_Aerospace Daily

By Jefferson Morris
BALTIMORE, Md. - A group of stakeholders in the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) industry voted to begin the process of developing consensus standards for UAV systems during a meeting here July 15. ASTM International ran the meeting and also will lead the effort. In existence for more than a century, ASTM specializes in helping industries develop and write consensus technical standards. Supporters hope that the development of UAV standards will lead to regulation and certification of UAVs for flights within the national airspace (DAILY, July 8).

Staff
LRIP CONTRACT: Lockheed Martin will begin production of six MH-60R helicopters for the U.S. Navy under a second low-rate initial production contract (LRIP), the company said July 15. The LRIP contract includes the initial release of $17 million to buy long-lead components. Full funding for the LRIP 2 contract, which calls for six aircraft, is expected to be part of the fiscal 2004 defense budget later this year, Lockheed Martin said. Four engineering and manufacturing development and five LRIP 1 aircraft have been built.

Staff
Goodrich Corp. will install its Integrated Mechanical Diagnostics, Health & Usage Management Systems (IMD-HUMS) on U.S. Navy MH-60R and MH-60s helicopters, the company said July 14. The installation on the newest variants of the Sea Hawk helicopter are part of a modification to a contract awarded in 1997, the company said. It expects to have test aircraft outfitted at the Patuxent River, Md., test facility early next year.

Rich Tuttle
The Boeing Co. is in line to produce seven new CH-47F Chinook helicopters, a move that would help offset a reduction in the existing fleet caused by upgrading Chinooks to more capable models for special operations duties. A Boeing spokesman said the seven could be followed by additional new CH-47Fs, but this depends on funding.

By Jefferson Morris
PATUXENT RIVER, Md. - The Department of Defense plans to deploy some of its unmanned aerial vehicles with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to help train border patrol and transportation security personnel on UAV operations. The deployment, set to take place within the next few months somewhere along America's southern border, comes at the request of Gordon England, deputy secretary for homeland security at DHS and former secretary of the Navy.

Staff
July 7, 2003 MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY

Staff
RAINBOW LAUNCH: International Launch Services (ILS) is scheduled to launch the Rainbow 1 satellite for Cablevision Systems Corp. on July 17, ILS said July 14. The third Atlas V launch will mark the debut of the booster's 521 configuration, which includes two Aerojet strap-on solid rocket motors. Lockheed Martin Commercial Space Systems Co. built the Rainbow 1 direct-broadcast satellite.

Staff
GOLDEN EYE: Aurora Flight Sciences' GoldenEye unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) is still awaiting its first flight at company facilities in Manassas, Va., while engineers continue to tweak the aircraft's thrust vectoring system and work to integrate its avionics. First flight is expected within a few weeks. The flight will be a low-altitude hover lasting three to five minutes, most likely followed by some slow-speed sideward and rearward flight.

Staff
X-31 AWARD: The Boeing Co. and the X-31A team will receive the von Karman award from the International Council of the Aeronautical Sciences (ICAS) at a July 15 ceremony in Dayton, Ohio, the company said July 14. The X-31A, an international experimental aircraft, was designed with a thrust vectoring control system to make it more maneuverable.

Staff
Northrop Grumman Corp. said July 14 it has received a contract from the U.S. Space and Naval Warfare (SPAWAR) Systems Center to continue research and development work on one of the Navy's primary command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (C4ISR) systems. The $3 million, five-year contract could be worth nearly $17 million if all four contract options are exercised.

Staff
U.S. Army Space Command probably will be renamed Army Strategic Command to reflect its revised list of responsibilities, according to Army Lt. Gen. Joseph Cosumano, who heads the command.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE - The 32nd tactical air force base in Namest nad Oslavou effectively will close later this year as part of wide-ranging army reforms designed to cope with planned cuts in the Czech military budget.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - India has ordered 36 Smerch multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS) worth $450 million from Russia, and Russia has agreed to sell them, according to an Indian defense ministry official. The systems, which can strike targets up to 90 kilometers (56 miles) away, are to be deployed along the border with Pakistan. India already has deployed short-range Prithvi missiles along the border.

Stephen Trimble
Upgrading "bunker buster" munitions so they can report back as they strike hardened or buried targets is the goal of a new U.S. Air Force development effort beginning this week. The idea behind the effort, called the Fuze Integrated Bomb Damage Information Demonstration (FIBDID), is to insert a wireless transmitter in the warhead's fuze and a repeater device that ejects before the munition strikes the target, said Steve Smith, program director at the Air Force Research Laboratory's Munitions Directorate at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.

Nick Jonson
The "Buy American" provisions inserted into the House fiscal 2004 Defense Appropriations bill could hurt suppliers of space components and parts as much as suppliers of military aerospace products, according to analysts. Many U.S. manufacturers and suppliers of launch vehicles and satellites have become dependent upon parts and components made in Canada, Germany, France, Spain, Britain, Italy and even Russia, said James Lewis, senior fellow and director of technology policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Marc Selinger
A House panel plans to consider the fiscal 2004 NASA appropriations bill this week, the first time lawmakers will take up major legislation for the agency since investigators scrutinized the Feb. 1 loss of the Columbia space shuttle. Meanwhile, the Senate late July 14 began debate on the FY '04 defense appropriations bill, the final step for the legislation before it heads to a conference with the House.

Stephen Trimble
As Congress begins a review of a $15.5 billion U.S. Air Force proposal to lease 100 Boeing 767-200 tankers, the service's top weapons buyer said a more affordable multi-year procurement is not feasible. Marvin Sambur, assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition, on July 14 presented details of the 13-page briefing on the proposed deal that was sent to Congress July 11 (DAILY, July 14). "Financially, what we showed here is that leasing is not a dumb thing to do," Sambur told reporters at a Pentagon briefing.

Staff
CCIS TRIALS: EDO Corp. of New York has completed sea-acceptance trials of its Command, Control and Information System (CCIS) aboard three Norwegian Coast Guard vessels, the company said July 11. The exercises, conducted in June, complete the program's 18-month delivery and acceptance schedule, the company said. A fourth Norwegian ship under contract for CCIS installation is scheduled to begin its modernization in 2004.

Staff
PROBABLE CAUSE: With its on-site investigation in Hawaii completed, the NASA five-member Mishap Investigation Board probing the loss of the Helios unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) now is turning its attention to determining the probable cause of the June 26 accident, according to NASA. The 247-foot solar-electric Helios flying wing was performing test flights at the Navy's Pacific Missile Range Facility in Kauai to demonstrate a prototype fuel cell system.

Staff
CHANGING ROLE: The Joint Staff's role in the weapons acquisition system has changed, the Pentagon says. The Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS) now is in effect, replacing the Requirements Generation System. That means that obtaining the Joint Staff's seal of approval for a weapons program has changed from being one of the last steps in the acquisitions process to being one of the first. The process also requires the Joint Staff to identify and describe capabilities gaps in U.S.

Marc Selinger
The Senate Appropriations Committee has added $202 million to the Coast Guard's $500 million fiscal 2004 budget request for the Deepwater modernization effort, an increase that proponents say is needed to keep the program on track.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Defense Department says several of its missile defense and space programs will be delayed or constrained if Congress approves certain proposals that lawmakers are considering as part of the fiscal 2004 defense authorization bill.