Weight is a major issue for ground vehicles that will be part of the U.S. Army's Future Combat Systems (FCS) as the program begins its integrated baseline review, a program official said May 25.
A new study by Northrop Grumman touts the potential of Ground Moving Target Indicator (GMTI) radar systems to transform warfighting, and recommends higher procurement and better incorporation of GMTI into military doctrine and training.
AUSTRALIAN MISSILES: Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace of Norway will deliver more Penguin missiles to the Royal Australian Navy under a contract valued at about $10 million, the company said. The Australian navy plans to deploy the missiles on its U.S.-built Kaman helicopters.
The Joint Council on Aging Aircraft (JCAA) is in the final approval stage for its national strategy document and plans to publish and formally distribute it starting in late July, according to JCAA Chairman Bob Ernst. The national strategy identifies the council's top 12 concerns, ranging from technical issues such as corrosion to management issues such as changing the way maintainers are trained to deal with older aircraft (DAILY, Oct. 6, 2003).
The U.S. Navy's Strategic Systems Programs (SSP) unit is continuing to study the idea of a submarine-launched, intermediate-range ballistic missile (SLIRBM). Last summer, it asked industry for input to help determine "plans and programs, including technology challenges and proposed solutions" for such a system (DAILY, Sept. 2, 2003). Now, it wants "detailed cost and technical information for the development and production of a propulsion system for" an SLIRBM.
Raytheon Co. has begun flight-testing an upgraded version of the Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) that is designed to give the anti-missile, ship-defense weapon the ability to destroy more types of targets.
A series of studies aimed at reducing the weight of the U.S. Defense Department's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter probably will be finished in about seven to nine months, or by early calendar 2005, according to a spokeswoman for the program office. The aircraft's first critical design review (CDR), originally scheduled for April 2004, has been put on hold until the studies are completed. The CDR is now forecast for sometime in 2005.
PARTNERS: SkyWay Communications Holding Corp. and its wholly owned subsidiary, SkyWay Aircraft Inc., have entered into a sales and marketing partnership with Titan Corp., the company said. Titan Corp. will market and sell SkyWay's high-speed airborne network services to U.S. government agencies, including the departments of defense and homeland security. The product could be used for advanced air combat and flight control services, and the company anticipates contracts worth up to $500 million over the next two years.
TIMKEN CO. of Canton, Ohio, has acquired the assets of supplier Alcor Engine Co. Inc. and affiliate Advance Repair Technologies. The acquisitions have been combined in a Timken subsidiary called Timken Alcor Aerospace Technologies Inc. Alcor, of Gilbert, Ariz., manufactures and repairs components used in turbine engines. A Timken spokesman said Timken Alcor will remain in Arizona and be run by its current leadership.
The Department of Defense's long-standing problems with its business systems "adversely affect the economy, effectiveness, and efficiency of its business operations and have prevented DOD from being accountable across all of its major business areas," says a May 17 General Accounting Office (GAO) report. In 2001, GAO recommended that DOD develop an enterprise architecture to guide and constrain its almost $20 billion annual investment in business systems and establish investment controls.
Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) plans to push an amendment to the fiscal 2005 Department of Defense authorization bill that would give the U.S. Army four-year authority to buy command-and-control vehicles using sale proceeds from M109 howitzers. The Senate is in recess until June 1, and is scheduled to resume consideration of the defense bill when it returns.
TANKS: Australia has requested a possible sale of 59 M1A1 Abrams Integrated Management tanks and related equipment for $475 million, the Defense Security Cooperation Agency has notified Congress. Australia would use the equipment to modernize and "harden" its army, DSCA said in a May 21 statement. The principal contractors for the deal would be General Dynamics Land Systems, United Defense Ltd. Partners, Oshkosh and Stewart & Stevenson.
ACQUIRED: Curtiss-Wright Corp. has acquired the assets of NOVA Machine Products Corp., of Middleburg Heights, Ohio, and Trentec Inc., of Cincinnati, Ohio, the company said May 24. NOVA supplies safety-related fasteners to the U.S. nuclear power industry and the Department of Energy, and Trentec has fabrication and nuclear components businesses. "... NOVA and Trentec will extend penetration into the commercial power generation and DOE market segments, supported by Curtiss-Wright's established sales and marketing resources," Martin R.
SELLING: Boeing Capital Corp. (BCC) plans to sell its Commercial Financial Services business to GE Commercial Finance, the company said May 24. The transaction, expected to close in the second quarter, includes about $2 billion in assets, Boeing said. The Boeing unit provides lease and loan financing for commercial assets that include business aircraft and marine vessels, but BCC President Walt Skowronski said it would be "better positioned for growth within the GE Commercial Finance portfolio."
NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORP.'s Space Technology sector was awarded the Contractor of Excellence Award from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., the company said. As the winner in its category, Northrop Grumman will automatically be entered into competition for the George M. Low Award, NASA's top award to the aerospace industry for quality and performance, the company said. Northrop Grumman Space Technology is the prime contractor for the James Webb Space Telescope and Aura and Acqua, two satellites that are part of the Earth Observing System.
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS has earned Rockwell Collins' Linear and Logic Commodity Supplier of the Year. Rockwell Collins Chairman President and CEO Clay Jones presented the award to Texas Instruments Vice President Steve Kelley at an annual supplier conference in Dallas.
Marotta Controls has won the National Aeronautic and Space Administration's George M. Low Award for supplier excellence for the second time, the company announced May 4. The Montville, N.J., company received its latest award for the outstanding performance of its Cold-Gas Micro-Thrusters, which were designed for use on NASA's Space Technology 5 (ST5) small satellite project. Astronaut Dr. Ellen Baker presented the award to Marotta Controls Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Tom Marotta and President and Chief Operating Officer Mark Laurenzi.
The U.S. Army's Rapid Equipping Force has asked Armor Systems International to send its peel-and-stick armor kits into Afghanistan this week. The REF originally had ordered the kits for use in Iraq, but recently determined a greater need for them in Afghanistan where dangerous conditions persist, according to officials from Armor International Systems, the manufacturer for the armoring panels.
PRAGUE, Czech Republic - A tender for 243 armored wheeled transporters was postponed yet again by the Czech ministry of defense after an independent audit found that the ministry lacks sufficient resources to conclude the deal successfully. The ministry, which originally planned to launch a tender worth nearly $1 billion by the end of last year, recently postponed the purchase until the end of May after calling for modifications to the tender documentation (DAILY, April 23).
A key decision-making session for the Medium Extended Air Defense System (MEADS) was canceled last week, and no new date has been announced. The Pentagon was expected to assemble a high-level U.S. Defense Acquisition Board (DAB) May 21 to give the go-ahead for the next phase of MEADS. Instead, a team of people associated with the system's development held a meeting simply to get a program update, said Maj. Gary Tallman, a spokesman for the U.S. Army.
Boeing plans to market the A160 Hummingbird as a ship-based unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, according to Kim Michel, director of the company's Advanced Unmanned Systems division. Boeing bought the rights to the A160 when it acquired its manufacturer, Frontier Systems of Irvine, Calif., earlier this month (DAILY, May 5). Frontier Systems had been developing the long-endurance vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) UAV in conjunction with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
The Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) awarded CVN-21 prime contractor Newport News Shipbuilding a $1.4 billion construction preparation contract for work on the Navy's next-generation aircraft carrier, the company announced May 21. The award is a three-year contract for advanced procurement of material, design and engineering, and advance construction of CVN-21. It includes a fee earnable to $161.9 million, which allows for cost, schedule and performance incentives, the Department of Defense said.