Aviation Week & Space Technology

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
Singapore-based ST Aerospace translated a 9% greater revenue, improved margins and lower financial expenses to a 53% higher profit before taxes, or S$60.9 million ($42.5 million), for the second quarter, compared with the first. The company’s engineering and materials services turnover soared 38.9% in the second quarter, with profit before taxes leaping 35.2%, compared with the second quarter last year.

The U.S. Navy plans to award Boeing a contract to flight test an air-launched version of the ScanEagle unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), carrying a magnetic anomaly detector to locate submerged submarines and track them for up to 24 hr. The MagEagle is based on Boeing’s ScanEagle Compressed Carriage air-launched small UAV, which will undergo ground-launched flight tests this year.

Manfred A. Runkel (Thousand Oaks, Calif.)
Regarding your article “A Wing and a Prayer,” I am dismayed at the dismal performance of my former employer. I belonged to the group that developed the 747, whose members in later years have been labeled the “Incredibles.”

AsiaSat 5, a Space Systems/Loral 1300 series, is set for launch Aug. 12 on an ILS Proton from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. It will replace AsiaSat-2 at 100.5 deg. E. and serve 53 countries spanning from Russia to New Zealand. Hong Kong-based AsiaSatellite Telecommunications has ordered AsiaSat-5C from SS/Loral to expand its network.

Aug. 17-19—Fifth Ankara (Turkey) International Aerospace Conference. Middle East Technical University. Call +90 (312) 210-3861, fax +90 (312) 210-3868 or see http://aiac.ae.metu.edu.tr Aug. 17-21—Pennsylvania State University’s Aerospace Engineering Short Course on Rotary Wing Technology. University Park. Call +1 (814) 865-2569, fax +1 (814) 865-7092 or see www.outreach.psu.edu/programs/rotary-wing/default-Staff.htm

Mark Carreau (Houston)
Engineers at Ad Astra Rocket Co. here are gradually easing up the power levels on a large experimental version of the Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (Vasimr) pioneered by seven-time space shuttle astronaut Franklin Chang-Diaz. The concept is approaching a significant milestone for in-space propulsion that is intended to establish the groundwork for a range of potential deep-space and near-Earth commercial missions, including possible 39-day human transits to Mars.

By Bradley Perrett
The Surion utility helicopter increasingly appears to mark the arrival of Korea Aerospace Industries as a serious player in the global rotary-wing market.

A Russian-built Ilyushin Il-78 tanker with U.S. registry N78GF remained stranded late last week at Sawyer International Airport near Marquette, Mich., after five Ukrainian nationals among the crewmembers were arrested during a refueling stop for allegedly violating immigration laws and in connection with a civil dispute that involved unpaid bills in Texas. The U.S. has evaluated Il-76s and Il-78s as heavy airtankers to carry aerial retardant and water for wildfire suppression. Russia uses the aircraft for that mission.

By William Garvey, David Esler
Richard Santulli’s announcement last week that he was resigning as chairman and CEO of NetJets Inc., the world’s largest operator of business jets, raised questions about Berkshire Hathaway’s commitment to the money-losing subsidiary and even the viability of the fractional aircraft ownership concept. Although Santulli cited his desire “to spend some more time with my young family and pursue other interests,” as the motivation for stepping down, others suggest NetJets’ recent fiscal performance might have been a factor.

With all the hoopla reserved for unveiling a major defense program, General Services Administration and Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) officials announce they are creating a “common marketplace” for commercial satellite communication services for the entire federal government. The new deal, the Future Comsatcom Services Acquisition, would start awarding contracts in September 2010 worth more than $5 billion over a decade.

Michael Mecham (San Francisco)
The National Research Council says a replacement Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) satellite could play an important—if limited—role in monitoring and verifying sources of carbon dioxide emissions to support greenhouse gas reduction treaties. In December, the NRC expects to release an ongoing study focusing on estimates of human-derived greenhouse gas emissions. The report will coincide with a meeting in Copenhagen of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, which is considering treaties to limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Officials of Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific Airways think its business may have ceased declining, even if it is too early to say it is beginning to strengthen. The company is still losing money operationally but earned a profit of HK$812 million ($105 million) in the six months ended June 30 because of gains on fuel-hedging contracts. Chairman Christopher Pratt says that while the worst of the recession might be over for Cathay, “we still cannot see any clear signs of any sustained pickup in our core business.”

By Bradley Perrett
The bottom-line strategy, from the U.S. military perspective, is that “we’re not withdrawing from the Korean Peninsula,” says Lt. Gen. Jeffrey Remington, commander of the 7th Air Force at Osan AB. But the question then arises: How realistic is this assessment, given that the U.S. is cutting Army force structure along with a few Air Force A-10s and tactical air control parties, moving those remaining farther from the demilitarized zone and returning operational control of forces in the peninsula to the South Korean military?

Rick Estus has been named vice president-operations for EaglePicher Technologies , Joplin, Mo. He was vice president-manufacturing operations for Mercury Marine.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Gulfstream International Airlines and other carriers that serve Cuba with charter flights are waiting revised U.S. regulations governing travel to the Caribbean island. Passenger traffic on Gulfstream’s daily flights from Miami International Airport has increased 25% since some travel restrictions were eased by the Obama administration, says Thomas L. Cooper, Gulfstream founder. He intends to replace a Boeing 737-200 with a 737-400 for the airline’s five-day-a-week schedule. Gulfstream operates Embraer aircraft on the other two days. The U.S.

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington )
The space shuttle Discovery has reached Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center for its flight on a logistics mission to the International Space Station as early as Aug. 25. The rollout follows Endeavour’s landing on July 31 after its successful assembly and maintenance flight to the ISS. Discovery’s seven-member crew is scheduled to deliver station racks containing scientific experiments and life support equipment—including a new sleeping compartment—in the pressurized Leonardo multipurpose logistics module.

By Adrian Schofield
The FAA is being accused of pursuing quantity over quality in a crucial NextGen initiative, with critics saying the agency is overlooking the areas of greatest need in favor of quick deployment.

General aviation aircraft deliveries and billings declined in the first half of the year, according to the General Aviation Manufacturers Assn. Compared to the same period in 2008, shipments decreased 46% to 1,037 units compared to 1,918 last year. Piston deliveries were down 58%, to 434 aircraft; turboprop deliveries totaled 191, a 13.6% decrease; and business jet shipments were down 37.9%, to 412. Total GA aircraft billings of $9.26 billion reflect a 22.7% decline from $11.99 billion reported in the first six months of 2008.

By Bradley Perrett
Shanghai carrier Spring Airlines will move on to international routes in the next stage of its strategy to build a budget airline business in China.

Thomas Evert (see photo), who is chief engineer for the Northrop Grumman Corp./NASA Clouds and Earth Radiant Energy System (Ceres) program, has received NASA ’s Distinguished Public Service Award for “exceptional sustained public service developing world-class space-based climate sensors.” The award is NASA’s highest honor for an individual who is not a government employee.

A 10-ft.-wingspan version of the Bat UAV built by Northrop Grumman has demonstrated a communications relay payload for a government customer (a generality that usually means an intelligence agency) during a series of five flights over four days at Naval Air Facility El Centro, Calif. The announcement last week concerned flights that were made in late June. The unmanned aircraft is designed for irregular warfare and also offers real-time intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, and strike capabilities.

David L. Calhoun has been appointed to the board of directors of the Chicago-based Boeing Co. He is chairman of the management board/CEO of The Nielsen Co.

Ihssane Mounir, who has been vice president-sales for Latin America for Boeing Commercial Airplanes , now also covers Africa.

Boeing last week won a $334.7-million contract for a P-8A stage II test aircraft and to upgrade three test aircraft to production representative condition. The company received a $64.4-million contract to provide sustainment support for two Qatar Emiri Air Force C-17 aircraft for Fiscal 2009-11. The company also snagged a $106-million contract to build five new CH-47F heavy-lift helicopters for the U.S. Army with delivery to be completed by 2013.

ASTM International, the group that sets standards for aviation fuel, has approved a new specification allowing use of synthetic fuels in blends with petroleum-based jet fuel for commercial aviation.