Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
STRIKER40: General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products will manufacture the MK47 MOD 0 Weapon System under a $16 million government contract, the company said June 18. The MK47 weapon system, also called the Striker40, is a lightweight 40mm grenade launcher with an integrated fire control system that is capable of firing air-bursting ammunition. General Dynamics and partner Raytheon will build the program's Lightweight Video System (LVS) fire control.

Staff
ENGINE UPGRADE? The U.S. Navy says it is studying the possibility of upgrading the Rolls-Royce F405 engine it uses on its Boeing T-45 Goshawk trainer. The Navy is interested in eliminating surges that cause the engine to run too quickly, forcing the aircraft to land. As part of the fiscal 2007 budget process, the Navy plans to decide whether to pursue the upgrade, which would be made on as many as 213 of the single-engine T-45s, according to Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR).

Staff
BE SPECIFIC: The U.S. Navy should review its shipbuilding program to establish a consistent requirement for new construction, coupled with a streamlined approach to upgrades and modernization efforts, says the House Appropriations Committee. "The committee remains deeply troubled by the lack of stability in the Navy's shipbuilding program," the HAC says in its report on the fiscal 2005 spending bill, which was approved June 16. "...

Staff
COMET ANSWERS: The European Space Agency's Rosetta comet rendezvous mission could help determine whether Earth's oceans came from icy comets hitting the planet, ESA says. Rosetta was launched in March on a mission to visit Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014 (DAILY, March 3). It carries an instrument named Ptolemy that is to analyze the mix of isotopes on the comet to see if the water frozen on comets is similar to water in the Earth's oceans.

Kathy Gambrell
The House Appropriations Committee said the U.S. Navy's development of the DD(X) guided missile destroyer is on a "rush to failure" as it recommended scaling back program funding from the requested level and delaying construction by a year. "The committee believes the DD(X) development schedule does not provide sufficient time for the proper maturation and testing of transformational technologies prior to initiating construction of the first ship," the committee said in its report.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency already plans to take the kinds of steps lawmakers are calling for to increase the realism of testing for the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system, an MDA official said June 18. "We're doing about everything we can to make this as realistic as we can," said Air Force Brig. Gen. Mark Shackelford, MDA's deputy for test and assessment, who spoke at a Defense Forum Foundation luncheon on Capitol Hill.

Rich Tuttle
"Numerous changes and improvements" have been implemented to dramatically upgrade the defense of U.S. airspace in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, a North American Aerospace Defense Command statement said June 17.

Staff
June 21 - 25 -- National Space & Missile Materials Symposium, "Developing Materials to Transform the Future," Seattle, Wash. For information go to www.usasymposium.com/. June 22 - 24 -- NDIA, 4th National Intelligent Vehicle Systems Symposium & Exhibition, Grand Traverse Resort and Spa, Traverse City (Acme), Mich. For information go to www.ndia.org.

Staff
BURNHAM AWARD: Tom Burbage, Lockheed Martin's executive vice president and general manager of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program, was awarded the Donald C. Burnham Manufacturing Management Award by the Society of Manufacturing Engineers on June 11. The award recognizes Burbage "for exceptional success in the integration of the infrastructure and process manufacturing," Lockheed Martin said June 17.

Kathy Gambrell
House appropriators eliminating funding for a study of the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator (RNEP) and other small nuclear weapons programs when it approved the fiscal 2005 energy bill, which funds the Department of Energy, the National Nuclear Security Administration and other agencies. The House Appropriations Committee approved the bill June 16. "I am very pleased that the House Appropriations Committee recognized the need to halt funding for nuclear 'bunker busters' and an arsenal of new nuclear weapons," said Rep. Ellen Tauscher (D-Calif.).

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Army's Rapid Equipping Force (REF), set up as an experiment two years ago to speed the deployment of urgently needed tools, is taking steps to expand its reach and effectiveness, a spokesman said June 17. The REF expects to receive a formal charter in about a month, which will make it easier to work through the government bureaucracy to secure funding and personnel, spokesman Frank Phillips told The DAILY.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe has ordered the leaders of the agency's field centers to begin dialogues with employees on the findings of the Aldridge commission report, which recommends a number of sweeping changes at NASA to help it carry out its new vision for space exploration.

Kathy Gambrell
Congressional appropriators see little future for the Space Based Radar program unless the U.S. Air Force redirects its technology to less expensive program efforts and concentrates on seeking breakthroughs to lower its cost.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA's authorization bill for fiscal year 2005 urges the agency to give private industry responsibility for flying an unmanned probe to the moon within three years, according to Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), who introduced the legislation June 17. Such a mission would "ensure America remains in the lead in understanding and utilizing this body," Brownback said while chairing a hearing of the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Science, Technology and Space in Washington June 17.

Staff
LAUNCHED: Intelsat's 10-02 satellite was successfully launched June 16 on an International Launch Services Proton vehicle from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan. The launch had been delayed a day due to minor technical problems. The satellite, built by EADS Astrium based on its Eurostar-3000 bus, is the largest spacecraft in Intelsat's fleet.

Marc Selinger
Rolls-Royce has assembled a team of engineers to assess how the company's aircraft engines can be ruggedized for the harsh environmental conditions that U.S. troops have encountered in Afghanistan and Iraq. Scott Crislip, president of Rolls-Royce's Defense North America, said during a press briefing June 17 that the team will examine such things as keeping sand out of engines and making engines more resistant to corrosion. Engines used on C-130 transports and V-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft are among those that could be examined.

Kathy Gambrell
The Senate approved an amendment to the fiscal 2005 defense authorization bill June 17 that would require the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) to conduct more tests on its proposed missile defense system. The amendment, introduced by Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, sets parameters for what lawmakers called "operationally realistic" testing and sets an Oct. 1, 2005 deadline for completion.

Lisa Troshinsky
Union and small business officials told House Armed Services Committee (HASC) members June 17 that they support language in the House and Senate versions of the fiscal 2005 defense authorization bill that would discourage or eliminate offset agreements with other countries. Offsets are the compensation required by countries as a condition for buying aerospace and defense products and can include co-production, subcontracting, technology transfer and other requirements.

Marc Selinger
Dassault Aviation's Rafale is a multirole combat aircraft with low observability intended to perform missions including air superiority, air defense, air-to-surface attack and reconnaissance. Powered by two French Snecma M88-2 turbofan engines, the Rafale entered service with the French navy about a year and a half ago and has flown off the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier in the Indian Ocean. The French air force is expected to begin fielding the new jet in late 2005 or early 2006.

Rich Tuttle
The House Appropriations Committee says the Coast Guard must "rebaseline" the Deepwater program. The huge project - which involves the replacement or improvement of ships, fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, command and control equipment, and support of such items for 40 years - "has reached a critical juncture within its development," the committee says in its report on the Department of Homeland Security's fiscal year 2005 budget request. The Coast Guard is an element of DHS.

Staff
A Lockheed Martin-Northrop Grumman team successfully completed a recent two-day space segment requirements review (SSRR) for the Transformational Communications MILSATCOM (TCM) Space Segment at Lockheed Martin Space Systems facilities in California, Lockheed Martin said June 17. More than 120 government representatives took part, including DOD service representatives. The review was an important milestone in the program's risk reduction and system definition phase, the company said. Two teams

Staff
ANALEX, Alexandria, Va. Thomas L. Hewitt, the founder and CEO of Global Governments Inc., has been elected to the board of directors. BROOKINGS INSTITUTION, Washington Richard A. Falkenrath, the former deputy homeland security adviser to president Bush, has joined the institute as a visiting fellow. CAE, Montreal Robert E. Brown has been appointed president and CEO, effective Aug. 12. EADS NORTH AMERICA, Washington

Staff
FLIR Systems Inc. will delivery Star SAFIRE II airborne thermal imaging systems to the U.S. Air Force Space Command, the company said June 16. The work will be done under a $6.3 million contract from Science Applications International Corp. The units are to be installed on UH-1N helicopters for use on ICBM security missions, the company said. Deliveries are expected to begin in the third quarter of this year and be completed within 12 months, the company said.

Staff
EMBEDDED DIAGNOSTICS: DRS Technologies Inc. will provide new embedded diagnostics systems for installation on the Army's M2A3 Bradley Fighting Vehicles, the company said June 14. The contracts are valued at $33 million. DRS will design, develop, and manufacture chassis modification and embedded diagnostics sets that will provide a redesign, function upgrade and embedded diagnostic integrated capability for the vehicles, the company said. Product deliveries are expected to begin in March 2005.