Aviation Week & Space Technology

A North Korean air force MiG-21 crashed in China after taking off from Sinuiju AB on the Yalu River a few miles from North Korea’s far northwest coast on Aug. 18. The crash site is about 125 mi. north of the base and near Fushun, China. The border with Russia would have been within the range of a MiG-21 bis or PFM variant of the Russian-designed fighter. The aircraft landed in a level attitude, but debris indicates the cockpit was crushed and the pilot killed when the nose plowed through a Chinese farmhouse.

Pierre Sparaco
As part of a strict environmental strategy, the French government last year decided to ban the construction of new airports and additional runways. The ultimate goal, government officials claim, is to encourage surface transportation such as TGV high-speed trains on domestic city pairs, a policy aimed at slashing carbon dioxide emissions.

Christopher T. Jones (see photo) has been appointed vice president/general manager of the Northrop Grumman Corp. ’s Technical Services Sector’s Integrated Logistics and Modernization Div. He was director of product support and international programs for airborne early warning and battle management command and control for Northrop Grumman’s Aerospace Systems Sector.

Robert Wall (London), Andy Nativi (Genoa), Michael A. Taverna (Paris)
There is a growing recognition among European navies that they will need to augment their fleets with unmanned aircraft. But there remains a distinct lack of coherence of views on what the ideal system may be.

Amy Butler (Huntsville, Ala.)
The Pentagon must make a major decision in December 2011 on whether to proceed with fielding the Phased Adaptive Approach (PAA) missile defense architecture based in Europe.

MASkargo is considering converting Boeing 747-400 passenger aircraft from parent Malaysia Airlines into freighters and is also in negotiations to firm up options for two more Airbus A330 freighters. The dedicated cargo carrier—which has primarily been relying on 747-200 freighters on wet-lease from U.S. carrier Southern Air—says it needs newer aircraft. Malaysia Airlines plans to replace some of its 747-400s with the six Airbus A380s it has on order, with first deliveries set for April 2012. MASkargo is considering ordering new Boeing 777 freighters.

Amy Butler (NAS Patuxent River, Md., and Washington)
First flight of the Unmanned Combat Air System (UCAS) demonstrator is slipping by roughly six months— to December, but Navy and Northrop Grumman officials say they still expect to meet the goal set by the chief of naval operations for UCAS to operate from an aircraft carrier in Fiscal 2013.

Sept. 10—Webinar on Strengthening Warfighter Protection and Response to Irregular Warfare. Sept. 28-30—MRO Europe. London. Sept. 29-30—MRO Military Europe. London. Nov. 1-3—A&D Programs Conference. Phoenix. Nov. 2-3—A&D Supply Chain Conference. Phoenix. Nov. 2-4—MRO Asia Conference and Exhibition. Singapore. You can now register ONLINEfor Aviation Week Events. Go to www.aviationweek.com/events or call Lydia Janow at+1 (212) 904-3225/+1 (800) 240-7645 ext. 5 (U.S. and Canada Only)

Andy Carlisle has been named managing officer for the London office of SH&E and Kata Cserep a principal. Carlisle was vice president-airport services. The company has formed an advisory board for the commercial aviation industry, headed by Chief Operating Officer Deborah Meehan.

Alon Ben-David (Tel Aviv)
Israel is pressing ahead with its purchase of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, after securing U.S. approval to install Israeli munitions on the aircraft and a pledge to adjust the electronic warfare suite to emerging Middle East threats.

Amy Butler (Washington)
The unmanned aviation market is seemingly exploding with large contractors and innovative, smaller companies experimenting with designs for various missions. And the U.S. military services are taking note, signing billions of dollars worth of contracts to develop and procure systems and intelligence-collecting services from companies operating their own fleets.

James R. Asker (Washington)
Just eight months after the National Mediation Board heard from Delta Air Lines flight attendants alleging the carrier hired consultants specializing in voter suppression who taught cabin crew how to “intimidate” their fellow workers not to vote for a union, the NMB finds the airline has tainted a different election process. The board has called for a new election for simulator technicians.

Mark Chapin has become director of the Draper Laboratory ’s Washington office. He was head of business development for the Sarnoff Corp., Arlington, Va.

By Guy Norris
The intense battle over powering the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter could be heading to new levels following test results that show the General Electric/Rolls-Royce F136 alternate engine has more than 15% thrust margin against specification, significantly exceeding the power of the baseline Pratt & Whitney F135.

Thuraya is launching an aeronautical service to serve aircraft in its coverage area, which includes Africa, the Middle East and southern Asia. The UAE-based mobile satellite service operator says more than 200 business jets and helicopters are already equipped with the service, known as AviationComs and based on hardware supplied by France’s Satsys. AviationComs will initially be limited to speeds up to 60 kbps., but a broadband offering that can work at 444 kbps.—comparable to Inmarsat’s Broadband Global Area Network—is to be introduced in the fourth quarter.

David A. Fulghum (Washington)
A major sticking point on the sale by the U.S. of 84 new F-15S strike-fighters to Saudi Arabia is the degree of sophistication of the long-range aircraft’s radars.

The crash of a de Havilland DHC-3 Otter ferrying aerospace and defense (A&D) power figures over Alaska last week killed a longtime pillar of A&D appropriations and aviation legislation, while shaking the C-suite of a burgeoning U.S.-European provider. Former Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) died Aug. 9 as the result of the crash, which claimed four other victims near Dillingham, Alaska, including the highly respected pilot. EADS North America CEO Sean O’Keefe was on board and survived with injuries.

Carole Rickard Hedden (Washington)
Aerospace and defense companies are looking for a few good men—and women—in spite of a very difficult 2009, which included freezes on salaries and merit pay, furloughs and layoffs. For the first time in seven years, the level of aerospace employment declined, according to 2009 year-end data from the Aerospace Industries Association.

Alexey Komarov (Moscow)
Russia is scrambling to expand and modernize its aerial fire-fighting capabilities now that the inability to curtail the havoc brought by widespread forest fires has revealed shortcomings of the current inventory.

Michael A. Taverna (Paris)
Inmarsat will create a Ka-band broadband system to complement its existing L-band system, allowing it to go one-up on mobile satellite service (MSS) competitors.

Raj Sharma has been appointed CEO of Aviation Technical Services , Everett, Wash. He was executive chairman.

Northrop Grumman and Alliant Techsystems (ATK), two of the main structural suppliers for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, are accelerating sub-assembly production as Lockheed Martin prepares to ramp up production. Full-rate production is expected to start around 2015, assuming current funding remains on track, with one aircraft rolling off Lockheed Martin’s Fort Worth assembly line every day by 2016. Northrop Grumman’s delivery of a center fuselage for AF-14 marks the transition to a single unit every 10 days.

The U.S. Air Force launch team at Vandenberg AFB, Calif., says corrective action on “certain connectors used on flight avionics components” aboard an Orbital Sciences Minotaur IV launch vehicle means launch of the Space Based Space Surveillance satellite will take place no earlier than late September. The launch was set for July 8, but a software glitch prompted the delay.

Asia-Pacific Staff (New Delhi)
The Indian government may have to reassess its strategy to field a fleet of unmanned combat aircraft after initial outreach to potential industrial partners elicited little response. Most companies that received the request for information (RFI) in June, when India launched its surprise effort to procure a fleet of stealthy unmanned combat air vehicles (UCAV), have shunned the approach, saying they were unable to respond. Company officials note they were unable to offer any meaningful response to the Indian air force’s stated requirement.

By Joe Anselmo
Europe’s aerospace and defense industry continues to grapple with a shortage of engineers in specific fields, but companies are still finding work-arounds to ensure that projects advance.