_Aerospace Daily

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July 1, 1996 Lockheed Martin Corporation

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NASA's Space Shuttle Columbia landed safely Sunday after a record- breaking 17-day life and microgravity science mission, but hot-gas damage discovered in the solid rocket boosters that orbited Columbia on June 20 could delay the Shuttle Atlantis' upcoming flight to Russia's Mir space station.

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PARKER BERTEA AEROSPACE, Irvine, Calif., will produce thrust vector actuation (TVA) system for the Mk. 72 booster on the U.S. Navy's Standard Missile Block IV. The company said it will carry out the work under a low rate initial production contract from Standard Missile Co. of McLean, Va. The contract covers a two-year period that began in February 1996. Ralph Kunz, missile team leader of Parker Bertea's Control Systems Div., said the company "conceived and designed the TVA system, which has been under development for over eight years.

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Denial of funds to develop a short-takeoff and vertical landing (STOVL) variant of the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) would be a "crippling blow to the future of [U.S.] Marine Corps aviation," the Pentagon has warned Congress.

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July 1, 1996 General Electric Company

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The General Accounting Office has raised a number of questions about the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile program, including whether technical challenges can be resolved during development. "Compared to past programs with similar goals, the JASSM acquisition plan contains schedule and cost risk," GAO said in a report titled "Precision Guided Munitions: Acquisition Plans for the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile" (GAO/NSIAD-96-144).

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Pratt&Whitney yesterday described as "unique" the fracture of an engine on a Delta Air Lines MD-88 Saturday. The JT8D-219 came apart as the plane was taking off from Pensacola, Fla., killing two passengers and injuring others. The takeoff was aborted after a run of 1,500 feet. "According to the physical evidence thus far, the fracture seems to be up in the fan area," a Pratt spokesman said. "The fracture of the fan hub is unique, something we have never seen before."

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July 1, 1996 Lockheed Martin Corporation Lockheed Martin Corporation, Marietta, Georgia, is being awarded a $47,302,000 face value increase to a firm fixed price contract to provide for two C-130T aircraft and associated data for the Navy Reserve. Contract is expected to be completed December 1996. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. ASC/LBA, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio is the contracting activity (F33657-90-C-0071-P00082).

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LITTON INDUSTRIES said yesterday that the U.S. court of appeals in Los Angeles upheld it appeal in patent-infringement litigation against Honeywell. Honeywell said it was "surprised and disappointed" and will pursue "all appellate remedies." A jury earlier found that Honeywell had "willfully infringed a Litton patent" related to development and production of precision ring laser gyroscope navigation and guidance systems. The jury verdict awarded Litton $1.2 billion. The verdict was overturned in January 1995 in the U.S. district court in Los Angeles.

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Airbus Industrie's supervisory board decided yesterday in Paris to restructure the consortium into a private company. It wants to reach a binding agreement to shift from Airbus' current status as a groupement d'interet economique (GIE) by the end of the year, and to a private company by 1999. The board, under Chairman Edzard Reuter, plans to move "within the minimum timeframe possible" and to "start immediately negotiations between Airbus' partner companies on the technical aspects of the transformation from a GIE toward a single corporate entity."

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July 1, 1996 Lockheed Martin Corporation Lockheed Martin Corporation, Denver Colorado, is being awarded a $40,525,756 contract to transfer all remaining Titan launch systems launch operations effort from the 1985 Titan contract to the new Titan launch operations contract. Contract is expected to be completed September 2003. Contract funds of $14,309,533 will expire September 1996. Space and Missile Systems Center, Los Angeles, California, is the contracting activity (F04701-96-C-0012, P00007).

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July 3, 1996 United Defense, L.P.

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JAPAN'S Automatic Landing Flight Experiment (ALFLEX) flew successfully for the first time yesterday, landing safely at Woomera Airfield in South Australia after a drop-test flight that lasted about one minute, the National Space Development Agency (NASDA) reported.

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REP. BILL YOUNG (R-FLA.), chairman of the House Appropriations national security subcommittee, was resting comfortably yesterday at Bethesda Naval Hospital, Md., after a quadruple heart bypass operation Sunday. Young, 65, is expected to remain in the hospital until the end of the week, a spokesman said. He said Young did not suffer a heart attack.

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The House and Senate should drop restrictions in the fiscal year 1997 defense authorization bill on how the Pentagon should proceed with the Space-Based Infrared System (SBIRS), as well as any direction to accelerate portions of the program, the Defense Dept. has told Congress.

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The first GPS-aided munitions for B-2 bombers were delivered this week to Whiteman AFB, Mo., where the planes are based. The 17 weapons were the first of 128 slated for delivery to the base this year, according to the U.S. Air Force's Air Combat Command. They will allow the B-2 to hit within 20 feet of a target.

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July 1, 1996 Boeing Company Boeing Company, Wichita, Kansas, is being awarded a $8,692,353 face value increase to a firm fixed price contract to provide for two shipsets of the Multipoint Refueling System (pods for wing tanks) applicable to the KC-135 aircraft. Contract is expected to be completed August 1996. Contract funds of $8,692,353 will expire September 1998. Aeronautical Systems Center, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio is the contracting activity (F33657- 95-C-0046, P00013).

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The crash last April of the DarkStar unmanned aerial vehicle has prompted the Defense Dept. to improve operator training and the procedures used to abort a takeoff. A synopsis of a report by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, released yesterday, recommends the steps in addition to engineering changes to the vehicle itself.

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July 3, 1996 TRW, Incorporated

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An article in The DAILY of July 3 stated that last week's launch of NASA's latest Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) was one year late because of developmental problems with the Pegasus XL booster. While the TOMS launch had been scheduled for July 1995 until the second Pegasus XL failure in June 1995 (DAILY, June 23, 26, 1995), TOMS was originally scheduled to launch in July 1994. That 1994 launch was delayed by the first Pegasus XL failure (DAILY, July 14, 1994), making last week's launch a total of two years late because of problems with the Pegasus.

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Rep. John M. Spratt Jr. (S.C.), ranking Democrat on the House National Security R&D subcommittee, questions the U.S. Navy's projection of a rapidly rising learning curve for production of the 1,000 planned F/A-18E/F strike fighters. Cost per plane is supposed to drop from $111.9 million in fiscal '97 when the first 12 are produced to $32.4 million in 2015 when the last 72 come off the McDonnell Douglas line (FY '90 dollars). Pentagon procurement chief Paul G.

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Even without the Joint Strike Fighter program, the Defense Dept. will have to spend about $8 billion in inflation-adjusted dollars through 2014 to pay for all present major airpower investment programs, the General Accounting Office has concluded. This is about three times the fiscal 1997 request of $2.7 billion for tactical aircraft programs.

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Lockheed Martin's X-33 reusable launch vehicle prototype is of such high fidelity to the company's proposed operational RLV that the commercial vehicle should have an easier time finding financing on Wall Street than its two competitors, but the X-vehicle still has some difficult technical issues to resolve.

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Meanwhile, the Senate is expected to plow through a number of defense measures. On Wednesday morning it's slated to vote on final passage of the FY '97 defense authorization bill. Also, debate and votes are scheduled on the Defend America Act, substitutes to that legislation, and the Chemical Weapons Convention Treaty. All three are controversial, and the schedule could be thrown into a tailspin.

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The U.S. Air Force and Army have been testing a new laser radar, developed by Textron, that has applications for missile tracking and space surveillance, the company said. In tests at the Air Force's Maui space surveillance site in Hawaii, the ladar "has been successful providing data on uncooperative targets not equipped with reflectors, including satellites and rocket bodies located in orbits nearly 1,000 miles above the Earth," Textron said.