Aviation Week & Space Technology

Michael Mecham (Evendale and Peebles, Ohio)
General Electric is on track to complete ground and flight tests of the GE90-derived GEnx-1B for the Boeing 787 by midsummer in order to finish paperwork for FAA certification by Sept. 15.

Staff
Viking Air Ltd. plans to restart production of the de Havilland DHC-6 Twin Otter this month with first deliveries scheduled in 2009. The Twin Otter was last produced in 1988 by de Havilland Canada.

Michael A. Taverna (Paris)
French space agency CNES is embarking on a technology project that could lay the groundwork for a launcher dedicated to nanosatellites.

Staff
General Electric's Peebles, Ohio, facility is moving beyond its traditional role as an engine test center to assume responsibility for final assembly of large-fan engines, such as this GEnx. Unprecedented order rates across its product line--especially in large-fan GE90 and GEnxes--has prompted the company to reevaluate production workshares at its factories across the country (see p. 56).

Staff
Arianespace affiliate Starsem has set the first Soyuz launch of the year for May 22, with the first of two Globalstar replenishment payloads. It will be preceded by an Ariane 5 mission, carrying Intelsat's Galaxy 17 and the SES Astra 1L communications satellites, in early May. Earlier this month, Arianespace confirmed an order to launch two additional Intelsat spacecraft that had been previously earmarked for Sea Launch's Land Launch derivative.

Staff
Graeme Alexander (see photo) has been named chief financial officer of Intense Ltd., Glasgow, Scotland.

Staff
High-speed wind-tunnel testing is underway of a 1:16 scale model of the European Neuron unmanned combat air vehicle design. Saab, one of the primary partners in the Dassault-led initiative, ran the latest tests at the Forces Research Institute in Stockholm. The test was to assess aircraft handling throughout the flight envelope. Low-speed tests took place last year in Switzerland and last month in France. The full-sized Neuron is to measure 9.3 meters (30.5 ft.) long with a 12.5-meter wingspan.

Staff
Joe Bogosian (see photo) has become president/chief operating officer of the U.S. subsidiary of Paris-based Safran. He was assistant FAA administrator for the Office of International Aviation.

Robert Hammond (Holiday, Fla.)
Regarding the article on fuel filter failures (AW&ST Mar. 19/26, p. 38), as a fuel system engineer at an engine manufacturer, I have been closely involved with FAA certification of fuel pumps. Filters were certified as part of a pump, but dual filter sourcing was conducted by running additional tests. There are many tests required and by the time the engine is certified, it is pretty certain the bugs have been eliminated.

Edward H. Phillips (Dallas)
Officials of Goodrich Corp. and Pemco Aviation Services, two of the world's major players in airline and military MRO, are reaching out to their customers to meet their needs while simultaneously grappling with day-to-day cost and productivity issues.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
The International Air Transport Assn. says it gets along with the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of China better than with any other military service. That's convenient, since the military effectively owns China's highly restricted airspace, but it hardly fits with the traditional view of the PLA as secretive and uninterested in working with foreigners. IATA's director-general, Giovanni Bisignani, points to success in opening new routes across China during the past three years.

Staff
USAF Gen. (ret.) John A. Gordon has been appointed to the board of directors of the New York-based EDO Corp. He was homeland security adviser to President George W. Bush and had been deputy director of central intelligence.

Staff
Alliant Techsystems will spend about $100 million to buy employee-owned Swales Aerospace of Beltsville, Md., in a move designed to enhance the Minneapolis-based company's capabilities in the small-satellite and operationally responsive space arenas. The deal, subject to Hart-Scott-Rodino review and approval by Swales's employee shareholders, should close in about 30 days. ATK hopes to make itself more attractive to the Pentagon's operationally responsive space push by combining Swales's micro-satellite specialty with its own space-launch capabilities.

Staff
U.S. Air Force/Northrop Grumman Defense Support Program DSP 23 missile warning spacecraft is set for launch this summer from Cape Canaveral. The $400-million spacecraft will be the final in the DSP series as USAF transitions to the Sbirs system. But this satellite is to support warning and intelligence operations until about 2022. Infrared telescope is at the center, minus long barrel sunshade. Red-capped Los Alamos/Sandia nuclear explosion detectors are at the base of telescope.

Craig Deyerle (Niceville, Fla.)
I take issue with your writer Frank Morring, Jr.'s statement (AW&ST Mar. 19/26, p. 93) that reads: "The results provided another data point that the Earth's climate is warming as a result of human activities and the greenhouse gases they produce." The data may indicate the Earth is warming but say nothing about the cause. I request that Morring report facts and spare us the politically correct propaganda. Perhaps you can induce him to write on how the Vikings farmed in Greenland between 700-1000 A.D. until global cooling forced them to leave.

Staff
Paul O'Brien has been promoted to manager of product engineering from senior product engineer for Peterborough-based New Hampshire Ball Bearing's Astro Div.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Nine Star Alliance partners and BMI, a big winner in the prospective U.S.-European Union aviation agreement (AW&ST Apr. 2, p. 60), moved quickly to solidify their gains. On Apr. 2, they applied to the U.S. Transportation Dept. for antitrust immunity in operations between the U.S. and U.K., once the agreement takes effect Mar. 30, 2008. The department approved immunity in 2002, contingent on a U.S.-U.K. open skies agreement, which the new EU deal provides, and on a further review by the department, which is what the Star carriers are seeking.

Edited by Edward H. Phillips
COMP AIR AVIATION'S PROOF-OF-CONCEPT COMP AIR 12 turboprop business aircraft is being prepared to make its debut at the Sun 'N Fun show this month. Plans call for the airplane to be flown to Lakeland, Fla., on Apr. 17 and be on static display at the company's exhibit area throughout the week-long event.

Michael Mecham (San Francisco)
Exercising five of its 20 options, Japan Airlines has propelled Boeing's 787 to more than 500 orders, just 36 months after the program's launch. The distinction makes the 200-300-seat twin-aisle jet the fastest-selling in Boeing's history. By late last week, the company had 514 total firm orders from 43 customers. The 787 was launched Apr. 26, 2004, by a 50-aircraft order from JAL's rival, All Nippon Airways.

Kazuki Shiibashi (Tokyo)
Controllers trying to rescue Japan's Hayabusa space mission will count on solar radiation pressure to help control the attitude of the crippled craft, improving the chances of bringing it and an historic asteroid sample back to Earth. By taking into account the force of radiation on Hayabusa's solar panels, mission controllers will refine their attitude control maneuvers, conserving the small supply of xenon they've been ejecting from the spacecraft as a makeshift propellant.

Robert Wall (Paris), Andy Nativi (Genoa)
Germany and Italy will bolster reconnaissance capabilities for NATO forces in Afghanistan, with the much anticipated go-ahead for the deployment of manned and unmanned aircraft. Before the end of the month, the German air force hopes to have six reconnaissance Tornados operational. They deployed last week to the Mazar-e-Sharif air base in northern Afghanistan. NATO first requested the reconnaissance improvement in December.

Staff
The U.S. Air Force says all of its U-2s have been cleared to fly since Mar. 20 after the small fleet was grounded briefly. Pinhole leaks were found in the sump tanks, which feed fuel directly to the engine, on multiple aircraft. The leaks resulted from electrical arcing caused by chafing in nearby wiring. The grounding briefly affected intelligence collection ops in Iraq, but USAF officials say the high-flying U-2s have been back in service.

Staff
Eurofighter has begun a series of Typhoon test flights with an MBDA Meteor environmental data gathering missile, covering both fuselage and wing-station carriage. Two further contracts have been placed with Saab, extending the use of the Gripen as a test platform for the rocket-ramjet radar-guided Meteor missile until 2010. The trials include firing and radar tests in the U.K. and Sweden.

Staff
Private bidders attempting to take over Qantas reportedly are seeking ways around potential blockages by investment funds. Instead of demanding 90% of the shares for the deal to go ahead, they could settle for 80%.

Staff
Kurt Black has been appointed business development manager of Aerodyne Controls, Ronkonkoma, N.Y., a Circor Aerospace company. He was Eastern U.S. sales manager for sister company Circle Seal Controls, Corona, Calif.