Aegis Class destroyers with the Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) Guided Missile Weapon System, the company said Oct. 11. The RAM weapon system defends against anti-ship missiles and helicopters, aircraft and surface craft (HAS), Raytheon said. It is the fourth direct commercial sale of the RAM weapon system in South Korea.

Staff
Northrop Grumman has won a contract that will allow it to compete for up to $39 million in airframe work for NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., the company announced Oct. 11. The company won the five-year indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (ID/IQ) contract for its Structures and Materials and Aerodynamic, Aerothermodynamic, and Acoustics Technology for Aerospace Vehicles (SMAcTAV) proposal.