Aviation Week & Space Technology

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Mitigating the risk of fatigue remains on the NTSB’s Most-Wanted List of safety improvements—but the FAA’s implementation of the board’s recommendations is progressing slowly, according to the NTSB, which this month upated the list. The Air Line Pilots Assn. has long urged that flight and duty time limits be revised. The FAA’s “outdated patchwork of rules” was developed decades ago and fails to reflect “current science, flight schedules, aircraft equipment and travel distances,” says Terry McVenes, executive air safety chairman of the Air Line Pilots Assn.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
A request for proposals (RFP) to create a 10-year major advertising display program at Miami International Airport has been released by the Miami-Dade Aviation Dept. (MDAD). The deal will cover 320 indoor and outdoor advertising locations. The RFP includes a minimum annual guarantee of $1.4 million a year for MDAD.

The competition between Boeing and Northrop Grumman to provide the U.S. Air Force with a new aerial refueling tanker aircraft—the KC-X—has become intense due to potential size of the program to replace the worn-out fleet of KC-135s. The increasing fierceness of claims in the news media and use of one-line histrionics to denigrate one side or the other tend to draw attention away from what’s important to men and women who will win America’s battles.

Craig Covault (Kennedy Space Center)
Processing the space shuttle for launch enables one to see it as much as art form as flight hardware. Sadly, scenes like this at the Kennedy Space Center will occur for only the next three years, as the shuttle program flies into history in 2010. Atlantis (left and above) first flew in 1985 and has perhaps only 2-3 more missions before retirement. But on STS-122, as early as Dec. 6, it is to launch the much-anticipated European Columbus laboratory to the International Space Station.

Chris Sobolewski (Valley Forge, Pa.)
Correspondence on the global warming debate provided lots of name-calling and hand-waving, but no data (AW&ST Sept. 24, p. 10). One letter disputed the notion of using Mars for a baseline because it has “different orbital mechanics, internal thermal dynamics, atmospheric dynamics and water cycles.”

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
The search is on for a director of the new Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Agency (Iarpa), now officially open for business. Iarpa is designed to focus the intelligence community’s research efforts on developing disruptive technologies, much like the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency does for the Pentagon. The President signed off on its first classified budget along with other intelligence and defense Fiscal 2008 appropriations on Nov. 13.

Robert Wall (Dubai), Michael A. Taverna (Dubai)
A new wave of military modernization programs is sweeping the Middle East, although many are still in formative stages and unlikely to firm up for some time. Two areas expected to see heavy activity in the near future are airlift and air and missile defense. Both have attracted much attention among military planners in recent months and feature prominently in strategic reviews done throughout the region in the wake of the war in Iraq and a changed strategic balance.

Europe’s Galileo satellite navigation program continues to receive a pounding on several fronts. Despite a call from German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy to find a solution quickly, finance ministers last week failed to resolve a funding impasse with Germany. This prevented the EU from agreeing to a proposal to fund full development and deployment of Galileo with public money.

Edited by Norma Maynard
Nov. 28-29—A&D Finance Conference, New York. Feb. 12-13—Defense Technology and Requirements, Washington. Apr. 15-16—AVIATION WEEK Interiors, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Apr. 15-17—MRO Conference and Exhibition, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Sept. 23-25—MRO Europe, Madrid. Oct. 14-16—MRO Asia, Singapore. PARTNERSHIPS Jan. 14-16—Soldier Technology, Arlington, Va. Feb. 19-24—Singapore Air Show.

Inmarsat has concluded an agreement with the European Space Agency to operate an advanced L-band payload on the agency’s AlphaSat large telecom satellite technology mission, but has yet to decide on an S-band system that could offer more bandwidth for mobile TV, digital radio and other applications.

Artist concept shows what a Boeing Business Jet pilot will see when the Rockwell Collins Enhanced Vision System (EVS) is certified early in 2008 (see p. 46). The Head-up Guidance System symbology shows the aircraft is 100 ft. above the ground on a 3-deg. approach path. This symbology photo is combined with an artist rendering of a typical EVS infrared image from the new BBJ EVS sensor during a nighttime approach. The conformal green image from the infrared sensor shows the warm runway and taxiways against the cooler—darker—grass.

Thales Aerospace and PowerJet, the Snecma-Saturn consortium producing the SaM146 engine to power the Sukhoi SuperJet 100, say the regional aircraft is still on track for a first flight by year-end, though they admit the schedule is tight and could slip to January.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
NASA loses out as the latest attempt by sympathetic Senate lawmakers to add $1 billion to the agency’s budget request fails in conference with the House, according to Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Tex.), one of the amendment’s co-sponsors. Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) has spearheaded the “NASA Restoration Amendment” two years in a row, along with Hutchison and Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), as a one-time emergency reimbursement to help the agency recover from the lingering financial effects of the Columbia accident and Hurricane Katrina.

Northrop Grumman, whose Litening advanced targeting pod was recently a key element in Israel’s attack on a suspected nuclear site in Syria, won a contract to develop and deliver a new generation of data links for the system.

Edited by Edward H. Phillips
Northrop Grumman Corp. and Muba­dala Development Co. of Abu Dhabi have signed an agreement to collaborate on a series of high-technology aerospace and aviation educational and training programs as part of an effort by the United Arab Emirates to strengthen its economic development strategy. Areas of technological interest include UAVs, composites and program management.

Edited by Edward H. Phillips
Ethiopian Airlines has ordered 10 Cessna Skyhawk TDs equipped with optional Thielert turbo-diesel engines that can operate on Jet A-1 fuel instead of aviation gasoline. Plans call for the four-seat 172s to be operated as ab initio training aircraft, and Ethiopian Airlines is the first carrier to order the new Model 172S, says Bob Gibbs, Cessna’s director of international propeller aircraft sales. The engine, which develops 155 hp., is manufactured in Germany by Thielert Aircraft Engines.

Sunho Beck (Seoul)
South Korea will ask foreign partners to share development costs for its proposed KFX stealth fighter, moving beyond technical collaboration previously described. The foreign companies would pay for up to 30% of the program, says air force colonel Daeyeol Lee, head of the air system development team at Korea’s Agency for Defense Development. BAE Systems has expressed interest in developing the radar for the aircraft, Lee told a conference in Seoul.

The recent return of its DC-8 airborne science laboratory signals a consolidation of flight research aircraft by NASA Dryden Research Center in California. The DC-8’s assignments vary but often center on Earth and environmental observations. Its instrument package includes an early synthetic aperture radar developed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory that was used to observe the reentry of the Stardust comet sample return spacecraft when it arced across the Western U.S. night sky and settled into the Utah desert in January 2006.

Raanan I. Horowitz (see photo) has been appointed president/CEO of Elbit Systems of America . He succeeds Joseph A. Parini, who was interim president/CEO and will continue as chairman. Horo­witz was executive vice president/general manager of Elbit subsidiary EFW Inc.

David Buchanan (see photo) has become head of the aviation insurance department of the Kemmons Wilson Cos. , Memphis, Tenn.

Undercover Government Accountability Office agents passed undetected through airport security checkpoints with components of improvised explosive devices and an incendiary device hidden in their carry-on bags or on their persons. The tests were conducted at 19 U.S. airports between March and June.

James F. Albaugh, president/CEO of Boeing Integrated Defense Systems, has been named as the 2007 recipient of the Southern California Aeronautic Assn. ’s Howard Hughes Memorial Award. The annual award recognizes aerospace leaders for contributions to the advancement of aviation and space technology.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
Opening up military airspace off the East Coast will be one of the Transportation Dept.’s holiday gifts to the nation. Secretary Mary Peters says opening two airways in restricted military airspace for a five-day period, Nov. 21-25, will alleviate delays up and down the East Coast during the busy Thanksgiving weekend. It will be the first time the Transportation Dept. has negotiated with the military for use of the airspace before a holiday; currently, the department has access to the airspace during weather events on an as-needed basis.

George M. Milne, Jr., a venture partner of Radius Ventures and former vice president-research and development for Pfizer Inc., has been elected a director of the corporation of Draper Laboratory , Cambridge, Mass. New members of the corporation are: Wendy Abt, president of WPA Inc. and former managing general partner of the Kellett Group; Wanda M. Austin, president/CEO-elect of The Aerospace Corp. and former member of the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board; Dennis Fitzgerald, former principal deputy director of the National Reconnaissance Office; Lena G.

Brent Smith has been appointed chief financial officer of Executive Jet Management of Cincinnati. He was vice president-financial planning and analysis.