Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
UNITED STATES Editor-In-Chief: Anthony L. Velocci, Jr. [email protected] Managing Editor: James R. Asker [email protected] Assistant Managing Editors: Stanley W. Kandebo--Technology [email protected] Michael Stearns--Production [email protected] Senior Editors: Craig Covault [email protected], David Hughes [email protected] NEW YORK 2 Penn Plaza, Fifth Floor, New York, N.Y. 10121 Phone: +1 (212) 904-2000, Fax: +1 (212) 904-6068

Edited by David Hughes
FROST & SULLIVAN REPORTS THE MARKET FOR GPS products in automobiles will grow to $1.8 billion in 2010, from $545 million in 2000. The nonautomotive segment should grow to $891 million from $417 million over the same period. A price reduction for GPS products is expected to boost demand.

David Hughes (Washington)
The Bell/Agusta AB139 is the first helicopter fitted with Honeywell's Primus Epic integrated avionics suite with modular units that will make it easy to equip the aircraft for a variety of missions.

Staff
Union machinists at United Techno- logies' Pratt & Whitney jet engine unit voted against going on strike Dec. 5. The vote paved the way for a disputed three-year contract offered by the company to take effect.

Staff
Boeing says Bridgestone will provide the 10 tires on each 7E7. Bridgestone holds tire contracts on Boeing's 737, 747-400, 767 and 777 product lines.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
Speaking of Mitsubishi, it has selected Flow International Corp. of Kent, Wash., to build waterjet machine tools to cut the 7E7's carbon fiber wing skins. The 118-ft.-long, 21-ft.-wide machining system will be built and tested in Jeffersonville, Ind. Its ultra high-pressure pumps, which emit a thin stream of water at Mach 3, will be made in Kent. Traditionally, carbon fiber has been cut by such conventional tools as carbide-tipped routers, bandsaws, cutoff saws and abrasive wheels. But these can overheat, fray or delaminate edges of advanced composites.

Douglas Barrie (London)
NetJets Europe is predicting it will show an operating profit in 2005, almost a decade after opening for business, although this year's results will still be in the red. Chief Executive Mark Booth is bullish about the company's ability to reach profitability, and to start capital repayments in the next two financial years.

Staff
Dennis Averyt (see photos) has been named vice president-intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance for the Northrop Grumman Corp.'s Space Technology Sector, Redondo Beach, Calif. Other new vice presidents are: Maureen Heath, civil space; Peggy Nelson, project manager for Prometheus 1; David Rosener, subcontracts; and Ron Smith, Six Sigma. Heath has been vice president-marketing and Washington operations. Nelson was program manager for Promethus 1.

Staff
The U.S. and U.K. have agreed to assist each other on homeland security science and technology projects by cooperating on the development, testing and evaluation of technologies, sharing capabilities and experts, developing threat assessments and working on best practices.

Edited by David Hughes
LOCKHEED MARTIN HAS ADDED A NIGHT VISION goggle feature to F-16 mission training centers it produces for the U.S. Air Force, and the new equipment has passed a critical design review. The NVG simulation capability provides pilots with night sensory and visual cue training in goggles fitted with an NVG channel that correlates with the cockpit visual scene. The hardware and sensor system package was developed under a $3.7-million USAF contract in which Lockheed Martin teamed with MultiGen-Paradigm and Silicon Graphics. The NVG training capability is in use at U.S.

By Joe Anselmo
Legacy U.S. airlines have embarked on a solid recovery--at least on Wall Street. Their stocks have seen a nice bounce in recent weeks, wiping out some of the losses that decimated prices earlier in the year. But investors beware: Analysts caution that the industry's woes are far from over.

By Joe Anselmo
Surging government spending on defense and anti-terrorism efforts pumped up U.S. aerospace sales by an estimated $12 billion this year, and the civil aircraft market is poised on a recovery that should drive similar growth in 2005, according to the Aerospace Industries Assn.

Edited by David Bond
In keeping with the "transformation" of NASA to carry out President Bush's exploration plans, the NASA Advisory Council (NAC) is being transformed into an outside advisory organization like the one the Pentagon uses. Henceforth the panel will be split into sub-panels for policy and for science and technology, on the model of the Defense Policy and Defense Science boards, which advise the secretary of Defense on what to do and how to do it. Each NASA panel will have its own chairman, one of whom will chair the overall NAC while the other waits in the wings to take over.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
Representatives of 27 European Union members and the European Space Agency will meet this spring to set down governance principles for the joint Space Council that will define a common European space program. The meeting also will draw up program priorities and industrial principles. The council, created under the EU Constitutional Treaty signed on Oct. 29, met for the first time on Nov. 25 and plans to have a blueprint ready by the end of next year.

Staff
General Electric's Boeing 747 served as the testbed for the first flight of the GE/Pratt & Whitney Engine Alliance's GP7200, which is mounted inboard on the left wing. The engine is on track for certification in 2005 and for powering the first flight of the Airbus A380 in November.

Staff
Raytheon has received a $158-million contract for continued production of the new, high off-boresight AIM-9X air-to-air missile. The order involves 442 tactical missiles, 153 training missiles and support equipment.

Robert Wall (Washington)
The British Defense Ministry wants to take steps to assure it can certify software on the Joint Strike Fighter and declare the system operationally safe once it is delivered, avoiding problems that have kept new Chinooks effectively grounded in the U.K.

Douglas Barrie (Hong Kong and Sydney)
Virgin Atlantic is beginning to flesh out its strategy for pushing into the Asia-Pacific market on the strength of substantial fleet growth. It plans to expand routes and has ambitions either to partner with regional carriers or launch further low-cost airline subsidiaries.

Edited by Edward H. Phillips
The demise on Dec. 5 of Poland's Air Polonia confirms that the European low-fare carrier's excess capacity could lead to multiple bankruptcies and consolidation initiatives. The Warsaw-based airline, which was serving Western European points such as London, Paris and Rome with Boeing 737-300/400s, was undercapitalized and could not find new investors. Its failure affects an estimated 50,000 travelers who had booked seats for the next several months.

Staff
Vietnam Airlines has ordered 10 185-seat Airbus A321 twinjets. First delivery is scheduled for 2006. Vietnam operates six A321s and 10 A320s.

Staff
Mark Niehaus (see photo) has become general manager of Stevens Aviation's Denver service center. He was director of service sales support and engine programs for Bombardier Business Aviation Services.

Staff
Newark Liberty International Airport will undergo a major expansion to accommodate a projected 40% increase in passengers who are expected to use the facility by 2021. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey approved nearly $280 million to modernize Terminal B and related facilities so passengers can be screened and baggage handled more efficiently. Planning and design work will begin in 2005.

Staff
GE Infrastructure, a unit of General Electric Co., has completed its acquisition of InVision Technologies Inc., one of two suppliers of Transportation Security Administration-certified explosives detection systems to screen checked bags at U.S. airports.

Staff
A Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. High-Resolution Imaging Experiment (HiRISE) camera will begin mission-scenario testing following its delivery to Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver last week. The camera is part of a six-instrument suite to be integrated into the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), which is now scheduled for an August 2005 launch.

Robert Wall (Washington)
The first of several key reports is now complete, and soon to be followed by others that should allow Pentagon leaders to repair the U.S. Air Force tanker program and other tainted acquisitions. But industry officials warn areas remain where future acquisition abuses can fester.