Aviation Week & Space Technology

Frances Fiorino (Washington)
Helicopter operators are moving closer to reaping the benefits of ADS-B--a system that will "take the National Air Space and extend it out over the Gulf of Mexico."

Amy Butler (Washington)
The U.S. Air Force is confident a weapon designed for use in urban areas will produce the small, targeted amounts of collateral damage needed to kill insurgents without risking harm to nearby populations.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Hiring started out strong this year with airlines adding 867 new pilot positions in January, according to AIR Inc., an Atlanta-based career information service. Domestic airlines led the hiring with 393 posts, with majors following at 297 new jobs. Out of 102,085 pilots employed industry-wide, 6,608 are on furlough, 5,863 of them with majors. American leads the furlough count at 2,812, or 30.8% of its active pilots, followed by United, with 823, or 12% of its active pilots. AIR Inc.

Staff
Bruce D. Parker has become chairman/CEO of AirNet Systems Inc., Columbus, Ohio. He succeeds Joel E. Biggerstaff, who has resigned. Parker has been an AirNet director and is a retired senior vice president/chief information officer of United Airlines.

Staff
The tentative agreement between Comair and its pilots' group calls for 7.75-13% pay reductions and commits 40% of new uncommitted aircraft from parent Delta Air Lines to Comair in the first year of the contract. Under the four-year contract, Comair would be assured of 30% of the unassigned aircraft in the second year and 20% in the third year, but assurances would be void if Comair is sold. The agreement also maintains the current 15 70-seat aircraft fleet plan through Jan. 1, 2011. Pilots would receive a 1.5% pay increase each year for the next three years.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
Controllers are maneuvering the five NASA/University of California Themis auroral research spacecraft into alignment within their 1,250-117,000-mi. elliptical orbits, following launch from Cape Canaveral Feb. 17 on a United Launch Alliance Delta II booster (see photo). It is NASA's first five-satellite mission, and the first to investigate how Earth's auroras are triggered by the storage and release of energy in the magnetosphere.

Michael A. Taverna (Washington)
A broad deal between General Electric and SES will give regional satellite operators Asiasat and Star One freer reign to compete in their markets.

Staff
SES has improved return on equity to 13.5%, up from 11.2% in 2005, and raised net profit 14%, to €436 million ($573 million) on sales of €1.6 billion (up 28.4%, or 7.4% without New Skies). Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization im- proved 22.6% to €1.08 billion, and EBITDA margin on sales of services, due to strong cost-cutting, rose to 10.5% (see p. 44).

Staff
Indonesia has grounded seven Boeing 737-300s operated by budget carrier Adam Air after the fuselage of one of them bent in a hard landing. No one was hurt in the incident, which left the tail of the 13-year-old aircraft drooping. The airline blamed a sudden downdraft and heavy rain. One of the airline's 737-400s fell from its cruise altitude and crashed Jan. 1, killing all on board. The cause is still unknown.

Michael Mecham (San Francisco)
As the first step in expanding its long-haul fleet, British Airways says it will add four 777-200ERs to its fleet and hold four options. Deliveries are set for 2010. BA began buying the twin-engine 777 in 1991 and now has a fleet of 43, including 40 -200ERs with a mix of General Electric GE90 and Rolls-Royce Trent 800 engines. While it has not formally signed the new order, British Airways is negotiating with both GE and Rolls on the engine order. At list prices, the four aircraft are worth $800 million.

USN

Staff
USN Adm. Timothy J. Keating has been named commander of the Honolulu-based U.S. Pacific Command. Keating has been commander of Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command, Peterson AFB, Colo. Rear Adm. (lower half) Charles W. Martoglio has been appointed commander of Carrier Strike Group Seven, North Island, Calif. He has been senior military assistant to the secretary of the Navy at the Pentagon.

Staff
To submit Aerospace Calendar Listings, Call +1 (212) 904-2421 Fax +1 (212) 904-6068 e-mail: [email protected] Mar. 5-7--North Dakota Aviation Council's Upper Midwest Aviation Symposium. Ramkota Inn, Bismarck. Call +1 (701) 223-0441 or see www.ndac.aero/umas.htm Mar. 5-8--Fatigue Concepts' Short Course: "Fatigue, Fracture Mechanics and Damage Tolerance." Brentwood Inn, Houston. Also, Mar. 19-22--Fatigue Technology Inc., Seattle. Call +1 (916) 933-5000 or see www.fatcon.com

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
French armaments agency DGA says average program slippage dropped to 2.9 months last year from 3.1 months a year earlier. Associated penalties decreased, too. However, the rate at which delays add up are still higher than the figure two years ago (2.5 months) and well above the objective of 1.5 months. DGA chief Francois Lureau says he hopes to reach this target in 2007.

James Ott (Cincinnati)
A likely outgrowth of JetBlue's encounter with a New York ice storm that left aircraft and passengers stranded on taxiways for more than 5 hr. is a stronger industry focus on passenger rights.

Staff
Craig Saddler has been appointed president of Sydney-based Boeing Australia. He was chief financial officer for the 787 program. Saddler succeeds Andrew Peacock, who is retiring.

David A. Fulghum (Washington)
The U.S. Navy's "Advanced Super Hornet" will tie together an electronic attack system with a powerful new radar that would allow the aircraft to find, deceive and, perhaps, disable sophisticated, radar-guided air-to-air, surface-to-air and cruise missiles. Moreover, it could do so at ranges greater than that of new U.S. air-to-air and air-to-ground weapons.

Staff
The second of three Boeing 747 Dreamlifters has made its first flight in Taipei. The converted 747s will be used to ferry parts and assemblies among suppliers and to Boeing for final assembly for the 787 program.

Staff
The faulty solar arrays that plagued early versions of the Boeing 702 satellite continue to haunt the company long after it says the problem has been fixed. In a 10-K report to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission of its 2006 business activities, Boeing revealed it faces damages of as much as $760 million in lawsuits arrising from the 702 spacecraft's performance, plus another $215 million in a claim over its smaller 601 satellite. The 702 was developed by Hughes Satellite in the late 1990s and acquired when Boeing took over Hughes.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
In an indication that the Pentagon's interest in ever more effective UAVs is unwavering, SAIC received a $32-million contract to demonstrate long-endurance, airborne intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) payloads for combat operations. Moreover, terms of the agreement also require maturation from laboratory prototype to an acquisition-ready system. However, the ISR system is to be applicable to a range of suitable aircraft. The effort requires installation of the equipment and flight testing both in the U.S. and overseas.

Andy Nativi (Genoa)
A recent surge in orders could lift AgustaWestland to a new level of financial health, with a €3-billion turnover mark in sight by decade's end, say executives. The Italian helicopter maker, like its Eurocopter rival, is experiencing strength in both its military and commercial business. The 2006 full results will not be disclosed until parent Finmeccanica announces its own performance, but it's clear that AgustaWestland beat its positive 2005 results: Production values last year topped €2.6 billion ($3.4 billion), compared with €2.5 billion in 2005.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
France has issued a contract to Atos Origin for a demonstrator to test the operational viability of a Link 22 data relay. Link 22, a successor to the Link 16 currently employed, is being developed under the NATO Improved Link Eleven (Nile) program in order to beef up the interoperability of joint broadband communications. Atos will supply a full demonstration data link chain, including tactical processor, communications system, modem, router, radio, antenna and associated software, within 19 months for operational trials.

Staff
Japan Airlines says it will buy 10 Embraer 170s for its J-AIR subsidiary. The order, with options for five more of the regional jets, anticipates greater availability of slots from 2009 after expansion of Tokyo's Haneda airport.

Staff
The SunSailor unmanned solar-powered aircraft is being developed by Israel Aerospace Industries and Technion, the country's premier technical institution. Derivative UAVs will have longer flight endurance because they can absorb and store energy during the day and use it to propel the aircraft at night. IAI revealed a number of solar-powered UAV designs at the 47th Israeli aeronautics conference for flight and space sciences last week in Tel Aviv and Haifa. IAI officials also say they have joined a European consortium that is researching unmanned passenger aircraft.

Staff
Airbus is scheduled to open its engineering center in Mobile, Ala., on Feb. 26. The facility is part of the Airbus/EADS presence being built there with an eye on winning the U.S. Air Force KC-X tanker program. The 150 engineers at the site will be involved in A350XWB design work.

Douglas Barrie (London)
Classified imagery of a BAE Systems Hawk trainer reveals the extent of modifications made to the test aircraft for visual stealth and infrared countermeasures work. The aircraft was used for a series of trials to examine just how much the visual and infrared signature of an airframe could be reduced to increase platform survivability. At least part of the program was known by the name Chameleon. BAE refuses to discuss the work or to release imagery of the modified aircraft.