Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Amy Butler
ANGRY CZAR: Pentagon acquisition chief John Young is less than pleased with the Air Force’s problems providing a coherent fiscal 2010 budget proposal to the Office of the Secretary of Defense. “There are too many games being played,” he says, citing the Air Force’s proposal that its sister services – the Army and Navy – should help pick up hefty bills for building USAF satellites. Air Force officers argue that the missile warning, communications and navigation services are provided to all of the services and the cost should be equally shared.

Bettina H. Chavanne
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. – The U.S. Army’s Special Operations Command (USASOC) is developing new protection systems and equipment for its helicopter fleet and refining fielded programs based on soldier feedback from Iraq.

Craig Covault
Data from the NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) is providing additional evidence that water remained on the planet’s surface longer and 1 billion years more recently than earlier envisioned. Researchers examining data from the orbiter’s Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars have found evidence of hydrated silica, commonly known as opal. The hydrated, or water-containing, mineral deposits are telltale signs of where and when water was present on ancient Mars.

Michael Bruno
TRAINER SUPPORT: L-3 Vertex Aerospace and Boeing Integrated Defense Systems are already working on a potentially $569 million U.S. Navy deal for logistics services and maintenance materials for T-45A and T-45C trainer aircraft based in Meridian, Miss., Kingville, Texas, and Pensacola, Fla. If all four option years are exercised, work could run through September 2013, they said Oct. 27. The support covers 71 T-45A and 108 T-45C.

By Joe Anselmo
U.S. Army demand for aircraft parts contributed to a surprising rise in the nation’s durable goods orders in September, the Commerce Department reported Oct. 29. Nationwide demand for durable goods rose 0.8 percent during the month to $208 billion after declining 5.5 percent in August. Orders for defense aircraft and parts totaled $5.7 billion during the month, up 10.1 percent from August. All of those orders were from the Army and were for parts, according to Adriana Stoica, a Commerce aircraft analyst.

David Eshel
Although Soltam’s automatic and autonomous Cardom mortar has been in service for some time, it received new attention at last month’s Israel Defense Industry display near Tel Aviv. Having now been integrated into the new Israel Defense Force (IDF) all-digital division deployed on the Golan Heights, Cardom units have become the mainstay for rapid tactical artillery on-call support missions, which can become crucial elements in any future conflict with Syria.

Bettina H. Chavanne
JLTV CONTRACTS AWARDED: After a tense few days of speculation and leaks of the winners in the media, the U.S. Army announced the three teams that have won contracts for the Technology Development Phase of the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) contract. Lockheed Martin won $35.9 million, General Tactical Vehicles won $45.1 million and BAE Systems Land and Armament won $40.5 million to perform the work by Jan. 31, 2011 on the JLTV Family of Vehicles.

Graham Warwick
Raytheon plans to launch a small unmanned air vehicle from a submerged U.S. Navy submarine early next year to demonstrate its concept for extending the boat’s sensor range in littoral operations. Last month the company demonstrated its UAV launch concept under Phase 1 of the Submarine Over the Horizon Organic Capabilities (SOTHOC) program funded by the Office of Naval Research and the Submarine Force.

Staff
A plasma rocket engine that may one day get a test on the International Space Station has reached a power milestone in one of the radio-frequency (RF) systems used to heat the electrically charged fluid that serves as a propellant. The Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR) under development by Houston-based Ad Astra Rocket Company reached its target rating of 30 kilowatts in a test at its laboratory of the RF device that generates the core plasma. In the Oct. 22 test, the helicon first stage used argon as its propellant.

Bill Sweetman
PARIS - Lockheed Martin is contemplating big changes to its Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) design to appeal to export customers, as the first LCS – USS Freedom – gets ready for its commissioning in Milwaukee on Nov. 8. A model of a modified ship is on display here at Euronaval. The leading export prospect for the LCS, Israel, is already planning such changes. If Israel follows through with its plans, its LCS ships will be heavily armed with the Barak 8 anti-air warfare system and land-attack missiles.

By Guy Norris
The first U.S. Air Force E-8C Joint STARS is about to be fitted with Pratt & Whitney JT8D-219s in Melbourne, Fla. The upgrade will give the 707-based aircraft better performance, greater range and endurance, and improved environmental characteristics.

By Bradley Perrett
China’s two aircraft-making conglomerates, Avic 1 and 2, have been merged back together as a prelude to further reorganization, including a dedicated helicopter subsidiary. The combined organization, foreshadowed earlier this year, is called Avic, or China Aviation Industry Corp., as it was before it was split into Avic 1 and 2 in 1999. It encompasses almost the whole Chinese aircraft industry, with plants and research institutes spread across the country.

Robert Wall
The French government has agreed to reach out to see if other governments are willing to grant industry’s appeal for some relief on the much-delayed Airbus A400M military transport aircraft project. French Defense Minister Herve Morin says he has asked his air force chief and the defense armaments agency, DGA, to lead the talks. The air force will see if there is room for some marginal relief on program specifications, with Morin suggesting he may be supportive.

Bettina H. Chavanne
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. – If the U.S. Army’s Apache AH-64D Longbow aircraft is to keep pace with its own manned-unmanned common architecture program, it will require extensive technological upgrades to the cockpit, according to the Army Aviation Applied Technology Directorate (AATD), a driving force behind the technology.

James Ott
The conviction of a University of Tennessee professor on charges he passed military technical data on unmanned aerial vehicles to China was one of 95 export-related cases handled by the Justice Department over a two-year period. China was involved in 22 cases; Iran more than 30.

Staff
TRIAL BALLOON: BAE Systems has carried out the first remotely piloted test flight of the GA-22 airship with the air vehicle being examined for a range of surveillance and endurance roles. The aim is to eventually make the GA-22 fully autonomous, with systems developed initially for the BAE Systems Herti tactical unmanned aerial vehicle to be integrated on the airship. The next stage of the program is to gain type certification. Lindstrand Technologies was picked by BAE Systems to develop the GA-22 in July of this year.

Robert Wall
The first U.K. aircraft carrier is all but certain to be fielded in a configuration to support only short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing (STOVL) aircraft operations, despite persistent rumors the country may yet pull out of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program.

Michael Fabey
The Pentagon is adding another layer of review meant to better protest-proof its major acquisitions, and the first programs set for greater scrutiny are the U.S. Air Force’s $15 billion combat, search and rescue (CSAR-X) helicopter replacement plan and the $35 billion tanker fleet contract award. As part of the new review, Army and Navy officials will conduct peer reviews of the Air Force acquisition programs before, during and after contract decisions, the Pentagon confirmed Oct. 28.

Douglas Barrie
Britain’s senior defense minister attended his first National Defense Industries Council meeting Oct. 27, signing a charter on sustainable procurement. While the charter is aimed at bolstering the ministry’s “green” credentials, senior industry executives in attendance also were keen to hear John Hutton’s views about more near-term sustainability issues.

Bettina H. Chavanne
The U.S. Coast Guard will be able to keep all of its capital projects on track with $9.36 billion in newly provided appropriated funds, according to the armed service’s chief financial officer. Rear Adm. Keith Taylor, assistant commandant for resources, said recently that the funding level “allows us to provide all the services we provide,” and added that certain additions to the fiscal 2009 budget were “critical,” including for marine safety and so-called stewardship issues.

John M. Doyle
The war in Afghanistan is not going well although there is still a chance to fix things – but time is running out, a British military expert says. “We’re not losing but we’re not winning. The next year is absolutely critical,” Michael Clarke, director of the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI), said Oct. 27.

Robert Wall
PARIS - The Spanish government faces an end-of-month deadline on whether to proceed with its planned acquisition of the Tomahawk land-attack cruise missile. Spain and the U.S. government had been in talks over the sale of the Raytheon missile for some time, in part because Washington had to wave Missile Technology Control Regime export restrictions. In June, the Pentagon notified Congress of the possible foreign military sale, which came after at least two years of talks.

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Bettina H. Chavanne
SUPPORT SERVICES: Sikorsky Aerospace Services signed $687,000 in contracts to provide the U.S. Coast Guard with scheduled maintenance help for their HH-60J medium-range Jayhawk helicopters. Sikorsky will conduct the work under two separate contracts: one for $486,368 to repair 18 spindle assemblies and another for $200,851 to repair five main rotor blades and two tail rotor blades.