Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Frank Morring, Jr.
Engineers and a former astronaut have started human-in-the-loop testing of the environmental control and life support system (ECLSS) for Bigelow Aerospace’s Sundancer inflatable orbital module, using a 90-cu.-meter chamber at the Orbitech facility in Madison, Wis.

David A. Fulghum
A plan being pushed by Defense Secretary Robert Gates to kill the post of assistant secretary of defense for networks and information integration (ASD-NII) and disperse functions of the Joint Staff’s J-6 office is a flawed concept, a former senior Pentagon civilian says.

Michael Bruno
U.S. State and Defense department officials are detailing a long-expected foreign military sale to Saudi Arabia, including 84 new Boeing F-15SA “Saudi Advanced” fighters with APG-63(v)3 active, electronically scanned array (AESA) radars, as well as upgrades to 70 existing F-15s.

Asia-Pacific Staff
NEW DELHI — The Indian air force is gearing up to field a raft of new air defense equipment and address longstanding concerns about the existing inventory. New Delhi has long worried about gaps, and in areas where it has fielded air defense systems, the equipment is often out of date.

By Joe Anselmo
Boeing’s defense unit reported a 23% decline in third-quarter operating profit as a strong performance by its global services and support business was not enough to offset the whiplash from Pentagon budget cuts. Operating earnings in the company’s Defense, Space & Security sector declined to $684 million in the quarter ended Sept. 30, from $885 million a year earlier, as profits fell 35% in the military aircraft business and 40% in network and space systems. Total revenues in the defense unit were down 6%, to $8.2 billion.

Staff
SUBSONIC PROJECT: NASA’s Subsonic Fixed Wing Project is seeking research proposals that develop improved prediction methods and technologies for lower noise, lower emissions, and higher performance for subsonic aircraft. The agency says the aim is to develop the enabling technology to meet specific long-term goals to reduce noise and emissions, improve aircraft fuel burn efficiency, and allow for the use of shorter runways at smaller airfields. Proposals are due Nov. 30. More information can be found at http://nspires.nasaprs.com.

Paul McLeary
A new U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report criticizes the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for failing to effectively monitor Boeing’s work on the stalled SBInet program, and missing cost and schedule targets.

Staff
Six new Globalstar satellites are in orbit following launch on a Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 1:10 p.m. EDT. Managed by Arianespace affiliate Starsem, the mission deployed the spacecraft in a 920-km. (570-mi.) circular phasing orbit inclined 52 deg. in a two-step process from a specially built dispenser (Aerospace DAILY, Feb. 25).

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — After years of vacillation and wrangling, India is now set to sign a $2-billion deal with Dassault to upgrade 51 aging Mirage 2000 fighters to the 2000-5 standard. The deal is expected to be signed Dec. 6 when French President Nicolas Sarkozy visits India. Ahead of Sarkozy’s trip, Adm. Edouard Guillaud, French chief of defense staff, will be in India on Oct. 23 to discuss bilateral defense cooperation.

Robert Wall
LONDON — As part of its 8% cut in planned defense spending, the U.K. will retire a slew of aircraft early and revamp its modernization plans.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The U.S. Air Force expects to commence follow-on operational test and evaluation of the F-22 with the Increment 3.1 upgrade package in January, with the goal of fielding new features such as synthetic aperture radar, electronic attack and the GBU-39 Small-Diameter Bomb (SDB) next year. The test phase will take place at Nellis AFB, Nev., says USAF Maj. James Akers, Air Combat Command’s F-22 requirements officer.

Michael A. Taverna
PARIS — NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen says he hopes the tripartite German-French-Russian summit that started Oct. 18 in Deauville, France, will help convince the Russians to join with NATO in establishing a ballistic missile defense (BMD) initiative. He also suggests that other nations, including China, should be brought into the security partnership dialogue.

Robert Wall
LONDON — Even before the British government unveiled the findings of its Strategic Defense and Security Review, Qinetiq says a major training program is being scrapped. Qinetiq is a stakeholder in the Metrix consortium that was named preferred bidder in 2007. It says that with the cancellation, it now faces a ₤37 million ($59 million) charge on costs already incurred. The Defense Training Review Package 1 program was to create a single vocational training center for all three armed services and run the facility over 30 years.

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — The seals on a leaky fuel line flange in Discovery’s Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) will be replaced, without an immediate affect on the scheduled Nov. 1 liftoff, NASA managers decided Oct. 19. The small leak of toxic hydrazine stopped during an overnight torque test of a half-dozen bolts in the cross-feed flange area within the orbiter’s aft fuselage.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The full impact on industry of Britain’s Strategic Defense and Security Review (SDSR) and the associated 8% budget reduction may take some time to emerge, although industry appears at least to be relieved the long period of uncertainty is over.

Anantha Krishnan M.
BENGALURU, India – American defense buyers, suppliers in India and aerospace companies will rub shoulders at a high-level, one-day meeting in Bangalore on Oct. 20. Hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce in India (AMCHAM), the meeting will discuss various challenges that suppliers and buyers are facing in the wake of opening up the defense and aerospace sectors in India.

Congressional Research Service
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David A. Fulghum
The U.S. Air Force tanker aircraft fleet is going to shrink significantly, well-connected observers say, but exactly how much they do not know. The details are, roughly, that the first group of 179 new KC-Xs will not be reinforced with KC-Y and KC-Z for 15-20 years and the larger KC-10 replacement will not show up for 30 years, says the former commander of the 12th Air Force and a key Washington-based airpower analyst in a briefing for reporters Oct. 19

Michael Bruno
HAWKS UP: The Royal Australian Air Force has cleared its BAE Hawk trainers to resume operational flying, officials said Oct. 19. On Oct. 11 they said they had suspended all Hawk operations after one of the aircraft experienced a technical fault while taxiing prior to takeoff from RAAF Base Pearce, Western Australia. “Following an investigation into that incident, the Hawk fleet has been cleared to resume flying, with each aircraft to receive a detailed technical inspection prior to flight,” according to officials.

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CRS
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By Irene Klotz
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. — Workers at Kennedy Space Center plan to drain the fuel from shuttle Discovery’s Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) tanks and lines to fix a suspected leak in the crossfeed flange area.