ITT Industries' Avionics Division is working under a $45 million contract to equip Army Special Operations aircraft with its AN/ALQ-211 electronic protection set, the Suite of Integrated RF Countermeasures (SIRFC) system.
May 13 -- National Defense Industrial Association presents U.S.-India Defense Industry Seminar - U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 1615 H Street, NW, Washington, DC. For more information contact Jim Linden at (703) 247-9464 or email [email protected]. May 13 -- Aviation Week presents Fast-Track Growth Conference, Hyatt Regency, New York, NY. For more information go to www.AviationNow.com/conferences
Senate Commerce space subcommittee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) says NASA should set a goal of landing a person on Mars, but NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe believes his agency must overcome two "showstoppers" before it can talk about a human space flight to the red planet. At a subcommittee hearing May 8, Wyden urged NASA to commit to putting a person on Mars, saying NASA should work with Congress to "set a date" for meeting that goal.
NEW POSITION: A new organization is being created within the Advanced Concept Technology Demonstration (ACTD) program, says Sue Payton, the deputy undersecretary of defense for advanced systems and concepts. Funding for ACTD programs is intended to "fast track" maturing technologies onto the acquisition path. Many ACTDs have become full-scale acquisition programs, like the Predator and Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicles. Other programs, however, have not been able to make the transition successfully.
The Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) approved a fiscal 2003 defense authorization bill late May 9 that cuts the Bush Administration's missile defense request by $812 million but adds $240 million for the Navy to buy 48 Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornets instead of 44. The missile defense reduction led eight of 12 SASC Republicans to vote against the bill. Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), the panel's ranking Republican, said the cut "undermines" President Bush's "fundamental priorities."
The Department of Defense ordered all development work on the DD(X) family of ships to cease until the General Accounting Office weighs in on a dispute over the selection process, according to a Navy spokesman. Navy officials awarded a $2.9 billion contract to the "Gold Team" of Northrop Grumman's Ingalls Shipbuilding and Raytheon on April 29 to develop and test 13 DD(X) engineering prototypes by 2005.
AUTOROTATION: An inability to perform an autorotative landing is not the "fatal flaw" of the V-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft, according to Chief Test Pilot Tom MacDonald. In an autorotative descent, a helicopter that has lost engine power uses the natural pinwheel-like spinning of its rotor to provide a cushion for landing. "The autorotation is a big issue with people that don't understand the V-22 ... and consider that to be a fatal flaw, and it really is not," MacDonald says.
The Navy is funding the development of a narrowband optical filter that would permit visible and near-infrared lidar (light detection and ranging) systems to operate during the daytime. When deployed on surveillance aircraft such as the P-3 Orion, the system would equalize daytime and nighttime performance, according to Richard Billmers, vice president of research and development for RL Associates. The company has been developing the system under a Phase II Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant from the Navy.
NASA is exploring bartering arrangements with the international space community to provide a launch opportunity for the mothballed Triana remote sensing spacecraft, according to the agency's head of Earth science. Triana, which originally was to be deployed from the space shuttle's payload bay as part of the STS-107 mission, has not been able to find another launch opportunity because NASA has scaled back shuttle launches from six a year to four. In the meantime, the spacecraft is in a storage container at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
NO WORKAROUND: The Navy had no role in the House Armed Services Committee's recent decision to allocate additional money for a third DDG-51 destroyer and does not "work around the president's budget," Navy Secretary Gordon England says. "I repeat, we do not work around the president's budget," England says of the HASC's decision to allocate $800 million for a third DDG-51 destroyer in the proposed fiscal 2003 defense budget. The allocation is contingent on the Navy, the Boeing Co.
NEW DELHI - French aircraft engine manufacturer Société Nationale d'Etude et de Construction de Moteurs d'Aviation (Snecma) is opening an Indian subsidiary called Snecma Aerospace India Pvt. Ltd (SAI). SAI will develop engine components, equipment and software for airborne weapon platforms used by the Indian armed forces, said an India representative of Snecma.
A proposed integration of Marine Corps and Navy aviation will reduce the number of Joint Strike Fighters procured in future years, Secretary of the Navy Gordon England said May 9, adding that the JSF is partly a victim of its own success. The integration would be made possible by the technologies that emerged with the development of the JSF, he told defense reporters in Washington.
As the Department of Defense looks at the lessons learned from Afghanistan, the advanced concept technology demonstration (ACTD) program, which provides funding to "fast track" maturing technologies, is trying to field systems that fit the military's vision of future wars.
The State Department recently announced that Bahrain has been designated as a "Major Non-NATO ally," providing the Middle Eastern country with special status and privileges under the Arms Export Control Act. The new status, which took effect March 14, allows Bahrain to be granted priority delivery of excess defense articles; stockpiling of U.S. defense articles; purchase of depleted uranium anti-tank rounds; and participation in the Department of Defense's cooperative research and development programs.
RELOCATION: Northrop Grumman Corp.'s Integrated Systems sector will relocate its headquarters from Irving, Texas, to El Segundo, Calif., by the end of the year to be closer to some of the company's 'most dynamic and promising programs,' including the Joint Strike Fighter and unmanned systems, the company said.
Two more Defense Department programs are likely to get fiscal year 2002 funding as Advanced Concept Technology Demonstrations, according to the head of the program. Fifteen ACTD candidates were provided funding this year. An additional three were approved, but no funding was available in March, when the ACTD was announced.
(Editor's note: The following is excerpted from written testimony NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe submitted to the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation's subcommittee on science, technology and space. He testified May 8).
PRAGUE - BAE Systems welcomed a May 9 decision by the Czech parliament to finance the purchase of 24 Jas-39 Gripen fighters. The government-sponsored bill, which allows the state to buy the Gripen fighters through a combination of loans and industry privatization proceeds, passed with a majority of nine votes. The Czech senate must take up the bill within 30 days.
The third public meeting of the Commission on the Future of the U.S. Aerospace Industry, to be held in Washington May 14, will hear testimony and conduct deliberations on space policy, industrial base and workforce issues. During the all-day meeting at the Commerce Department's headquarters, the commission will hear testimony from NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe, NORAD Commander-in-chief Gen. Ed Eberhart, Spectrum Astro President W. David Thompson, and Lockheed Martin Aerospace President Dain Hancock, among others.
Lockheed Martin has delivered the first of 14 new Block 50 single-seat F-16s to the U.S. Air Force, the company announced May 9. The aircraft will be used for suppression of enemy air defense (SEAD) and to sustain the Air Force's multirole fighter force structure. Ten of the aircraft were procured in fiscal year 2000 and four in FY '01. They will be delivered at a rate of one or two a month through December 2002.
The House was expected late May 9 to add $135 million to the Bush Administration's fiscal 2003 defense budget request for the Arrow and Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) missile defense systems. The increase, in the form of an amendment to the FY '03 defense authorization bill, would add $65 million for PAC-3 to increase missile procurement from 72 to 96. It also would add $70 million to help establish U.S. co-production of the Israeli missile used in the Arrow system.
Rocket motor and munition maker Alliant Techsystems (ATK) reported a 34 percent increase in net profits for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2002. The acquisitions of ATK Thiokol Propulsion and the Federal and CCI/Speer ammunition businesses, as well as higher sales of small-caliber and medium-caliber ammunition, were the principal factors behind the boom, company officials said May 9.
General Dynamics' Bath Iron Works has filed a protest with the General Accounting Office over the evaluation process the Navy used to select a rival contractor team for the DD(X) program, saying it was unfair. "After careful review of the facts provided during the Navy's debriefing, it is obvious to us that the selection process was not consistent with the established evaluation criteria, and thereby gave an unfair advantage to the Gold Team," Bath Iron Works President Allan Cameron said in a May 9 statement.