Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
Philip A. Teel (see photo) has been appointed vice president-airborne early warning and electronic warfare systems of the Northrop Grumman Corp. Integrated Systems Sector of Dallas. He succeeds Paul Coco, who is retiring. John Young, currently vice president/integrated product team leader for electronic warfare programs, will be deputy business area leader. Teel was sector vice president-materiel. Martin Dandridge, sector executive vice president, will be Teel's interim successor. Lance G.

EDITED BY EDWARD H. PHILLIPS
Upgrade of the AIM-9M-9 Sidewinder short-range missile has been completed by the missiles division of the Space and Special Systems Management Directorate at Robins AFB, Ga. The upgrade provides the weapon with improved counter-counter-measures capability to discriminate between defensive flares and the engine exhaust of targets. The program delivered 6,600 of the modified missiles to U.S. forces at 84 locations worldwide.

Staff
Bryan Barlow has been named vice president-business development for Caratron Industries, Warren, Mich. He was director of sales and marketing for ACR Industries Inc.

Staff
Sandra J. Wright has become vice president/controller of Litton Industries, Woodland Hills, Calif. She succeeds Carol A. Wiesner, who has announced her retirement. Wright was staff vice president-financial planning and operations.

Staff
Joergen Lindegaard has been appointed to succeed Jan Stenberg as president/CEO of Scandinavian Airlines System on June 1 when Stenberg plans to leave. Lindegaard is president/CEO of the Danish company GN Store Nord.

EDITED BY EDWARD H. PHILLIPS
Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co.'s Joint Strike Fighter team has developed fabrication and assembly methods designed to reduce assembly span to five months for production aircraft. The team has demonstrated the ability to assemble large, separate subassemblies quickly. Using laser alignment, the wing carry-through and center fuselage can be mated in only 14 min., and joining these assemblies to the aft fuselage requires 16 min., according to airframe team lead Martin J. McLaughlin.

Staff
President Clinton's executive order establishing an Air Navigation Service Organization (ANSO) last week was not completely unexpected. When it reauthorized the FAA's budget this year, Congress set the course toward a performance-based organization to manage the air traffic control (ATC) system and related programs (see p. 32). It also has been a high priority of FAA Administrator Jane Garvey.

JAMES R. ASKER
The stunning assertion that new spacecraft data show the equatorial latitudes of Mars were once a land of lakes is just the sort of ``discovery'' NASA and its international partners had hoped for as they set out upon a concerted, continuous program of exploring the most Earth-like of our planetary neighbors. The obvious, dramatic implication of the compelling imagery of what seems to be sedimentary rock formations is that these are precisely the sort of areas where one might search for fossils.

Staff
Sonobond Ultasonics' equipment for welding rigid plastic has been expanded to allow customers to choose the most effective machine for a particular job. The basic line of Sureweld 20-, 35- and 70-KHz. bench models and hand-held units includes machine builder's modules and additional wattage choices for the power supplies and a space-saving integrated welder with the power supply built into the welding head. Available in 20- and 3-KHz. sizes, the modules take up less space and are less expensive than more cumbersome ultrasonic actuators.

Staff
Sabena suspended weekly flights to Bujumbura, Burundi, after a Sabena A330-200 was raked by gunfire Dec. 4 as the aircraft approached Bujumbura airport at about 300 ft. A passenger and a flight attendant suffered minor injuries from shrapnel caused by 11 bullet hits, one in an engine. The aircraft carrying 158 passengers landed safely. Sabena accommodated 82 Nairobi-bound passengers in a hotel before transferring them to their final destination.

Staff
Thomson-CSF has decided to change its name to reflect its new status as an international company firmly committed to dual technologies.

Staff
The SV Series of solenoid valves is a new line from Circle Seal Controls for use with liquids or gases. The valves provide positive shutoff and fast response regardless of flow direction or pressure. They assure bubble-tight sealing from vacuum to 6,000 psig (414 bar) and can be used to control flow in remote locations. The balanced poppet design renders them insensitive to pressure fluctuations and assures a rapid operation response time of less than 0.1 sec. for a full position shift, according to the company. Standard AC models are explosion proof to Mil-Std 810B.

PAUL MANN
U.S. labor's contention that defense offsets violate free trade doctrine is indisputable, but few countries adhere to pure market orthodoxy in their push to expand their aerospace sectors, outside experts say.

JAMES R. ASKER
The armada of craft that European and U.S. space agencies plan to launch to Mars presages a flood of information about the red planet over the next decade. There's just one problem: unless something changes, that ocean of data will have to trickle back to Earth.

MICHAEL A. DORNHEIM
Last week's revelation from Mars Global Surveyor data--that sedimentary rocks suggest past bodies of water on the red planet--is just the latest discovery by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory spacecraft.

EDITED BY EDWARD H. PHILLIPS
Boeing Satellite Services reports it will end 2000 with a record 15 satellite deliveries and a backlog of more than 34 spacecraft valued at about $6 billion. Orders this year include seven commercial spacecraft. Societe Europeene des Satellites in Luxembourg is the latest commercial customer. Last week it ordered its 10th satellite in 10 years, Astra 3A, which is scheduled for launch in 2002.

Staff
Four Russian airlines have formed an alliance to coordinate activities in order to counter Aeroflot's expansion plans on the domestic market. The as-yet-unnamed alliance consists of Moscow-based Domodedovo Airlines and Aviaexpresscruise; KrasAir, based in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk; and Urals-based Chelyabinsk Air Enterprise. The airlines have a combined fleet of 97 aircraft, serve 33 cities and carried 1.8 million passengers last year.

Staff
The Eddytherm microprocessor-controlled induction heater for bearings allows precise setting of time or temperature to prevent premature bearing failures due to overheating. The temperature probe continuously measures and displays actual temperature. The ``stand by'' feature permits holding temperature at preset levels. It automatically demagnetizes bearings after heating. Light and buzzer signal termination of heating demagnetizing cycle. Shrink-fitting bearing, sleeves, sprockets, couplings, impellers, crane wheels and gears of up to 880 lb.

EDITED BY ROBERT W. MOORMAN
SAS has settled a dispute with the Norwegian Cabin Crew Union, which threatened to expand strike action regarding pay and overtime issues. The recent settlement came after striking cabin crews forced SAS to ground 159 domestic Norwegian flights on Nov. 27. Separately, Joergen Lindgaard has been named to take over from Jan Stenberg as president and CEO of SAS in June 2001. Lindegaard, whose background is in engineering, heads the Danish telecommunications company, GN Store Nord.

Staff
Robert B. Dial (see photo) has been promoted to vice president-maintenance and quality control from chief inspector/director of quality control of BFGoodrich Aerospace Aviation Services, Everett, Wash.

Staff
Bob M. Duff (see photos) has been named vice president of the Applied Physics Div. and R. Curtis Heinen vice president of the Training Systems and Simulators Div. of the Southwest Research Institute of San Antonio. Duff was executive director of the Instrumentation and Space Research Div., while Heinen was a director in the Aerospace Electronics and Training Systems Div. Scott D. Royse was promoted to director from assistant director of the Simulation and Systems Engineering Dept.

Staff
Michael A. Coviello has become vice president-asset management of BACK Aviation Solutions, Manassas, Va. He was director of aircraft programs for the Republic Financial Corp.

Staff
Russian managers are considering redocking the Russian Progress M1-4 unmanned transport with the ISS to use the Progress as both a garbage scow and also to verify fixes to software they believe caused the failure of its initial auto-docking.

Staff
Karl E. Olsoni, Jr., has been appointed chief financial officer of Final Analysis, Lanham, Md. He was vice president/treasurer of Southern Energy Inc.

Staff
The Navy's acquisition executive, Lee Buchanan, has approved low-rate initial production for the ALQ-214 radio frequency countermeasures (RFCM) portion of the Integrated Defensive Electronic Countermeasures (IDECM) system. It was developed for the F/A-18E/F by Lockheed Martin/Sanders--which was recently acquired by BAE Systems North America--and by ITT Avionics. The ALQ-214 includes the Sanders developed ALE-55 fiber-optic towed decoy.