The U.S. honed its littoral combat skills and continued to strengthen its Asian ties this past month with additional Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (Carat) exercises.
LONDON — The Royal Australian Navy’s first Sikorsky MH-60R Seahawk helicopter has made its first flight. The Seahawk made the flight on June 26 at Sikorsky’s facilities in Stratford, Conn. The aircraft will now be transferred to Lockheed Martin’s facility in Owego, N.Y., where it will be equipped with a mission system and sensors. Three more MH-60Rs for the Australian navy are currently in various stages of assembly at Sikorsky’s facilities, Australia’s defense ministry says. The first two aircraft are set for delivery in December 2013.
GeoMetWatch, a startup that is building on its engineers’ experience developing an unflown government hyperspectral weather sounder to produce commercial weather hosted payloads, has entered a Space Act Agreement (SAA) with NASA to exchange data from orbit for surplus hardware and calibration services.
In observance of the U.S. Independence Day holiday, Aerospace Daily & Defense Report will not publish issues dated July 4 and July 8. Subscribers to the Aviation Week Intelligence Network can visit www.aviationweek.com/awin for continuous updates.
FIREWORKS: A long-anticipated Missile Defense Agency test of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) program is planned for July 5. The operational test will gauge the first-generation Capability Enhancement I Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle, currently deployed in Alaska and California. The interceptor will fly from Vandenberg AFB, Calif., to knock down a target from Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands. The GMD program had suffered a series of test failures before scoring a successful test in January.
As budgets in the U.S., Israel and across Europe contract, growth in global defense spending over the next four years will be concentrated in developing countries, according to a Global Defense Outlook report by Deloitte. Despite an overall contraction in defense spending by countries with large gross domestic products (GDP), those nations will still continue to invest in military equipment to address specific security concerns. For example, Japan will continue to invest in missiles, advanced fighter aircraft and helicopters.
NEW DELHI — India is trying to “fast track” production of its Tejas Light Combat Aircraft, producing 20 of the single-seat fighters over the next three years, despite lingering delays with the program, according to an official with the Defense Research Development Organization (DRDO). After several delays, the first of the indigenous LCAs, being developed for the Indian air force (IAF), is expected to fly out by the end of this year or the beginning of 2014. “The LCA project has been put on [the] fast track,” DRDO chief Avinash Chander says.
HOUSTON — International Space Station astronauts Chris Cassidy of NASA and Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency plan to further prepare the six-person orbiting laboratory for the arrival of Russia’s Nauka Multipurpose Laboratory Module (MLM) during a pair of July spacewalks that will include external alterations to ready the outpost for possible power and cooling system failures.
Pushing turbine engines to higher efficiencies and speeds, at lower weights and costs, for missiles, unmanned aircraft and space access are among objectives outlined in a new solicitation for Phase III of the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory-led Versatile Affordable Advanced Turbine Engine (Vaate) program. Vaate is a joint Defense Department/NASA/Energy Department/FAA/industry program aimed at providing a ten-fold increase in affordable turbo-propulsion capability by 2017, when compared to a year-2000 baseline engine.
STANDING DOWN: Jason-1, a Franco-U.S. ocean-topography spacecraft in operation since Dec. 7, 2001, has gone offline after its sole remaining transmitter failed on June 21. NASA and the French space agency CNES decommissioned the Earth-science bird after 11.5 years of service continuing the data set started in 1992 by Topex/Poseidon and continuing today with the Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason-2. Built by Thales Alenia Space, the 500-kg.
CHINA PENALTY: A former Republican senator who was once the chamber’s aviation subcommittee chairman says current lawmakers should consider penalties on Chinese imports due to the Asian country’s alleged cyber pilfering of intellectual property. “I don’t think that would get us a lot of money, but it would get us action,” says Slade Gorton, now a member of the Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property.
OHB System AG of Germany has signed an €816 million ($1.06 billion) contract with Germany’s defense procurement agency to develop the SARah satellite-based radar reconnaissance system. SARah aims to provide an enhanced follow-on to Germany’s five-satellite SAR-Lupe constellation, which became fully operational in 2008. Built by OHB System AG, SAR-Lupe, which utilizes one ground station, is slated to retire after November 2017.
Washington and Wall Street analysts are beginning to believe that another round of so-called sequestration budget cuts for fiscal 2014 will bring significant reductions to weapons systems as the Pentagon runs out of budget room to maneuver.
Boeing says a new approach to helicopter flight testing has proved successful following the on-time delivery to Canada of the first of 15 highly modified CH-47F Chinooks. Chinooks are assembled in Philadelphia, but flight testing of the Canadian CH-147F was relocated to Boeing’s Mesa, Ariz., plant for the first time “to take advantage of Mesa’s rotorcraft experience, combined with that at Philadelphia,” says Steve Parker, Chinook program manager for Canada and Italy.
LONDON — The European Commission (EC) has cleared General Electric’s planned acquisition of Italian aero-engine supplier Avio S.p.A., but the ruling comes with caveats concerning Avio’s involvement in the Eurofighter program. GE’s $4.3 billion purchase of Avio’s aerospace business from private equity firm Cinven Ltd, announced at the end of 2012, comes with requirements about the safeguarding of the joint Eurojet GmBH consortium, which builds the EJ200 engine for the Eurofighter aircraft.
GENUINE DISPLEASURE: A proposed acquisition rule from the Pentagon designed to combat counterfeit parts is drawing the U.S. technology industry’s ire, according to a statement from its lobby association.
PARIS — A Proton M/Block DM-03 rocket carrying three Russian Glonass navigation satellites veered wildly off course shortly after liftoff July 2, exploding into a fiery ball before crashing 2.5 km from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
With the growing proliferation of submarines around the world and the accompanying threat to the undersea dominance the U.S. Navy says it has and wants to maintain, the service is looking to identify and address antisubmarine warfare (ASW) gaps. To that end, the U.S. Naval War College (NWC) Gravely Naval Warfare Research Group conducted the Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) Integration and Interoperability (I&I) series of workshops to analyze gaps in the “ASW kill chain” and determine the effectiveness of current programs and policies.