Aviation Week & Space Technology

Edited by David Hughes
SITA INC (INFORMATION NETWORKING COMPUTING) HAS AGREED to sell its 27 VHF data-link ground stations installed at all major airports in Germany to DFS Deutsche Flugsicherung GmbH., the air navigation services provider in that country. The 1.4-million-euro ($1.8-million) transaction provides ongoing benefits to both parties, according to DFS and Sita officials speaking at the Janes ATC conference in Maastricht last month.

Eiichiro Sekigawa (Tokyo)
The Japanese space agency JAXA is ready to resume a full launch schedule after its Mitsubishi H-IIA successfully orbited a long-awaited weather satellite. The seventh launch of the H-IIA medium-lift booster came 15 months after hot exhaust gases burned through the nozzle of a solid rocket booster motor and prompted the destruction of the sixth H-IIA. The Feb. 26 launch put the $314-million Space Systems/Loral (SS/L) MTSat-1R into a geostationary transfer orbit. It is to reach its final orbital slot at 140 deg. E. Long. on Mar. 8.

Staff
FAA has formed a working group to address root causes of general aviation accidents. Following a spate of high-profile business aviation crashes that raised public concerns about safety, the FAA in late February called a meeting with GA groups to share best practices for safe operations (AW&ST Feb. 21, p. 19). National Business Aviation Assn. President Ed Bolen in a letter on Feb. 25 reminded members that NBAA has led the way in developing best practices.

Staff
USN Rear Adm. (ret.) William A. Retz has joined the Studies and Analyses and Business Development teams of Washington-based Defense Solutions.

William B. Scott (Colorado Springs)
The newest arrow in the U.S. Air Force's space-control quiver is actually the nation's oldest space-gazing sensor.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
Prospects for returning NASA's space shuttle fleet to flight brightened last week when the 17th Russian Progress cargo vehicle to reach the International Space Station docked with the orbiting outpost. Launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome Feb. 28 on a Soyuz rocket, the Progress delivered more than two tons of supplies to the ISS, including 86 containers carrying a six-month supply of food. Also in the unpiloted craft were spare parts for the station's life support system, 1,071 lb. of water and 242 lb. of oxygen and air.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Two subsidiaries of Shanghai's China Eastern Airlines have taken delivery of two aircraft from International Lease Finance Corp. One 737-800 with blended winglets was received by China Eastern Airlines Wuhan and a 737-700 went to China Eastern Yunnan Airlines. China Eastern is due to take 13 737s from ILFC this year. Last December, China Eastern ordered six 737-700s for delivery in 2006 from Boeing.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
The Feb. 7 Industry Outlook column listed Douglas Equipment as the first to provide a towbarless tractor large enough to handle Airbus A380s. TLD developed the first A380-compatible tractor, which has been in use at Airbus since 2004.

Staff
Traci Fremin has been appointed general manager of the Atlantic Aviation facility at New Orleans Lakefront Airport. She remains director of customer development there and at Louis Armstrong International Airport.

Staff
The Civil Air Patrol rolled out its Airborne Real-Time Cueing Hyperspectral Enhanced Reconnaissance system last week at Ft. Belvoir, Va. The imaging system will be installed in CAP aircraft for aerial reconnaissance, and is expected to increase the effectiveness in several types of missions.

USAF Lt. Col. (ret.) Stephen D. Vining (Dayton, Ohio)
In your article "Watts Next?" (AW&ST Dec. 13, 2004, p. 30), it must have taken a great deal of editorial skill to purge the many inherent references to the Air Force Research Laboratory. AFRL's Power Div. has for decades been driving development of the enabling technologies cited by your article.

Staff
You can now register ONLINE for Aviation Week Events. Go to www.AviationNow.com/conferences or call Lydia Janow at +1 (212) 904-3225/+1 (800) 240-7645 ext. 5 (U.S. and Canada Only) Apr. 19-20--MRO Military Conference. Also, Apr. 20-21--MRO USA Conference & Exhibition. Gaylord Texan Resort & Convention Center, Dallas. May 10-11--Net-Centric Operations Conference 2005. Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, Washington. May 24-25--Homeland Security Summit & Exposition, Washington.

Staff
U.S. Army Gen. (ret.) Paul J. Kern has been appointed to the board of directors of the New York-based EDO Corp. He was commanding general of the Army Materiel Command.

Robert Wall (Paris)
SES Global executives expect to hit double-digit organic revenue growth for this year and next, and believe short-term interests driving some competitors could boost the long-term outlook for the satellite communications provider.

Staff
Eumetsat has made available its Meteosat 5 spacecraft, stationed at 63 deg. E. Long. over the Indian Ocean, for tsunami alert applications, following the reconfiguration of ground infrastructure to allow data-collection platforms to receive signals in the international frequency band reserved for emergency use. The University of Hawaii will use the spacecraft to retransmit signals from two new buoys placed in the Indian Ocean as part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's tsunami alert system.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
The budget carrier market in India is set to add another airline, Air One, in May with one leased 50-seater Embraer ERJ 145. The carrier intends to add four more by the end of 2005. It has plans to operate initially on regional routes where adequate services are unavailable. An announcement on launch plans is expected soon. Presently, Air Deccan is the only budget carrier, with SpiceJet and Kingfisher Airlines expected to start by April.

Staff
General Electric has been awarded a $57.8-million U.S. Air Force contract, that could eventually be worth $91.5 million, to provide newly redesigned high-pressure compressor and turbine assemblies to support the service life extension plan and upgrades for aging F-16 F100-GE-100/129 engines.

David Fulghum (Washington)
Northrop Grumman planners believe they have discovered a new, unfilled military niche for unmanned reconnaissance aircraft with day-long endurance that carry a payload of up to 20 lb. Researchers envision mounting these 6.5-ft.-wingspan UAVs--called Killer Bees--in "hives" or pods of three, five or 10 vehicles for automatic dispensing. They could then be dropped from the weapons pylons of large UAVs or the weapons bays of bomber aircraft, or they can be shot out the back of transport aircraft at speeds of 200 kt. or more and altitudes up to 40,000 ft.

Staff
Sarah Zhang (see photo) has become sales manager for Asia for Condor Engineering, Santa Barbara, Calif. She was director of Asia/Pacific Sales for SBS Technologies Inc.

Staff
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Staff
Boeing is targeting Mar. 8 for the first flight of the 777-200LR. The 301-seat aircraft is expected to have the industry's longest range--up to 9,420 naut. mi. (AW&ST Feb. 21, p. 45).

Pierre Sparaco and Robert Wall (Paris)
Boeing's top executives are convinced that the potential market for their rival's 500-seat-plus aircraft is narrowing. The consolidation versus fragmentation debate pitting Boeing against Airbus, although far from new, is further escalating as the A380's first flight date nears. Boeing's business analysts are convinced traffic growth will continue to create new city pairs while Airbus believes higher-capacity aircraft will be needed to operate hub-to-hub routes.

Staff
USAF Gen. (ret.) William J. Begert has become vice president-international programs and business development for Pratt & Whitney Military Engines, East Hartford, Conn. He was commander of Pacific Air Forces and had been assistant vice chief of staff.

David Bond (Washington)
Continental Airlines, the last of the Big Six U.S. network carriers to ask its employees for major pay, benefit and work-rule concessions, is on the verge of getting them in record time.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
Rolls-Royce plans to spend $42 million building and upgrading facilities at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi as it prepares to move its large outdoor aircraft engine test facility from the U.K. to the U.S. Plans call for testing the Trent 900 engine for the new Airbus A380 and the Trent 1000, under development for the Boeing 787, at Stennis in 2007.