Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
Saab-Scania Group is being split into two separate companies, with all of Saab's civil and military aerospace businesses to form the new Saab AB. Saab, which like Scania will be a wholly-owned subsidiary of Investor Group, will consist of Saab Military Aircraft, Saab Dynamics, Saab Training Systems, Saab Aircraft, Saab Combitech and Saab Service Partner. The company, which will remain based in Linkoping, Sweden, has annual sales of 4.9 billion kronor ($671 million).

Staff
Gaston Hebert has been appointed president of de Havilland, Inc., Downsview, Ontario. He has been executive vice president. Hebert succeeds Ken Laver.

Staff
Gamesa Aeronautica, Embraer's Spanish risk-sharing partner in the EMB-145 transport program, has shipped the first EMB-145 wings to the Brazilian aircraft manufacturer's Sao Jose dos Campos final assembly facilities. Gamesa will produce wings, wing fairings and nacelles for the 50-seat regional twinjet. The nacelle's thrust reverser section is manufactured by France's Hurel-Dubois. The first EMB-145, equipped with 7,040-lb.-thrust Allison AE3007 turbofan engines, will begin flight tests by mid-year. Embraer has launch orders for 13 aircraft.

ANTHONY L. VELOCCI, JR.
Sundstrand Corp., citing the continuing drop in defense-related sales and the need to carve out excess capacity, will embark on a major restructuring.

EDITED BY EDWARD H. PHILLIPS
THE HOUSE HAS APPROVED and sent to the Senate a $3.2-billion Fiscal 1995 supplemental defense spending bill to cover last year's unfunded U.S. contingency operations in Somalia, Haiti, Kuwait and elsewhere around the globe, as well as pay raises for military personnel. A Democratic amendment to reduce the amount to the $2.5 billion originally requested by the Clinton Administration was defeated. Republicans would pay for the boost in readiness funding by rescinding $1.46 billion in other defense spending and $1.4 billion in foreign aid and domestic spending.

COMPILED BY PAUL PROCTOR
A NEW USE FOR SMART MATERIALS could include constant, real-time crack and delamination detection in critical composite aircraft and spacecraft structures. The process incorporates micron size particles of Terfenol-D, a ``giant magnetostrictive'' material, into the composite. Sensing coils monitor internal stress based on the magnetic field generated by the particles. Stress concentration caused by a defect or delamination results in an abnormally high local magnetic field, according to Terfenol-D manufacturer Etrema Products, Ames, Iowa.

COMPILED BY PAUL PROCTOR
IN RESPONSE TO STARTUP NATIONS, USAir has announced one-way fare cuts on several of its Pittsburgh-Philadelphia flights to $53, $6 lower than Nations' fare, and said it would match the $89 fare on four of its 16 daily Pittsburgh-Boston flights.

Staff
WorldCorp, which owns 75% of World Airways, posted net earnings of $8.3 million in 1994 after losing $5.3 million in the fourth quarter. This compares with a net loss of $30.9 million and $11.1 million, respectively, in 1993. The company's improved financial performance was chiefly attributed to ``near breakeven operating results'' at World Airways, T. Coleman Andrews said. He is president and CEO at WorldCorp. The airline's fourth-quarter operating loss was $400,000 and net losses were $1.3 million.

MICHAEL MECHAM
A Swiss manufacturer of high-temperature and dynamic pressure transducers for monitoring booster performance gave technical briefings to China Great Wall Industries a month before the Long March 2E/Apstar-2 explosion. Vibro-Meter Aerospace Div. of Fribourg, Switzerland, offered China Great Wall the same equipment that the Societe Europeenne de Propulsion (SEP) has selected to instrument the Ariane 5's first-stage Vulcain engine.

Staff
BOEING PREMATURELY REMOVED the starboard Pratt&Whitney PW4084 powerplant from a 777 transport involved in a 1,000-cycle ETOPS test on Feb. 18. The powerplant was 40 cycles short of a planned 500-cycle removal. It previously had been ``aged'' for 2,000 operating cycles. The powerplant may have been damaged by human error during an engine oil change and subsequent run-dry test by Boeing personnel.

EDWARD H. PHILLIPS
Spurred to action by two unsolved crashes involving Boeing 737 transports, the National Transportation Safety Board is calling for sweeping changes that would greatly expand capacity of flight data recorders on board most U.S. airline aircraft.

CRAIG COVAULT
The flight test of an advanced French rocket-ramjet has opened the way for possible development of a French ``anti-AWACS-type'' long-range, air-to-air missile and European high-speed air-to-ground weapons. The French aeronautics agency ONERA and Matra are joint prime contractors for the ``self modulating ramjet'' project which has been a French ``black program'' for most of its 14-year history.

GAIL F. BUTLER AND MARTIN R. KELLER
Some years ago, Alfred E. Kahn, Cornell Professor and former CAB Chairman, coined the phrase ``deregulatory schizophrenia'' to describe his attitudes toward economic deregulation. Kahn indicated his attitudes comprised two components: a clear preference for relying on competition wherever it appears it will do the job, and a skepticism about relying entirely on the unregulated market since economic deregulation cannot mean simple ``laissez-faire.''

Staff
Clayton M. Jones (see photo) has become senior vice president-government operations and an international and corporate officer of Rockwell International Corp., Seal Beach, Calif. Previously vice president-aerospace government affairs and marketing, he succeeds James A. McDivitt, who will retire Apr. 1. Lt. Gen. Edward P. Barry, Jr., (USAF, Ret.) has been named vice president-integrated inertial navigation systems/Global Positioning Systems for the Autonetics Electronics Systems Div. He was commander of the Space and Missile Systems Center at Los Angeles AFB.

COMPILED BY FRANCES FIORINO
WESTERN AIRPORTS RENO, SEATTLE AND SALT LAKE CITY in December, 1994, set passenger traffic records for the month and year. Year-end passenger counts rose to 5.3 million at Reno/Tahoe International, 21 million at Seattle-Tacoma International and 17.5 million at Salt Lake City International. The totals are up 12%, 12% and 10.5%, respectively, over 1993..

STANLEY W. KANDEBO
Pratt&Whitney and General Electric have formally embarked upon programs to develop increased-thrust derivatives of their engines for upcoming versions of the Boeing 777. Pratt has launched development of a 98,000-lb.-thrust version of the 84,000-lb.-thrust PW4000 for stretched versions of the ``B-market'' 777, and General Electric has solidified plans to increase the power of the 84,700-lb.-thrust GE90 to 92,000 lb. However, the engine will be derated to 90,000-lb. thrust for the ``B-market'' 777.

Staff
Following are excerpts from a recent analysis of U.S. policy toward North and South Korea written by Robert A. Manning, a senior fellow at the Progressive Policy Institute, a Washington think tank. Manning previously was an adviser on Asia strategy to the U.S. Defense secretary and a State Dept. adviser on East Asia-Pacific affairs. He argues that the Clinton Administration should develop a follow-up strategy to the 1994 U.S./North Korean ``Agreed Framework,'' aimed at ending Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program.

MICHAEL O. LAVITT
Photograph: Strotek will test the intensity and flash rate of strobes on 1,000 U.S. transports that are moving on the ground under an FAA contract using specially equipped vans. U.S. airlines are facing a Mar. 1 FAA deadline to develop a plan for assuring the brightness of strobe lights on their aircraft, but some industry officials doubt the change is needed and say carriers will have difficulty meeting the requirement.

Staff
Jeffrey E. Grant has been appointed vice president/member of the Office of the President at Hughes Space and Communications Co. of Los Angeles. He was vice president-quality at GM Hughes Electronics. Richard J. Neiger, vice president/controller of Hughes Industrial Electronics, has been named vice president-operations for Hughes Telecommunications and Space Co.

EDITED BY PAUL MANN
IT IS UNLIKELY EUROPEAN COMPANIES WILL BE ALLOWED to participate in the JAST program any time soon. France and Germany have been interested in joining the next-generation aircraft development program. So too has the United Kingdom, which is already involved in the ASTOVL (Advanced Short Takeoff/Vertical Landing) project that has been merged with JAST. But Pentagon acquisition chief Paul Kaminski says discussions are still in the ``very early stages.'' The Pentagon wants to ensure the allies sign the dotted line for long-term commitments.

ANTHONY L. VELOCCI, JR.
Some Wall Street airline analysts expect Federal Express Corp.'s stock within 12-18 months to climb 20% or more above its current trading range of the low 60s. Their bullish outlook is based on the company's growth prospects internationally and its aggressive efforts to boost productivity. Gruntal's Steve Lewins last week raised his earnings estimate for fiscal 1996, which begins in June, to $5.65 from $5.50 a share. He believes the stock could reach $80 a share by mid-1996. ``FedEx remains one of the biggest turnaround stories in transportation,'' he said.

Staff
Westland Helicopters will deliver the first of six new Mk.3a search and rescue (SAR) Sea Kings to the Royal Air Force this summer. The Mk.3a, shown on its maiden flight at Yeovil, is equipped with a Thorn EMI color radar, Racal RNS 252 navigation computer, and Rockwell-Collins VHF/ UHF radios for improved communications. The new Sea King also has a new SN500 Smith-Newark automatic flying control system.

Staff
UPS in 1993-94 tightened schedules to meet the rising demand, leased aircraft and began hiring pilots. The hiring campaign brought in approximately 420 pilots, and another 100 crewmembers will be added this year. These pilots would bring the pilot workforce to approximately 1,820. The growth has delivered what appears to be an extraordinary year financially. UPS is expected shortly to report 1994 revenues approaching $20 billion, at least $2 billion more than in 1993. The net profit will exceed $900 million.

Staff
Edmond L. Soliday (see photo) has become United Airlines vice president-corporate safety and security. A United pilot for 28 years, he was assistant to the senior vice president-flight operations, administrator of United's human factors pilot training program and director of corporate safety.

Staff
ALLIEDSIGNAL AEROSPACE has formed a joint venture in Russia with Aviation Corp. Rubin to produce and market wheels, brakes and brake systems for commercial aircraft. The new venture, called Rubix, is equally owned by Rubin and AlliedSignal.