Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Andy Savoie
ARMY Rolls-Royce Corp., Indianapolis, Ind., was awarded on June 19, 2009 a $8,986,055 firm-fixed-price contract for the production of 40 gas turbine engines (Model 250-C30/R3) (part No. 23065550) and engine containers (Part Number 23088248). The work is to be performed in Indianapolis, with an estimated completion date of Feb. 28, 2010. One bid was solicited with one bid received. U.S. Army Contracting Command, Aviation and Missile Center, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., is the contracting activity (W58RGZ-09-C-0049).

Frank Morring, Jr.
Researchers are looking forward to two more close flybys of Saturn’s strange moon Enceladus by NASA’s Cassini Saturn orbiter in November to resolve continuing questions about the source of spectacular water jets emerging from cracks at the moon’s south pole.

Michael Bruno
TANKER TOUCHDOWN: Australia’s first prototype commercial Airbus A330-200 aircraft marked for conversion into a multirole military tanker transport, MSN747, completed the second subphase of developmental flight-testing, according to officials there. The testing entailed boom-free flight data gathering and validation of the planned KC-30 receiver and tanker flight control laws. The aircraft is being acquired as part of Project Air 5402, under which five such aircraft are being purchased from Europe’s Airbus Military.

GAO
Click here to view the pdf

Robert Wall
PARIS — The Iraqi air force has accepted back into service the first upgraded Mi-17 helicopters after they completed an upgrade program to modernize the missile warning and internal communications subsystems. The Mi-17s currently are the backbone of the Iraqi air force’s rotorcraft force.

John M. Doyle
About 600 U.S. troops based at Soto Cano Air Base, Honduras are “essentially holding fast,” a Pentagon spokesman says, following a military coup that removed the Central American nation’s president from office.

Bettina H. Chavanne
TO THE MOON: Northrop Grumman recently demonstrated rocket engine technology that the company says may enable the return of American astronauts to the moon. Working with NASA on the TR202 lunar descent engine, Northrop Grumman reported demonstrating stable combustion over a broad throttling range utilizing high-performance pintle injector technology. The Lunar Model Descent Engine, used on each Apollo descent, relied on Northrop Grumman’s heritage pintle injector technology.

Michael Mecham
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has placed a Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite into orbit as a spare that is likely to come into service next year serving the Western Hemisphere. Controllers reported early June 28 from NASA’s Diego Garcia atoll ground station in the Indian Ocean that GOES-O, built by Boeing based on its 601 platform, was sending strong signals after its launch on a United Launch Alliance Delta IV from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on the evening of June 27.

Michael A. Taverna
Hispasat has placed a 48 million euro ($68 million) order with OHB System for a new multimedia spacecraft that will be the first application for the European Space Agency’s Small GEO program, intended to help European manufacturers compete with the likes of U.S. small telecom satellite specialist Orbital Sciences Corp. The satellite, Hispasat AG1, will use OHB’s Luxor bus that was designed under the program, along with an advanced communications payload from Thales Alenia Space Spain.

By Maksim Pyadushkin
Russian fighter manufacturer Su­khoi plans a decade-long production overlap of its latest Flanker model with its fifth-generation fighter program for the Russian air force, apparently further undermining MiG’s ambitions for a next-generation fighter. Sukhoi management now says production of the Su-35 (Su-27 SM2) will run in parallel with that of the fifth-generation project, known as PAK FA, for around 10 years. This may well see the Su-35 remain in production until the middle of the 2020s, with the type becoming the long-term complement to the PAK FA.

GAO
Click here to view the pdf

John M. Doyle
Prior to President Barack Obama’s planned trip to Moscow in July, the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff has been doing a little advance work.

Michael Fabey
With its star battlefield aircraft — the MV-22 Osprey — under fire in Washington for cost and performance issues, the U.S. Marine Corps counterattacked June 29 with an announcement that highlights the versatility of the tiltrotor. The Marines said they used two MV-22B Ospreys for a ship-to-shore emergency medical evacuation (medevac) of a sailor, marking the first time the aircraft had been used to conduct such a mission from the sea.

Staff
POSITIONING: Engineers are debating whether the capability of China’s Beidou (Compass) satellite navigation system will force changes in Europe’s Galileo satellites, which are expected to be contracted by year’s end. Some industry sources say the high power levels of the Beidou spacecraft will require a design change; others argue that compatibility can be reached by tweaking the ground segment or through other means. A compatibility agreement similar to one for Galileo and GPS is expected soon.

Staff
HELPING HAND: Relief to the industrial base is expected in the fiscal 2009 omnibus reprogramming now being put together at the Pentagon, Air Force Secretary Michael Donley says. He says he is particularly concerned about the lack of funding for protected communications and low-observable technology integration. He also expressed concern about the solid rocket fuel industrial base, which is suffering from uncertainty over NASA’s future plans and the demise of the Pentagon’s Kinetic Energy Interceptor program.

U.S. Government Accountability Office
Click here to view the pdf

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) July 16 — AVIATION WEEK Management Forums, Demonstrating & Quantifying the Value of Business Aviation. For more information go to http://www.aviationweek.com/events Aug. 5 - 6 — AVIATION WEEK Management Forums, RNP & NextGen, Sheraton Grand Hotel, DFW Airport. For more information go to http://www.aviationweek.com/events

Staff
PHONY WAR: The next British Army chief of the general staff has not been shy about expressing his views on the debate that will inform an all but guaranteed strategic defense review. Gen. David Richards argues that “non-state opponents should be our principal defense and security focus,” though he does recognize “we cannot dismiss the possibility of state on state warfare either.” Richards argues there is a lucky coincidence in the kind of capability that will be required to deal with both non-state and state conflicts.

Paul McLeary
The Army’s $160 billion Future Combat Systems (FCS) modernization program might be “reorganizing under a new name and program structure,” as program spokesman Paul Mehney puts it, but that doesn’t mean that large parts of the program are changing in any significant way.

Staff
AUSSIE R&D: The Australian Defense Science and Technology Organization has unveiled seven research efforts under the Capability & Technology Demonstrator (CTD) Program, including a Blue Gem wrist-mounted computer that monitors a diver’s vital signs from the surface to enhance safety during operations.

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI India’s urgent requirement for 155mm ultra-light howitzers has become jammed in controversy, forcing the Indian army’s artillery modernization plans to be put on hold until it is decided whether or when the request for proposals (RFP) will be reissued. The ministry of defense and Indian army offered no comment.