Aviation Week & Space Technology

By Irene Klotz, Jen DiMascio
Awards tallying nearly $2.3 billion go to ULA, Northrop Grumman and Blue Origin.
Commercial Space

By Steve Trimble
Boeing fears that a major CH-47 upgrade could be delayed as the U.S. Army looks for budget savings.
Aircraft & Propulsion

Our roundup of the main aerospace and defense stories making the news this week.
First Take

By Jen DiMascio, Steve Trimble, Lee Hudson
The U.S Army has multiple modernization programs underway, including long-range precision fires, future rotorcraft and tactical UAVs. Listen in as our editors discuss.
Check 6

By Jen DiMascio
Embraer aims to get KC-390 flight-test program back on track; India buys S-400s; Poland buys countermeasure system, and Philippines equips helos with torpedoes.
Defense and Space

By Steven Grundman
A convergence of indicators suggests the recently passed defense appropriations act will mark the apex for U.S. defense spending.
Defense and Space

Readers address conjecture about an F-16 mishap attributed to Automatic Stall Recovery System; defend Trump's NATO stance; urge a rethink of retiring J-Stars.
Feedback

By Bill Carey
Operational trial of oceanic surveillance system expected to begin next year in Caribbean region.
Air Transport

Upcoming aviation and aerospace industry events and Aviation Week Network events.

By Lee Hudson, Graham Warwick
Release of the Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft solicitation puts the U.S. Army’s requirement for an armed scout at the front of its rotary-wing needs.
Defense and Space

Recent appointments, promotions and honors in the aviation and aerospace industry.

By Jens Flottau
Faury has been a driver of that approach. But whether that low-risk, low-investment answer will be enough in the long term is already in doubt.
Air Transport

By Bradley Perrett
Two LE-9 expander bleed engines have run, one for 1,000 sec. The H3 launcher project is on schedule.
Space

By Irene Klotz
Hayabusa2 is to depart Ryugu in late 2019 and parachute samples from the asteroid down to Earth in December 2020.
Space

By Michael Bruno
In hypersonics, it is hard to know which is going faster, the hype or the reality. But increasingly, investors could be betting on the latter.
Defense and Space

By Steve Trimble, Guy Norris
Pieces of the complex U.S. hypersonic development jigsaw are coming together as the Pentagon places reliance on heritage design for common-boost glide concept.
Air Dominance

By Thierry Dubois
Thanks to Hexcel opening a new factory in France, European industry gains complete autonomy in carbon-fiber supply.
Air Transport

By Helen Massy-Beresford
As Primera Air learned the hard way, in an era of high jet fuel prices unless they have new and efficient fleets, long-haul budget airlines are doomed.
Air Transport

Jim Wininger and Mike Goldberg
Five rules for portfolio-shaping.
Defense and Space

By Guy Norris
GE’s oldest widebody engine family enjoys a comeback amid buoyant cargo market and reengining study.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Irene Klotz
NASA chief Jim Bridenstine aims to bridge partisan divide with political know-how.
Space

By Guy Norris
GE hits halfway mark in engine certification program as delivery of first production-compliant GE9X to Boeing nears for 777-9.
Optimizing Engines Through the Lifecycle

Flight-testing the world’s largest engine requires precise control and a thorough buildup approach, says GE Flight Test Operations chief test pilot Jon Ohman.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Bradley Perrett
Japan’s solid-propellant rocket is moving quickly from one version to the next. A new first stage will be the solid-propellant booster from H3.
Space

By Graham Warwick
From communities isolated by poor roads to heart-attack victims and affluent golfers, pilot projects are exploring the value of drone delivery.
Aerospace