Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Fabey
ABOARD THE USS FREEDOM — A core crew size of 53 appears to suit the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS-1) Freedom just fine, says Cmdr. Patrick Thien, the ship’s commanding officer. “This is the right crew size and I think we’ve got the right mix,” Thien said Dec. 13 as Freedom approached the Navy port in Pearl Harbor en route to San Diego to finish off the ship’s first Western Pacific deployment.
Defense

Andy Savoie
ARMY
Defense

Graham Warwick
With $37 million of congressionally directed funding to spend on improving energy efficiency, the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) is seeking proposals for fuel-saving technology demonstrations. The funding would help manufacturers and others conduct demonstrations to mature technologies to reduce fuel consumption, drag and weight to a manufacturing readiness level high enough for them to be considered for future acquisition programs, AFRL says in a new solicitation.
Defense

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Frank Morring, Jr.
NASA evaluators have selected SpaceX to lease and convert historic Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center for commercial spaceflight operations, waiting less than 24 hr. after the U.S. Government Accountability Office rejected a bid-process protest from Blue Origin. In what has been referred to as the “battle of the billionaires,” SpaceX founder Elon Musk trumped Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, who has bankrolled Blue Origin’s efforts to develop commercial orbital and suborbital human launch systems.
Space

U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
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Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — A U.S. International Space Station astronaut on Dec. 13 expressed confidence in NASA’s spacesuits and spacewalk procedures if they become an essential part of a strategy to resolve a cooling system problem that surfaced earlier this week, forcing a shutdown of some non-critical electrical systems and science experiments aboard the six-person lab.
Space

Graham Warwick
In a bid to boost the ability to track orbital debris that could endanger satellites, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is seeking methods for the uncued detection of objects in low-inclined low Earth orbit (LILO). The LILO project is part of Darpa’s OrbitOutlook (O2) program to bolster the U.S. Space Surveillance Network (SSN) with new sensor, database and validation capabilities. The SSN is tasked with observing and tracking space objects.

Staff
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Graham Warwick
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) has demonstrated a complete sense-and-avoid system on its Predator B unmanned aircraft, generating test data that will help the FAA and industry develop standards for integrating UAVs into civil airspace. The test demonstrated both the short-term collision avoidance and longer-term self-separation functions required of an unmanned-aircraft sense-and-avoid architecture, the company says.
Defense

Anthony Osborne
The Norwegian parliament has approved plans to accelerate the country’s procurement of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. Ministers gave the green light to buy six F-35s for 4 billion Krone ($654.7 million). The approval means that Norway is now signed up for 16 F-35A Lightning IIs. Four were ordered back in 2011, and the other six earlier this year.
Defense

Graham Warwick
Lockheed Martin is to deliver a 60-kw ruggedized laser that will enable the U.S. Army and Boeing to demonstrate the lethal potential of the truck-mounted High-Energy Laser Mobile Demonstrator (HEL MD) in 2017, on the path to a 100-kw version planned to be tested by 2022. The HEL MD shot down both 60mm mortar rounds and tactical unmanned aircraft using a 10-kw off-the-shelf industrial laser in six weeks of testing at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., that ended on Dec. 12. This followed low-power testing with a surrogate laser in 2011.
Defense

Michael Fabey
The Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) remote minehunting system (RMS) recently successfully completed developmental testing, U.S. Navy officials say. The RMS consists of the remote multi-mission vehicle (RMMV) and the towed AN/AQS-20A variable-depth sonar. The system’s purpose is to provide detection, classification, and localization of bottom, close-tethered, and volume mines in a single pass, as well as provide identification of bottom mines.
Defense

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) Jan. 21, 2014 — U.S. - Austria Defense Industry Day, Embassy of Austria, Washington, D.C. For more information go to www.ndia.org/meetings/4770/Pages/default.aspx Jan. 22 - 24 — Fifth Decennial AHS Aero-Mechanics Specialists' Conference, Holiday Inn, Fisherman's Wharf, San Francisco, Calif. For more information go to http://vtol.org/events/fifth-decennial-ahs-aeromechanics-specialists-co…

Frank Morring, Jr.
ON HOLIDAY: The U.S. House of Representatives recessed for the holidays without taking up a Senate version of legislation to extend third-party indemnification for the space-launch industry, but contracts already in the works will not be affected when indemnification expires at year-end. Both houses of Congress have adopted extensions of indemnification, which protects launch companies if third parties are injured in a launch failure. But the House bill extends indemnification for only one year, while a Senate measure adopted Dec. 12 would grant a three-year extension.
Space

Anthony Osborne
LONDON — Bond Air Services has grounded its U.K. fleet of Eurocopter EC135 twin-engine light helicopters for precautionary testing. The company, which is part of the Avincis Group, grounded 22 aircraft in the U.K., affecting air ambulance and law enforcement operations around the country. According to Bond, the tests involved work on the function and accuracy of the fuel indicator system on the helicopter. The operator said it had identified a number of aircraft with a fuel indication anomaly.

By Thierry Dubois
ZURICH — Solar Impulse is well into the final assembly process of HB-SIB, the aircraft that is to fly around the world using solar power only.
Air Transport

Mark Carreau
MMT deferred a “go/no go” decision on resupply mission
Space

By Jen DiMascio
Singapore’s defense minister provided a fairly lukewarm description of the island nation’s interest in the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, saying twice that the military is in “no particular hurry” to buy the advanced fighter. “We’re in no particular hurry, because our F-16s are still very operational, and they’re due for upgrades,” Ng Eng Hen said during a Dec. 12 press briefing with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel. “It is a serious consideration.”
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
Iraq has ordered 24 light attack fighters based on supersonic trainer
Defense

AWIN, Avascent Analytics
Click here to view the pdf Selected Asia-Pacific Countries Aviation And Ship Defense Acquisition,Fiscal 2009-2023 Selected Asia-Pacific Countries Aviation And Ship Defense Acquisition, Fiscal 2009-2023 Country Size Of Existing Inventory (
Defense

Michael Fabey
Helicopter pilots of the U.S. Army’s 25th Combat Aviation Brigade (25th CAB) participated in recent training operations with the U.S. Navy’s Pearl Harbor-based guided-missile cruiser CG-70 USS Lake Erie, as the two services hone their joint operating skills and concepts. Army pilots landed OH-58D Kiowa Warrior armed reconnaissance helicopters and UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters aboard Lake Erie while a mixed flight deck crew of sailors and soldiers performed standard flight deck operations, Navy officials report.
Defense

AWIN Analysis of Avascent Analytics Data
Click here to view the pdf Selected Asia-Pacific Countries Aviation And Ship Defense Acquisition,Fiscal 2009-2023 Selected Asia-Pacific Countries Aviation And Ship Defense Acquisition, Fiscal 2009-2023 Country Size Of Existing Inventor
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — A squeeze in India’s defense budget will hinder all future research and development projects, the chief of the state-run Defense Research & Development Organization (DRDO) says. “We need to make sure that R&D funding is not just maintained but enhanced,” says Avinash Chander, who is also the scientific adviser to the defense minister. “We may be able to meet the present requirement, but any squeeze will keep us out of next-generation products such as multi-static radars, which require high investments.”
Defense