Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
The USLT 2000 is a laptop-based ultrasonic flaw detector contained on a PCMCIA card. It is suitable for manual applications such as spot weld testing, precision thickness measurement and flaw detection. It has a 0.5-20 MHz. bandwidth, 110 dB. gain range, built-in DAC and TCG curves, two independent gates, four selectable frequency ranges and normal rectification modes plus RF. Krautkramer Branson Inc., 50 Industrial Park Road, Lewistown, Pa. 17044.

Staff
Also, Richard L. Kline, vice president-international activities/director of the International Aerospace Corp. of Anser, the von Braun Award for Excellence in Space Program Management; Richard E. Quigley, chief of the Joint Strike Fighter Integrated Subsystem Technology Program at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, the Aerospace Power Systems Award; and Irvin Glassman, Robert H. Goddard professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Princeton (N.J.) University, the Propellants and Combustion Award.

EDITED BY MONICA WARNOCK
Robertson Aviation Inc. has won a $16-million contract from the U.S. Army for 209 CH-47D Chinook crashworthy extended-range fuel systems and associated training and technical manuals. With all options, the contract is worth $28 million.

JOHN D. MORROCCO
British Aerospace sees the U.K.'s Future Offensive Air System (FOAS) program, which is investigating a host of new and emerging technologies, as a springboard for further aerospace/defense consolidation in Europe.

Staff
Phil Marshall (see photo) has been named general manager of the Boeing Co.'s Delta rocket manufacturing and final assembly facility in Pueblo, Colo. He was senior manager of production operations there. Marshall succeeds Scott Strode, who is now division director of the Delta 4 factory in Decatur, Ala.

Staff
Laurie Martin has been named managing director for inflight services, Stan Petersen-Gauthier managing director for cost and profit analysis and internal audit, and Vince Portaro managing director for customer service, all for the Air Wisconsin Airlines Corp.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
According to the Assn. of European Airlines (AEA), ``1998 is turning out to be a `black year' for flight delays.'' During the first half, more than 20% of AEA member airlines' scheduled flights departed with a more than 15-min. delay. Even worse, in June, delays peaked at a record 29.1%, AEA officials said.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
State Dept. investigators looking into Boeing's information exchanges with Russian and Ukrainian engineers working on the Sea Launch project may want to look westward. A grand jury in Seattle has issued a subpoena to a translator working on Sea Launch for Boeing contractor Superior Design. Sources tell Aviation Week the subpoena seeks records of his work, including project documents, and a computer he was using. The U.S.

WILLIAM B. SCOTT
The U.S. Air Force is soliciting ideas for improving the quality of undergraduate pilot and navigator training, while also exploring the possibility of a contractor taking over the flight-screening program until the Slingsby T-3A Firefly trainer is returned to service.

Staff
Jeff Green (see photos) has been appointed chief financial officer and Gwen Loquercio controller of AirLiance Materials of Chicago. Green was manager of marketing and planning asset management for United Airlines, one of the AirLiance partners. Loquercio was accounting manager for AmeriKing Inc.

Staff
Robert M. Hall has been named senior vice president-business affairs/general counsel of DirecTV Inc., El Segundo, Calif. He succeeds Larry D. Hunter, who is now chairman of DirecTV Japan Management Inc. Hall was vice president/assistant general counsel of the Hughes Electronics Corp.

Staff
Rocco Tomanelli has been appointed airports director for the Delaware River and Bay Authority. He was senior research specialist for Europe for the Logicon Corp.

Geoffrey Thomas
Political meddling in the air traffic control procedures at Australia's Sydney airport, aimed at more evenly distributing noise pollution, has significantly reduced safety margins, according to a just-released report by Australia's Bureau of Air Safety Investigation.

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
TAP Air Portugal is expected to suspend its twice-weekly Airbus A340 services from Lisbon to the Portuguese enclave of Macau next to China as of Oct. 26. High overhead costs make the route unprofitable, despite passenger loads that normally average more than 70%. TAP began operating the routes two years ago and was due to hand them over to the Chinese-led regional, Air Macau, next April. Yet, as a Macau airport official noted, TAP's own restrictive financial structure prohibited the routes from becoming profitable.

PAUL PROCTOR
GEC is targeting the rapidly expanding airline market for head-up displays with an advanced, lightweight unit based on its military head-up display technology. A prototype is scheduled to fly this month in a Boeing 737-200 transport testbed from Mojave, Calif.

Staff
Michael DeWalt has been named chief scientist for aviation systems for Certification Services Inc. of Seattle. He was FAA national resource specialist for aircraft computer software.

Staff
Kayser-Threde has handed over Maqsat 3, a dummy satellite that will replace Eutelsat W1 on the third and final Ariane 5 qualification flight. W1 was destroyed by fire in May, and it was not possible to reschedule another commercial payload for the flight. The mission also will carry an experimental reentry vehicle, the ARD.

Staff
The Hydraulic Mini Jack features 5 tons of force but is small enough to fit in the palm of one's hand. It can be used as a jack or spreader and can turn a mechanical gear puller into a hydraulic one. The jack weighs 4.2 lb. and has a retracted height of 2.56 in. The base diameter is 215/16 in. The 97/16-in. jacking handle operates in line with the base for easier use in confined spaces. SPX Power Team, 2121 W. Bridge St., P.O. Box 993, Owatonna, Minn. 55060-0993.

Staff
Bill Gale has been named West Coast sales manager for El Al Israel Airlines.

Staff
This aileron actuator built under NASA's Electrically Powered Actuation Design validation program, which made its first flight on NASA's research F/A-18 on July 28, is the first electromechanical actuation device to fly on the primary flight control surface of a tactical fighter, according to manufacturer MPC Products Corp. The high-power density actuator develops 5 hp. The device is about 12-14 in. long. MPC Products Corp., 7426 N. Linder Ave., Skokie, Ill. 60077.

Staff
USAF Gen. (Ret.) Thomas Moorman, Jr., (see photo) has become vice president of Booz, Allen and Hamilton, McLean, Va. He was USAF vice chief of staff and chairman of its board of directors.

Staff
Lt. Gen. John B. Sams, Jr., has become commander of the 15th Air Force, based at Travis AFB, Calif. He was vice commander of the Air Mobility Command.

Staff
Declan Meagher has been named Dublin-based director of business development for Europe, the Middle East and Africa for the Memphis Group. He was general manager of Spare Partners International USA.

PIERRE SPARACOPAUL PROCTOR
European aircraft and engine manufacturers as well as research agencies are increasingly focusing technology research on the reduction of noise and emissions generated by commercial transports. Noise-related constraints are having a severe impact on major European hubs, such as Amsterdam-Schiphol, Paris/Charles de Gaulle and Brussels-Zaventem. In the last few months, for example, local residents forced DHL Worldwide to abandon a plan to establish an additional hub at Strasbourg airport, in eastern France.

PAUL MANN
The hemorrhage of authority in Russia is the gravest test of the nation's nuclear security, and of the military's allegiance to the government, since the Soviet Union collapsed seven years ago, U.S. defense experts say. The likeliest nuclear security breach at the moment, they believe, is the diversion by corrupt insiders of a few feebly protected and easily transported tactical nuclear weapons, of which the Russian military has thousands.