Aviation Week & Space Technology

Gordon Johndroe has been appointed vice president-media relations and international communications/chief spokesman for the Lockheed Martin Corp., Bethesda, Md. He was a vice president at APCO Worldwide in Washington and had been spokesman for the National Security Council and a White House deputy press secretary.

Australia will buy 12 Boeing EA-18G Growlers instead of converting some of its current 24 F/A-18F Super Hornets to the electronic-attack configuration, the government says in its 2013 defense white paper. The government remains committed to “three operational squadrons” of Lockheed Martin F-35A Lightnings entering service starting around 2020, according to the white paper. Triton Interests Australia

Andrew Tyler has been named London-based chief executive for the U.K. and Europe for the Northrop Grumman Corp., effective July 1. He has been CEO of Siemens's Marine Current Turbines and was chief operating officer of the Defense Equipment & Support organization within the U.K. Ministry of Defense.

By Jens Flottau
JetBlue ponders ways to push the boundaries of its model.
Air Transport

By Maksim Pyadushkin
Cuba's national carrier Cubana has a serious problem: It needs more aircraft to respond to the growing tourist industry in its homeland, but the U.S. trade embargo against Cuba makes it impossible for the airline to buy aircraft that contain more than 10% U.S.-made components.
Air Transport

Michael Bruno (Washington)
The Pentagon's ad hoc review of roles, missions and spending, due this month, will propose significant savings outside of the armed services, while tackling health care costs and services held dear by the active-duty personnel and veterans. But the review will deepen the ongoing weapons program alignment around the U.S. military's pivot to the Asia-Pacific region.
Defense

Graham Warwick (Washington)
A new study to enable U.S. air dominance over a peer adversary in the 2040-50 timeframe is a test of Darpa's belief that layered solutions, not single answers, hold the key. The study grew out of discussions between new Darpa director Arati Prabhakar, Defense acquisition undersecretary Frank Kendall and service leaders. “I sensed a concern about growing capabilities around the world, and that we haven't faced a peer adversary for a long time, but have to be ready when that moment comes,” she says.

Bill Sweetman
There was a full demonstration of unmanned, autonomous takeoff, landing and deck movement on the USS George Bush on May 14, courtesy of a sleek, well-fed urban pigeon. The white-jacketed safety crew caused a flurry on the deck as they tried to surround it. Standard operating procedure, I suspect, would have involved termination with extreme prejudice (which, as Tom Lehrer informed us, is not against any religion) but media presence complicated matters, as it usually does.
Defense

Raymond F. Maddalone (Fishers, Ind. )
“Small Disrupters” (AW&ST May 6/13, p. 55) made me smile when I read that Pumpkin uses hardware-store retractable tape measures for their antennas. There was a model of Pioneer 1 in the lobby of Northrop Grumman's E2 building. When the Ramo-Wooldridge (later TRW) scientists/engineers built Pioneer 1—the first satellite built by the private sector—they too used a hardware-store retractable tape measure for the spacecraft antenna. Sometimes practical versus gold-plated solutions are the right answer. Looks like we have come full circle.

By Bradley Perrett
China appears to be lifting its six-year ban on new private airlines, provisionally approving the establishment of a carrier in the southwestern province of Yunnan that will have no direct government links.
Air Transport

Michael Bruno (Washington)
Republicans, who control the U.S. House of Representatives, and other supporters of Taiwan here have mounted a fresh push to persuade the White House to allow sales of advanced fighters to the island.
Defense

Jalil Jatip (see photo) has been named director of quality assurance for Superior Air Parts Inc., Coppell, Texas. He was quality fabrication department manager for Lockheed Martin for the F-16, F-22 and F-35 programs.

Frank Morring, Jr. (Washington)
Setting down safely may be as difficult as getting there
Space

Rick Armstrong (see photo) has become president/CEO of the Composites & Aerostructures Group of AGC Aerospace & Defense of Oklahoma City. He was a vice president of FlightSafety International, managing its flight simulator engineering and manufacturing division, and was an executive with Nordam.

John Croft (Washington)
Delta retrofit highlights cost benefits, concerns

Graham Warwick (Washington)
Citing the potential for NextGen airspace modernization, unmanned aircraft technology and certification reforms to revolutionize general aviation, flying-car developer Terrafugia has unveiled its concept for a hybrid-electric vertical-takeoff-and-landing (VTOL) four-seater. The new TF-X is planned to become available after 2020 as a follow-on to the Transition two-seat roadable aircraft now under development. First delivery of the Transition was originally slated for 2011 but is now expected between January 2015 and March 2016, says CEO Carl Dietrich.
Business Aviation

May 21-23—American Helicopter Society's 69th Annual Forum and Technology Display. See www.vtol.org/forum May 27-29—19th American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA)Aeroacoustics Conference. Berlin. See www.aiaa.org/Aeroacoustics2013/ June 11-14—Sixth Chaotic Modeling and Simulation International Conference. Yeditepe University, Istanbul. See www.cmsim.org June 12-14—Eighth Annual International Forum on Design for Manufacture and Assembly. Crowne Plaza Hotel, Providence-Warwick, R.I. See www.dfma.com/forum/

Lee Ann Tegtmeier (Brussels)
Are airlines good at inventory demand planning? If you answered yes, why are operators ordering more parts on an aircraft-on-the-ground (AOG) basis? A number of people say the rising AOG orders are not correlated with problematic aircraft or engines that need new parts. In many cases, the need to receive parts via express delivery—in hours instead of several days or weeks—links to the fact that airlines generally hold less inventory, and suppliers can expedite deliveries.

JetBlue has had a rough ride with the Embraer 190 involving maintenance costs and reliability. But the aircraft also symbolizes the airline's ability to innovate and willingness to take risk. The New York-based carrier was the first low-cost airline to introduce large regional jets, one of many initiatives outside of the traditional low-cost model. Now JetBlue is looking at the next step. Others, like Norwegian, have studied the role model and drawn their own conclusionssuch as taking the bold step of entering the long-haul market this month (page 34). JetBlue photo.

Amy Butler (Turin, Italy, and Rome)
Defense ministry takes harsher stance to strengthen home industry
Defense

By Guy Norris
First India delivery, U.S. operations mark inflexion point for P-8
Defense

Frank Morring, Jr.
Cold War model seen useful for U.S.-China space confrontation
Space

By Guy Norris
Focus shifts to weapons development after X-51A test
Defense

Louis Friedman
President Barack Obama's fiscal 2014 budget proposal contains a brand-new idea that may be the most exciting and interesting one in the history of exploration—certainly since the Apollo project. Although, there is no Cold War or superpower rivalry to fuel it, the asteroid retrieval mission represents an opportunity to sustain American leadership in human space exploration with technological innovation and engineering prowess.
Space

By Bradley Perrett
Just two decades ago, on May 2, 1993, Hainan Airlines began operating from its tropical island home, Hainan, in the South China Sea. Within seven years, a holding company, HNA Group, had been set up above it. Affiliated airlines followed, along with businesses in corporate aviation, aircraft maintenance, airports, real estate, hotels, shipping, finance and much else.
Air Transport