Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
F-16 WORK: LaBarge Inc. will produce electronic chassis for the F-16's fire control radar system under a $2.6 million contract from Northrop Grumman Corp.'s Electronic Systems sector, the company said Feb. 10. The company has been providing the chassis for Northrop Grumman's AN/APG-68 fire control radar since 2003. The latest batch is for F-16s being upgraded for the Polish air force, St. Louis-based LaBarge said. The work is being done at the company's Huntsville, Ark., facility, and will continue through August 2005.

By Jefferson Morris
The Joint Unmanned Combat Air System (J-UCAS) program is trying to adjust to its recent Pentagon-mandated budget cut without losing momentum, according to Mike Francis, J-UCAS program manager for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). "One of our main goals is to keep this from taking momentum out of the program," Francis said during the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems' Unmanned Systems Program Review Feb. 9 in Washington. "I don't think anybody is unhappy with how the program is moving."

Staff
Rep. C.W. "Bill" Young (R-Fla.) would chair the House Appropriations Committee's Defense subcommittee under a reorganized and reduced full-committee structure, Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.), chairman of the full committee, announced Feb. 9. The proposal shrinks the current 13 subcommittees down to 10. The plan had been rumored on Capitol Hill since the start of the year (DAILY, Jan. 10). "These changes will make it a little easier to get our work done on time and under budget," Lewis said in a statement.

Staff
BAE Systems has been awarded a second-year production contract for the thermal Weapon Sight II (TWS II) by the U.S. Army's Communication and Electronics Command (CECOM), the company said Feb. 10. CECOM awarded the company a modification to an existing contract, boosting the number of TWS IIs to 6,528, raising the total contract value to $53 million. The TWS II enables gunners to see deep into battlefields, increasing their surveillance and range, the company said.

Michael Bruno
A small, bipartisan group of lawmakers is pushing to ensure federal funds continue flowing to a nanotechnology research and development (R&D) effort in line with a commitment Congress made two years ago.

Staff
Lockheed Martin recently conducted the fifth successful flight-test of a Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS) Unitary rocket at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., the company said Feb. 9. The test demonstrated the GMLRS Unitary rocket's warhead proximity sensor, which allows it to detonate at a predetermined distance from soft targets. The test also collected temperature, shock and vibration data and verified the rocket's performance and the warhead's effectiveness. All test objectives were met, the company said.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Army is stopping work on the Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) and plans to pursue a different approach for a new guided rocket, government and industry spokesmen said Feb. 10.

Andy Savoie
Unmanned undersea vehicles of the future should be built with modularity and open architecture in mind and not be "vehicle centric," a UUV program manager said Feb. 10. "Open architecture. This is the enabler to the future. We need modularity. We need common standards and interfaces. We can't afford to redesign the system. Industry may have proprietary systems, but the overall system cannot be proprietary. It needs to be open," said Capt. Paul D. Ims, Jr. (USN), program manager for UUVs in the Program Executive Office for Littoral and Mine Warfare.

Staff
HOT BIRD: International Launch Services will launch a Hot Bird satellite owned by telecommunications company Eutelsat S.A. in the first quarter of 2006 under a new agreement, ILS said Feb. 10. "It is important for our company's business plan to bring new Hot Bird capacity into service in early 2006 in order to enhance security of our satellite system and to replace Hot Bird 1," Eutelsat CEO Giuliano Berretta said in a statement.

Michael Bruno
Higher shipbuilding costs, some caused by a low rate of production, as well as new force structure methods and technology led the U.S. Navy to propose retiring the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy and making cutbacks in ship construction, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark told Senate lawmakers Feb. 10.

William Dennis
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia - Indonesia is considering acquiring up to 12 more Sukhoi Su-27 fighters from Russia. It currently has four, which it bought during the Megawati Sukarnoputri administration five years ago. According to Sudradjat, Indonesia's director general for defense strategy, an additional purchase to build a full squadron would make good defense sense for the country.

By Jefferson Morris
Passing an authorization bill for NASA will be a top priority this year for Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Calif.), newly appointed chairman of the House Science Committee's space and aeronautics subcommittee.

By Jefferson Morris
Transportation Secretary Norm Mineta on Feb. 10 announced draft safety guidelines for space tourism that would require spacecraft operators to obtain informed consent from passengers, who would undergo medical examinations to ensure their fitness for space travel. "Our guidelines say that operators who want to take passengers into space must clearly lay out the risks and must obtain informed consent from space flight participants before they fly," Mineta said at the FAA's 8th Annual Commercial Space Transportation Conference in Washington.

Staff
DIVIDEND: Cubic Corp. said a regular semi-annual dividend of 9 cents per share will be payable March 22 to shareholders of record as of March 1. The dividend was announced at the company's annual shareholder meeting on Feb. 8.

Staff
Sikorsky Aircraft Corp.'s S-92 helicopter was awarded Canadian type certification by Transport Canada in a ceremony at the Heli-Expo trade show in Anaheim, Calif., the company said Feb. 7. The certification will allow the helicopter to enter service with Canadian operators and to carry passengers, Sikorsky said. The European Aviation Safety Agency/Joint Aviation Authorities and U.S. FAA already have certified the helicopter.

Michael Bruno
After a tense Feb. 9 briefing with the U.S. Navy that only raised their tempers, at least four Democratic Connecticut lawmakers - including both U.S. senators - will try to overturn or change the Navy's recent award of the next fleet of presidential helicopters to an international team led by Lockheed Martin Corp.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency's newly completed fiscal 2006 budget request does not contain money to buy a Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle, but the idea of acquiring the Northrop Grumman-built UAV to monitor missile defense tests remains under study, according to Defense Department officials. "Global Hawk will continue to be an option to be considered to satisfy data collection needs," a DOD official said Feb. 10.

Michael Bruno
FAA Administrator Marion Blakey said the FAA has enough regulatory authority for now under the new commercial space launch law and is just as committed to safety concerns despite the law's mandate against FAA regulation of passengers and crew. "At this point, in this stage of the industry's development, I think we're all right," Blakey told the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee's Aviation subcommittee on Feb. 9.

John Terino
SAN DIEGO - Army-sponsored research of radar that would give units advancing at high speeds a way to detect anti-tank and other mines is showing significant promise, John Bramer, director of SRI International's Washington operations, told The DAILY. The research, being done separately by a number of companies, couples Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) programs that can sort and classify data with computers in a mobile unit. The Army wants to find mines far enough ahead of its tanks and vehicles so that they can be avoided.

Staff
David Smith has been named chief executive officer, effective Feb. 14. Ian Gillespie, acting CEO, will remain as a senior member of the management team. J. Dennis Heipt has resigned as an independent director. Mike O'Dwyer, the company's founder, is retiring as a director and employee. He will continue with the company as an unpaid consultant.

Staff
Engineered Support Systems Inc. of St. Louis has completed its $151.5 million purchase of Dulles, Va.-based Spacelink International LLC, the company said Feb. 8. ESSI paid $138.5 million in cash and issued 228,292 shares of restricted common stock worth about $13 million, the company said. ESSI financed the transaction with borrowings under its new $200 million unsecured credit facility, which was finalized last week. The Spacelink purchase will contribute about $70 million to ESSI's fiscal 2005 revenues, ESSI said.

Staff
Joseph Pollo and Naidu Katuri have been hired as project managers.