Aviation Week & Space Technology

Amy Butler (Washington)
U.S. military finally establishes new F-35 IOC blueprints
Defense

Kevin Wu of Cessna Aircraft has been elected chairman of the Asian Business Aviation Association. New vice chairmen are David Best of BBA Aviation and Charlie Mularski of Universal Weather & Aviation. New executive committee members are: Saira Kanchwala of Arinc and Sacha Dunas of the World Events Agency. And, Zhang Qiang of Deer Jet has become chairman of China Mainland Business Aviation Operator Committee.

Honeywell Chairman/CEO Dave Cote is slated to receive the Washington-based TechAmerica Foundation's Corporate Leadership Award on June 20. The award recognizes “CEOs for their leadership in setting the model for creating and driving successful technology enterprises as well as their involvement and contributions to the U.S. technology sector.” The foundation is designed to educate executives, policy makers and opinion leaders on the promise of technological innovation to advance prosperity, security and the general welfare.

June 24-27—American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics' Fluid Dynamics Conference and co-located conferences and exhibit. San Diego. See www.aiaa.org/Fluids2013 June 25-26—Fourth Pan American Aviation Safety Summit. San Jose, Costa Rica. See www.alta.aero/safety/2013/home.php June 25-27—JEC Asia. Singapore. See www.jeccomposites.com/events/jec-asia-2013 July 16-17—RotorTech Asia-Pacific Conference & Exhibition 2013. Singapore. See www.rotortechasia.com

Boeing reports that it has completed installation of all 50 of the retrofit installations of battery containment systems on 787s that had been grounded for safety reasons. As of late last week, all 50 aircraft were flying.

Bill Sweetman
The second day of Boeing's pre-Paris media tour promised a new product, which turned out to have nothing to do with the Unmanned Carrier Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike program, but to be a V-22-transportable vehicle called the Phantom Badger. On the last day we saw the International Multi-Intelligence Operational Laboratory Environment (I-Mole). Our final briefing was on the KC-46, so Boeing's “tanker toads” neatly completed the “Wind In The Willows” trifecta for the week.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
A rotorcraft industry once characterized by rugged individuals flying simple machines is seeing an influx of technology not witnessed since the Vietnam War. Introduced at the top end of the market, in larger helicopters for demanding offshore oil-and-gas and search-and-rescue operators, new technologies are spreading down the size range as costs and weights fall so more customers can see the safety, performance and economic benefits.

Mike Mount has been appointed director of media relations for DRS Technologies, Arlington, Va. He was senior national security producer for Cable News Network.

Due to a production error, a Top-Performing Companies table on the Average 5-Year Ranking for companies with revenues between $1-5 billion (May 27, p. 52) displayed incorrect scores. The correct version is here.

Martin Aguera has been named head of corporate media relations within the EADS Corporate Communications Department. Jeff Burridge has become head of content and production. He was head of communications for Airbus in the U.K. Philippe Lemasson has been named head of corporate protocol, events and sponsoring as well as head of communications in France. He was head of EADS corporate protocol for France.

David Hambling
A robotic albatross gliding at 200 mph is a dramatic demonstration of how wind power can be harnessed. But it is just one of several projects showing how unmanned aircraft can use air currents, from thermals and ridge lift to wind shear and even turbulence, to increase their endurance from hours to days.
Defense

Ken Coleman has been named vice president/general manager of Thales Avionics Services Worldwide-Americas, Piscataway, N.J. He was CEO of the Thales Components Corp., Totowa, N.J., and had been vice president-sales and marketing of Antenna Research Associates.

Claudia Sender (see photo) has been appointed CEO of Brazil-based TAM Airlines. She has been vice president of the Brazil Domestic Business Unit of the merged LAN and TAM and was vice president-commercial and marketing of TAM.

Soon, pilots may be able to use a new type of synthetic vision-based cockpit display that will help them line up more easily for a runway and land with very low visibility. Honeywell photographer Eugene Cupps captured this image of the flight deck of a Dassault Falcon 900EX during a test approaching Tucson, Ariz., in April as the company prepared to demonstrate the new tools to the FAA and European Aviation Safety Agency.

John C. Bierwirth, who led the Grumman Corp. in the 1970s and '80s through the development of the U.S. Navy's F-14 fighter and other military aircraft, NASA space shuttle and space station work, and various diversification efforts, died May 26 in a hospice on Long Island, N.Y., of congestive heart failure. He was 89.

By Guy Norris
Boeing taps automated systems to support 777 production
Air Transport

Christine McGlade and Andrew W. Reynolds (see photos) have been named vice presidents-manufacturing operations and site managers for the Northrop Grumman Corp.'s aircraft integration centers of excellence in St. Augustine, Fla., and Palmdale, Calif., respectively. McGlade has been program director for the St. Augustine site's E-2/C-2 international programs and deputy program director for U.S. Navy E-2D production. Reynolds has been director of manufacturing operations/deputy manager for the Palmdale site.

The U.S. Marine Corps plans to declare initial operational capability (IOC) for the F-35B Joint Strike Fighter in late 2015, says the commandant, Gen. James Amos. The Marines are the first JSF customer slated to declare IOC, and as such are willing to use the 2B software package, which allows for a limited flight envelope and limited weapons carriage in the near term. For IOC, the short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing aircraft must be “shipboard-qualified,” Amos told an audience in Washington on May 29.

By Jens Flottau
Given years of economic recession in Southern Europe, airlines based in the region are all suffering. But some are dealing with the situation far better than others.
Air Transport

Mark Carreau
The International Space Station (ISS) returned to a six-person crew May 28 with a second Soyuz “express” mission. The Russian capsule docked with the orbiting science lab at 10:10 p.m. EDT—less than 6 hr. after lifting off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan (shown)—delivering veteran cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin, NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg and the European Space Agency's (ESA) Luca Parmitano of Italy.
Space

By Jens Flottau, Guy Norris
The Boeing 737-7 and the Airbus A319NEO look almost obsolete years before first delivery.
Air Transport

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
Congress may put a lunar landing back on the table
Space

By Bradley Perrett
Choosing between the F-15SE, F-35A and Typhoon. .
Defense

Slowly but surely, Washington's attitude is changing from total denial of nearly $1 trillion in cuts to planned defense spending over the next decade to learning how to live with those restrictions and not completely bollix national security. This week, news could emerge of the Pentagon's formal recommendations to the White House and Congress on how to implement the full effect of the 2011 Budget Control Act and the automatic sequestration toll it levies.