Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Graham Warwick
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Rolls-Royce is working on further upgrades to its long-running Model 250 small turboshaft engine series aimed at the U.S. Army Armed Aerial Scout and Navy unmanned aircraft system requirements. The company has provided an upgraded engine to Bell Helicopter to power a company-funded OH-58D Block 2 demonstrator.
Defense

Graham Warwick
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Rockwell Collins has demonstrated a synthetic-vision display for improved crew situational awareness in military helicopter cockpits. Generated from an onboard digital terrain and obstacle database, the three-dimensional head-down display was incorporated into the company’s Common Avionics Architecture System (CAAS) for flight tests on a U.S. Army Sikorsky UH-60L Black Hawk. The tests were conducted under a cooperative R&D agreement between the avionics manufacturer and the Army’s Aviation Applied Technology Directorate.
Defense

Amy Butler
Boeing’s decision to close down its Wichita facility, which was slated to handle military modifications for the KC-46A aerial refueler, has added some uncertainty and risk into the development effort, according to Maj. Gen. Christopher Bogdan, who oversees the U.S. Air Force program.
Defense

Click here to view the pdf

U.S. Government Accountability Office
Click here to view the pdf Cost Growth In Major U.S. Defense Acquisition Programs, 2011 Portfolio (Fiscal 2012 $ in millions) Cost Growth In Major U.S.
Defense

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI — India’s defense minister has directed the country’s army to restructure its acquisition procedures to improve oversight and speed purchases. On April 2, Defense Minister A.K. Antony met with top army officials led by service chief V.K. Singh to complete various proposals related to acquisition and procurement of equipment for the service.
Defense

David A. Fulghum
Airborne electronic attack in the U.S. is being overtaken by a new generation of threats including cyberattack, according to a new report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO).
Defense

Michael Fabey
The overall CVN-78 Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier program price tag is increasing roughly $2.2 billion — or about 5.5% — to $42.5 billion, the Pentagon estimates in its recent Selected Acquisition Report (SAR). The increase includes an additional $951 million for the application of revised escalation indices and another $811 million for revised estimates on non-recurring engineering, Dual-Band Radar (DBR), and construction performance variance for the Ford carrier, the SAR states.
Defense

Mark Carreau
Flight control teams in Moscow and Toulouse combed through International Space Station electrical data on April 2 in a bid to pinpoint the cause of a Russian power system failure that nearly prompted a premature jettison of the European Space Agency’s recently docked Automated Transfer Vehicle-3.
Space

Richard Mullins
The Pentagon’s annual cost-growth report to Congress looks better this year: three programs had critical breaches in 2011, but only because budget pressures severely cut their procurement plans.
Defense

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy’s proposed future DDG-51 Arleigh Burke-class destroyer program cost is dropping by $1.1 billion — or 1.2% — to roughly $88.4 billion because of multiyear-buy benefits and changes in the radar suite proposed for the Flight III model of the ship, the Pentagon says in its recent Selected Acquisition Report (SAR).
Defense

Mark Carreau
SUPERCOMPUTING: Rice University, partnered with IBM, is looking to a May start-up for a P-series Blue Gene supercomputer for collaborative research in the engineering disciplines, including aerospace, astronomy, particle physics, climate modeling, geophysics and medicine. “We are open to collaborations with government, industry and academia,” says Jade Boyd, a Rice spokesperson.
Space

Graham Warwick
The U.S. Defense Department plans to kick-start the domestic production of drop-in biofuels by co-funding the establishment of at least one regional supply chain using Defense Production Act Title III money. Title III, usually wielded to create or protect industrial capabilities critical to U.S. security, will be used to fund the construction or retrofit of one or more integrated biorefineries capable of producing at least 10 million gal. of fuel annually from domestic feedstocks.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The Australian government is moving forward with plans to upgrade its F/A-18E/F fleet with Growler electronic-attack equipment. The military already has taken 12 of its 24 aircraft wired for the electronic-attack system and now is laying the groundwork to equip them for the EA-18G role, although the final decision to do so will not come until later this year, says Defense Minister Stephen Smith.
Defense

Staff
SWEDISH SCANDAL: Swedish Defense Minister Sten Tolgfors has resigned over a Defense Research Agency program to build a weapons plant in Saudi Arabia. The secrecy of the deal has been highly controversial in Sweden since the effort became known.

Staff
APOLLO 11 SALVAGE: Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos may try to recover one or more of the F-1 rocket engines that powered Apollo 11 on its historic mission to the Moon in 1969. The engines were located with advanced sonar 14,000 ft. down in the Atlantic, where they fell with the Saturn V first stage that they powered, and Bezos hopes to raise them for restoration and display in a museum.

Amy Svitak
KOUROU, French Guiana — With three of the Automated Transfer Vehicle’s (ATV) five missions to the International Space Station (ISS) now behind it, the European Space Agency (ESA) is looking for an opportunity to advance the already cutting-edge platform—along with a means to pay for it.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
Three robotic probes are returning a wealth of data on impact craters for scientists, who are studying the craters in the same way that biologists study tree rings – for clues to the history of the objects they’re investigating.
Space

Staff
Click here to view the pdf

Staff
CLASSIFIED SCRUB: The U.S. Air Force has delayed the launch of the latest classified surveillance satellite for the National Reconnaissance Office to allow engineers more time to investigate an issue with the United Launch Alliance Delta IV rocket’s upper stage that was discovered during closeout inspections. Liftoff for NROL-25 is now set for April 2 at 4:04 p.m. PDT from Vandenberg AFB, Calif. The launch originally was scheduled for March 29.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The four core Eurofighter countries have awarded large support contracts to their respective national industrial champions to sustain the fighter aircraft for a further five years. The governments have put significant pressure on industry to bring down the cost of supporting the fighter aircraft as each looks for savings in its defense budget. The complexity of finding those savings led to some difficult negotiations before the deal was finalized.
Defense

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) Apr. 2 - 3 — Aviation Week Engine MRO Forum, Dallas Convention Center, Dallas, Tex. For more information go to www.aviationweek.com/events Apr. 4 - 5 — Aviation Week MRO Military, Dallas Convention Center, Dallas, Tex. For more information go to www.aviationweek.com/events

Staff
KILLING MEADS: The government has argued that the cost of ending the U.S. commitment to Lockheed Martin’s Medium Extended Air Defense System (Meads) was equal or nearly equal to paying to complete development of the missile through the end of fiscal 2013. But a group of senators who are trying to persuade the Pentagon to shift funding for the tri-national Meads program to the Raytheon Patriot system are casting doubt on the government’s position.

Graham Warwick
NASA is claiming a breakthrough in the design of supersonic aircraft, with wind-tunnel tests proving it is possible to design configurations that combine low sonic boom with low cruise drag, characteristics once thought to be mutually exclusive.