Aviation Week & Space Technology

Niklas Prager (see photo) has switched roles at Lagga, Sweden-based Envirotainer , moving from chairman to CEO. He succeeds Thomas Persson, who will remain as senior adviser. Prager has a long background in the pharmaceutical and medical technology industries, including executive positions at MSD and Pfizer.

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
France’s government accounting office has raised a red flag over a vast French plan to sell off assets and outsource services to help compensate for a drop in military procurement spending, notably a proposal to sell and lease back the country’s Syracuse 3 secure satellite communications system. The satellites have about 10% of unused capacity, according to French finance ministry figures. Launched in 2005-06 with a design life of 12 years, they are expected to fetch €400 million ($548 million).

By Guy Norris
Since the advent of powered flight, aircraft designers have sought to escape the bondage of heavy rigid structures by moving to lighter, bird-like adaptive shaping and sensing technology.

By William Garvey
A small aircraft accident with a happy outcome—all onboard survived with minor injuries—is, years later, evolving into something of an international cause celebre with ominous overtones.

Mark Verdesco has been promoted to director of pre-owned aircraft sales by Dassault Falcon , succeeding Skip Flint, who retired in December. Verdesco has held a variety of positions at Dassault, including a stint as technical marketing analyst.

USAF Gen. Kevin P. Chilton has been selected by the board of advisers of the Rotary National Award for Space Achievement to receive the 25th National Space Trophy. Chilton, commander of U.S. Strategic Command and a former astronaut, is being recognized for his leadership in civilian and military space programs.

USMC Col. (ret.) Curt Marsh (Annandale, Va.)
The issue of running out of missiles against China is not a new one for jet fighters and surface escort ships. In “Numbers Matter” (AW&ST Jan. 3, p. 21), Chinese air forces certainly provide a “target-rich environment,” but as one sage points out, U.S. Gen. George Custer was said to have the same type of environment prior to his last stand. The article suggests use of high-persistent drones, but they better be stealthy to survive. Just consider a squadron of stealthy J-20s with a mass of conventional fighters.

Brian Gillman has been tapped to become senior vice president/general counsel/corporate secretary for Global Aviation Holdings . He held similar titles at Mesa Air Group and Vanguard Airlines.

The Jan. 24/31 issue, on page 58, the statement that the Delta IV Heavy is the largest launcher since the Saturn V referred to expendable launch vehicles.

Deirdre Clemmons has been promoted to vice president of meetings, conventions and education by Airports Council International-North America . Previously, she directed conferences for the National Defense Industrial Association.

Debra Higgins has become vice president of charter sales for Arcadia Aviation . Her career includes stints as vice president of sales for Capital Jet and director of charter sales at Private Jet Charters in Windsor Locks, Conn.

Graham Warwick (Washington), Amy Butler (Washington)
Details of the revamped F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program are emerging and showing that, despite more than nine years of work, almost six years of challenging development and testing still lie ahead for the Lockheed Martin-led project.

James Ott (Cincinnati)
The practice of screening people and baggage is about to take a leap forward after slowly evolving over more than four decades. Future checkpoints will harness channels of personal data to differentiate between passengers and assign to them—depending on how they score on a screener’s confidence scale—varying levels of technological screening. The physical configuration of checkpoints is likely to change as best practices of processing people come into play.

Asia-Pacific Staff (New Delhi)
India’s Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) program, currently the world’s biggest international fighter competition, will hinge on a series of national objectives—only one of them being the air force’s need to maintain squadron numbers.

Denise Millard (see photo) has been named vice president of international business development for L-3 Aviation Products . She was vice president of the Customer Group for L-3 company ACSS and had been director of marketing for Thales’s Avionics Regional and Business Aircraft Division.

Asia-Pacific Staff (New Delhi)
At least $50 billion will be committed over the next five years to provide the Indian army, navy, air force and coast guard with military hardware, force multipliers and advanced systems of almost every kind. Fixed-wing aircraft, rotorcraft, guided weapons and space asset requirements, spread across the four services and the paramilitary forces, will make India one of the heaviest buyers of military equipment in the world this decade.

James R. Asker
Navy Vice Adm. David Venlet, the U.S. program director for the $380 billion Joint Strike Fighter, is due to make his public debut in the role Feb. 15, after nearly a year of working behind the scenes to revamp the troubled Lockheed Martin program. The company has taken a beating from Defense Secretary Robert Gates since last year, when more problems came to light in the testing program (see p. 25). Venlet’s task will be challenging.

John Colucci has joined Avantair as executive vice president after spending 17 years at NetJets. His earlier career was spent at Gulfstream Aerospace as vice president of new business development and in sales positions at IBM.

Harvey V. Lankford (Richmond, Va.)
I admire your recent series of articles about the space shuttle, however, in “Almost an Afterthought” (AW&ST Dec. 6, 2010, p. 50), you state that a Vandenberg-based shuttle (flying a polar orbit no doubt), after a 90-min., single-orbit flight, would need to return to a location 1,265 mi. away from where it was launched “to accommodate the Earth’s precession.” Precession would only change the requirement a tiny amount. Rotation seems the more likely explanation. (The reader is correct-Ed.)

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
Experts from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency will certify any commercial crew transportation vehicle put forward by U.S. companies as safe to fly. Only then will the Japanese agency accept them as substitutes for the space shuttle in the complex barter deals that govern International Space Station operations.

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
European Space Agency engineers have upgraded the Large Space Simulator (LSS) at the European Space Research and Technology Center (Estec) to prepare the two BepiColombo spacecraft for their upcoming mission to the broiling environment at Mercury. Spacecraft orbiting there must endure temperatures on the order of 350C from the Sun itself, and heat reflected from the planet’s surface that is literally hot enough to fry eggs.

Asia-Pacific Staff (New Delhi)
The Indian army wants to expand its aviation corps and has asked the government to give it full control over all tactical air assets in the battlefield, including transport, observation and attack flights.

China’s J-20 stealthy prototype “is at the heavy end of the fighter scale, leaving ample room for medium and light platforms” as follow-on stealth designs from Beijing’s aerospace industry, says Douglas Barrie, senior fellow at The International Institute for Strategic Studies in London. The J-20 and Russian T-50 stealth strike fighter projects may offer a challenge for U.S.

James R. Asker
House lawmakers are talking again about capping the number of screeners the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) can hire. Harold Rogers (R-Ky.), who in the past helped set such a cap, is now chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. The subject has already been discussed with Robert Aderholt (R-Ala.), who chairs that panel’s homeland security subcommittee. The cap lapsed under the chairmanship of David Price (N.C.), now the top Democrat on the subcommittee.

Amy Butler (Sunnyvale, Calif. )
As the U.S. Air Force’s first next-generation secure communications satellite continues its long journey to orbit after an onboard engine failure, Lockheed Martin is working to ensure that the suspected foreign object debris (FOD) failure that crippled the spacecraft will not occur in other A2100-based satellites.