Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
The House Appropriations Committee's defense subcommittee has approved a $416.1 billion defense spending bill for fiscal 2005, the committee said June 10. The panel voted to boost spending for the U.S. Navy's Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) and pay for additional UH-60 Black Hawk and CH-47 Chinook helicopters for the Army, but would cut the president's request for missile defenses.

Staff
LOCKHEED MARTIN will increase the performance and memory of U.S. Air Force B-52H bomber mission computers under a $30 million contract. The company's Avionics Control Unit computer will replace the existing AP-101C computers. Installations are scheduled to begin in late 2005 and be complete by 2009. "The mission computer upgrade improves the B-52H's ability to deploy new precision weapons, integrated future capabilities and will support the reliability and sustainability of the B-52H until 2040," Frank C.

Marc Selinger
Brazil's military is in the market for significant amounts of new equipment, much of which could be supplied by U.S. or other international firms, a Brazilian official said June 10.

By Jefferson Morris
BALTIMORE, Md. - To fit seamlessly into the U.S. Army's future command and control architecture, the Unmanned Combat Armed Rotorcraft (UCAR) will accept verbal commands from operators and report back to them verbally as well, according to Program Manager Don Woodbury of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). "All the interaction is verbal," Woodbury said during a presentation at the American Helicopter Society's (AHS) Vertical Flight Transformation Forum here June 10. "We talk to it, it talks to us."

Kathy Gambrell
Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) has proposed an amendment to the fiscal year 2005 Department of Defense authorization bill that would ban government contractors from hiring high-ranking federal officials overseeing procurement programs for two years after those employees leave their posts. The amendment would temporarily prohibit some presidential appointees, senior executives, people who served in the executive branch above grade GS-12 and commissioned military officers from taking positions with companies that do business with the federal government.

Marc Selinger
BALTIMORE, Md. - The U.S. Army's plans for a new Light Utility Helicopter (LUH) are moving significantly closer toward becoming a reality, a program official said June 9. The proposed acquisition effort received the blessing of the Army Requirements Oversight Council (AROC) June 8 and is now headed to the Joint Requirements Oversight Council (JROC) for its review, said Matt Rainey, the Army's acting deputy program manager for utility helicopters. In October, the Army hopes to release a request for proposals (RFP) for the LUH.

Staff
General Dynamics will acquire TriPoint Global Communications Inc., a privately held company that provides ground-based and satellite communications equipment, the company said June 9. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The boards of directors of both companies have approved the deal, which is expected to close in the third quarter of this year, General Dynamics said.

Kathy Gambrell
Lehman Brothers this week gave Boeing Co. a vote of confidence, saying investment firm analysts believe the aircraft manufacturer will regain its share losses to Airbus, although company stock still carries significant risks. Lehman Brothers aerospace analyst Joseph F. Campbell said the firm has been pessimistic about Boeing's 767 civil and 767 military tanker programs, and is "particularly pessimistic" about the 767 tanker lease-buy deal with the U.S. Air Force, which is on hold pending reviews (DAILY, May 26).

Lisa Troshinsky
General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products (GDATP), which has been equipping Army Bradley fighting vehicles with reactive armor since 1999, has opened a new facility in Mississippi to manufacture its latest version. "This new-generation reactive armor offers a substantial increase in protection levels for troops and equipment against all shoulder-fired weapons, and most tube-launched, shaped-charge systems," GDATP said.

Lisa Troshinsky
The expendable launch vehicle (ELV) industry is emerging from a sluggish market and probably will experience a near-term resurgence, says a June 8 Forecast International (FI) report. Launch industry revenues rose more than 60 percent in one year, from $3.7 billion in 2002 to more than $5.5 billion in 2003. In 2003, 17 new commercial geosynchronous communications satellites were ordered, compared with only three in 2002.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA is trying to strengthen the boom being developed to inspect the space shuttle in orbit to ensure it can handle the structural loads anticipated during flight, according to Michael Kostelnik, deputy associate administrator for the International Space Station (ISS) and space shuttle programs.

Staff
PARABOLIC FLIGHTS: A new European Space Agency campaign of parabolic aircraft flights, which give researchers temporary access to weightlessness, is underway in Bordeaux, France, ESA said. A modified Airbus A300 began the first of three consecutive flight days June 8, according to ESA. Ten experiments, some of which are slated for the International Space Station, will be part of ESA's 37th parabolic flight campaign. The flights give researchers a total of 10 minutes of weightlessness each day. The campaign is the second one this year, with a third scheduled for October.

Marc Selinger
BALTIMORE, Md. - The U.S. Marine Corps hopes to receive Pentagon approval by December to develop a successor to its aging CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter, an official said June 9. The Marines would like to replace the shipboard, heavy-lift Super Stallion with the CH-53X, a "new-build derivative" of the CH-53E, said Marine Corps Col. Paul Croisetiere, who manages H-53 programs for the Marines and Navy. A recent analysis of alternatives recommended the new aircraft (DAILY, June 9).

Staff
SUBSYSTEMS: DRS Technologies will provide airborne instrumentation subsystems to Cubic Defense Applications for use in the U.S. Air Force's P5 Combat Training System and Tactical Combat Training System program, the company said June 9. The work is potentially valued at more than $525 million over 10 years, the company said. The training program is intended to replace existing training instrumentation on U.S. Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and Air National Guard aircraft at more than 25 sites.

Staff
LAUNCH SCHEDULE: International Launch Services (ILS) plans to launch the Intelsat 10-02 satellite on June 15 from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, ILS said June 9. The satellite, built by EADS Astrium of France, is intended to provide video, networking, voice and Internet services across Europe, Africa, the Middle East, South America and parts of Asia and North America. It carries 36 Ku-band and 70 C-band transponders and will be the most powerful satellite in Intelsat's fleet, ILS said.

Staff
ABB, Norwalk, Conn. Dinesh C. Paliwal, a group executive, has been elected to the board of directors of the U.S.-India Business Council. ACSS, Phoenix Kris Ganase has been named president. AEROSONIC, Clearwater, Fla. Thomas E. Whytas, the chief financial officer and finance director for CAE USA Inc., has been elected to the board of directors. AMSEC, Virginia Beach, Va.

Dmitry Pieson
MOSCOW - Russia seems ready to continue its cooperation with the Ukrainian aerospace industry despite years of seeking distance from it. Anatoly Perminov, the head of Russia's new Federal Space Agency, inspected the facilities of the Ukrainian-built Zenit launcher during a tour of Baikonur Cosmodrone in Kazakhstan last week.

Kathy Gambrell
A public administration panel has made recommendations aimed at improving the embattled Manufacturing Extension Program (MEP), which the White House has targeted for budget cuts. The National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) said in a report released earlier this week that the MEP program could help create an infrastructure for supporting small manufacturing firms as the U.S. economy undergoes enormous economic transition.

Marc Selinger
The General Accounting Office has written a harshly worded critique of the recent competition for the Precision Guided Mortar Munition (PGMM), saying the U.S. Army knowingly misinformed the losing bidder and improperly credited the winner for technology that was not formally proposed.

Kathy Gambrell
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) has introduced an amendment to the fiscal year 2005 defense authorization bill that would bar the U.S. Defense Department from leasing Boeing 767 aircraft, along with other amendments that would set requirements for the U.S. Air Force's procurement of aerial tankers.

Lisa Troshinsky
Operation Iraqi Freedom is straining the Marine Corps' helicopter fleet, Lt. Gen. Robert Magnus, the service's deputy commandant for programs and resources, said June 8. "We are about topped out on Marine aviation - for tactical helicopters and heavy lift helicopters. OIF is putting stress on aviation planning for next spring," Magnus told reporters at a Defense Writers Group breakfast. "The nation hasn't been in a prolonged combat like this since Vietnam. We don't have enough rotary wing for prolonged combat."

Lisa Troshinsky
UGS, a Texas-based product lifecycle management (PLM) software and services company, whose products are used by the aerospace and defense industry, is acquiring D-Cubed Ltd., a Cambridge, England-based supplier of embedded technology used by computer-aided design (CAD) application developers, UGS announced June 8. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The transaction is expected to close within 45 days.