Aviation Week & Space Technology

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
A decision on a new airborne early warning (AEW) aircraft by Turkey, expected in August but delayed because of financial problems, could be coming shortly. The Turkish Defense Undersecretariat is awaiting final cost approval for the four-aircraft program from Treasury Administration officials. Defense and industry officials in Ankara say Boeing--whose proposal involves Northrop Grumman's multirole, electronically scanned array radar mounted in a 737 transport--is the odds-on favorite after winning a similar competition in Australia in July.

Staff
Juan D. Morales has become senior vice president-cargo, Pamela L. Rollins senior vice president-business development and Mark Stewart senior vice president-airline, all of Amerijet International Inc., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Staff
A senior Russian government official backed the new management at MiG-MAPO which was stung by the highly public resignations of several top officials late last month, including the directors of the MiG-29 and MiG-31 programs. They blamed management, which has instituted a major restructuring program, for effectively closing down the MiG-29SMT upgrade program and shifting focus to civil aircraft. Vice Prime Minister Iliya Klebanov pledged the government's support for MiG-MAPO in ``all future activities.'' He said the company is to be renamed the Russian Aircraft Corp.

Staff
Timothy J. Perrott has been appointed vice president-investor relations of the Orbital Sciences Corp., Dulles, Va. He was director of investor relations for the Southern Co.

Staff
John Silk has been named product manager for aircraft tubing and Brian Dell marketing specialist for tubular products at Tiernay Metals, Redondo Beach, Calif.

EDITED BY MICHAEL A. DORNHEIM
NASA is working with Veridian Trident Data Systems to build a prototype firewall for space use, so that Earth-bound experimenters can securely control their projects on the space shuttle, satellites or the International Space Station. It is the virtual private network (VPN) part of NASA's Space Internet project to make spacecraft look like a node on the Internet.

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
Kawasaki Heavy Industries, long a co-producer of the BK117 helicopter, is to develop a longer version of the utility rotorcraft in cooperation with Eurocopter. The new machine is to have 13 seats and a range of 700 km. (435 mi.), compared with 11 passengers and 500 km. for the current BK117 C1. Development costs have not been released, but they are to be shared equally. Current planning would have Eurocopter produce the rotor system and dynamic components, with Kawasaki assembling the fuselage. Flyaway costs are put at $4.9 million. More than 450 BK117s have been sold.

Staff
Peter Niemy has been named London Gatwick Airport-based vice president-marketing and business development for Europe, Asia and the Middle East for GE Capital Aviation Training.

Staff
Craig Saddler has been appointed vice president-investor relations of the Boeing Co. in Seattle. He was chief financial officer of the Boeing Shared Services Group.

Staff
Bombardier Aerospace has received certification by Europe's Joint Airworthiness Authorities (JAA) for its new high-speed, 66-78-seat Q400 turboprop aircraft, which was launched in June 1995. The JAA has recommended that Europe's national aviation authorities grant the aircraft their type certificate or equivalent document.

Staff
The ADVCRtm is the first production-ready airborne digital videocassette recorder and is qualified to Mil-Std-810E. Some of the technological advances associated with the ADVCR include: integrity of image quality when digitally copying or importing images to a computer, firewire interface for video I/O, compatibility with existing cameras and video sources, both NTSC and PAL availability, discrete or RS-42 remote control and event-mark-with-search-function capability with several types of distinguishable events.

Staff
DotLine Lasertm combines V-belt pulley precision alignment with laser leveling in a single hand-held permanently calibrated tool. Tight space is no limitation as this lightweight, waterproof tool can be attached magnetically to either outside or inside of pulley. Three AAA batteries project a bright fanned laser onto three magnetic targets on the opposite pulley allowing the user to view the alignment condition. The tool's laser can be switched to a bright red dot for distance leveling. Better alignment of pulley reduces belt wear, noise, vibration and downtime.

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
Bombardier Aerospace has sold a Global Express business jet to the Japan Civil Aviation Bureau. It will be operated as a flight inspection aircraft. Delivery is scheduled for December 2001. In related news, Global Express competitor Gulfstream early this month provided technical briefings on its Gulfstream V and Gulfstream IV-SP ultra-long-haul business jet aircraft for Polish officials.

Staff
Hans-Dieter Kesseler has become president of Lufthansa Consulting and TTI Consult, a Lufthansa Systems subsidiary.

Staff
This product is designed for precision electric field and voltage measurement and RF signal transmission. It used advanced, proprietary optical chip technology to achieve precise, interference-free measurement. Because the sensor and optical fibers are made of dielectric materials, there is a high degree of isolation between electric field or high voltage test point and instrumentation system. Remote measurement of at least 100 meters is possible. It may be used for a variety of EMC, EMI, ESD or voltage measurement needs.

Staff
Racal Instruments introduced three high-voltage switch plug-ins for its Adapt-a-Switch platform. These permit end users and system integrators to easily integrate hipot and cable breakdown testing into VXI-bus based test systems. Capable of switching up to 500 volts and 10 watts, the first is a reed relay plug-in; another reed relay plug-in is designed for switching voltages up to 1,000 volts and 25 watts. A mercury-wetted plug-in card can switch voltages up to 500 volts and 50 watts.

BRUCE A. SMITH
The two competitors in the U.S. Air Force's Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) program have developed boosters aimed at achieving a delicate balance among cost, performance and system reliability that will be required to meet future government and commercial launch requirements. The Lockheed Martin Atlas V and Boeing Delta IV launchers appear similar with their first-stage, common-core modular designs, but the two companies have taken distinctly different paths in the design and development of their next-generation boosters.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
El Al has signed a $400-million order with Boeing for three 777-200ER aircraft to be delivered starting in February 2001 but has postponed a decision on acquiring 3-4 A330-200s from Airbus Industrie. The delay came at the request of Israeli Transport Minister Yitzhak Mordechai, who asked that the state-owned airlines' board of directors postpone a meeting scheduled last week to decide on the Airbus order. Mordechai wants more time to study the financial implications and obtain Treasury Ministry input on the proposed Airbus deal.

EDWARD H. PHILLIPS
Air Canada has agreed to purchase AMR Corp.'s preferred shares in Canadian Airlines for C$55-60 million, and allow American Airlines to retain its code-share with Canadian for 10 years. The accord, however, is contingent upon Air Canada acquiring Canadian.

Staff
Lease of 28 F-16s to New Zealand became a political issue after new Prime Minister Helen Clark announced a review of the deal. Russia's Sukhoi has offered the government a 10-year lease on an unspecified number of Su-30s for the same lease cost of $63.8 million for the F-16s. President Clinton phoned Clark to try to secure the F-16 deal, which will be the subject of negotiations in New Zealand later this month. In addition to the lease cost is a $182-million reactivation cost for the aircraft, which were sold--but not delivered--to Pakistan due to their nuclear policy.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
Astronauts assembling the space station may be exposed unnecessarily to high levels of radiation, the National Research Council warns. An NRC panel says flight controllers in Houston aren't making use of real-time data and the best models on solar storms. It's a particular problem for the station program, since the bulk of the shuttle flights and extravehicular activity will occur during the Sun's peak phase of activity in its 11-year cycle.

Staff
These steel and stainless steel filtration systems are suitable for a variety of filtering uses including cleaners, rinses and quench oils. They offer high flow rates (up to 9,000 GPH) and high solids loading areas (15-60 sq. ft. with pleated filters, 17.5-52.5 sq. ft. with depth wound cartridges), with a choice of cast centrifugal single or double mechanical seal pumps. Each system has a pump and TEFC motor, filter chamber, flow control valve, piping, vent valve and pressure gauge mounted on a rugged vinyl-coated steel base.

Staff
Cal Purdin (see photos) has been named general manager of the Interiors and Structures Div. of Nordam Manufacturing, Tulsa, Okla. He was head of the BFGoodrich Motion Controls Div., Cedar Knolls, N.J. Tom Villani has been promoted to general manager of the Nordam Nacelle/Thrust Reverser Systems Div. from director of operations and Rick Smith to general manager of the Prism Div. from director of operations.

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
The Turkish Defense Ministry also is threatening to cancel a $35-million order with Kongsberg of Norway for Penguin anti-ship missiles The deal, signed this past summer, has been blocked by the Norwegian parliament owing to concerns over Turkey's human rights record. Turkey has set a deadline of January for approval of the deal, threatening to open negotiations with Boeing and Matra BAe Dynamics for Harpoon or Polyphem missiles, respectively, instead. The missiles are to arm eight Sikorsky Black Hawk helicopters set to be delivered next year.

EDITED BY PAUL PROCTOR
FlightSafety International now can present infrared information on the visual systems of its advanced simulators, including the Bell Boeing V-22 tiltrotor. FlightSafety's Visual System Div. performed the upgrade in collaboration with Technology Service Corp., based in Silver Spring, Md. The modification provides information on the thermal properties of objects within the database and computes the image for correct presentation on a cockpit panel display.