_Aerospace Daily

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AIR FORCE MAJ. GEN. GEORGE MUELLNER, manager of the Joint Advanced Strike Technology program, was confirmed Friday by the Senate for a third star and assignment as the principal deputy to the AF assistant secretary for acquisition. Muellner, who is expected to assume his new duties next week, replaces Lt. Gen. Richard Hawley, who has been nominated to the four-star post of commander of Allied Air Forces Europe, U.S. Air Forces in Europe and Air Force Component Commander, U.S. European Command at Ramstein AB, Germany.

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The Australian government has removed France's Dassault from its fighter trainer competition to protest French plans to resume nuclear testing in the South Pacific, a Royal Australian Air Force official in Washington said yesterday. France countered the move by recalling its ambassador to Australia, a spokesman for the French embassy in Washington said.

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An Atlas IIA rocket successfully launched a Defense Satellite Communications System (DSCS) satellite into geostationary transfer orbit Monday evening. Liftoff from Cape Canaveral came at 7:30 p.m. EDT after five days of delay due to poor weather. The satellite was built by Lockheed Martin Astro Space. Another Astro Space satellite, Koreasat-1, is scheduled for launch from Cape Canaveral Thursday morning on a Delta II rocket.

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Boeing technicians joined the first production representative V-22 Osprey fuselage yesterday at Boeing Defense&Space Group's suburban Philadelphia Helicopters Div. facility. Thanks to lessons learned after re-thinking manufacturing processes used to make the full-scale development aircraft in the late 1980s (DAILY, Nov. 16, 1994, page 239), the new fuselage "is 1,541 pounds lighter and $2.07 million less expensive than the earlier FSD design," said Stuart Dodge, program director for the Bell-Boeing team.

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LT. GEN. NIKOLAI KUZNETSOV, the Russian aircraft engine and rocket engine designer, died Sunday in Samara after what Russian government officials yesterday described as "a long illness."

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Britain's new defense minister, Michael Portillo, reaffirmed his country's interest in buying American hardware, but said the U.S.-U.K. relationship couldn't be one sided and would have to lead to U.S. buys of British-made equipment.

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British Aerospace is finalizing arrangements for its stake in the new Airbus Military Company, which will manage Europe's Future Large Airlifter, or FLA, program from Toulouse.

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Russia's Lavochkin Science&Production Association (NPO) has offered an upgraded propulsion module developed in the 1980s for Phobos and Mars spacecraft to be used as the basis of a future Chinese moon probe. Officials from Lavochkin and China's Academy of Launch Vehicles met here last week to discuss cooperation in the implementation of the proposed Chinese moon mission. The envisioned deal might include delivery of three or four flight-rated propulsion units for about $20 million.

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July 28, 1995

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EVANS&SUTHERLAND said Airbus Industrie has chosen it to supply fully integrated visual systems for A320 and A330/340 aircraft flight simulators. E&S said the competitively bid multi-million contract marks its entry as the first independent supplier to the civilian aviation simulation system market. E&S said the systems will be included in simulators installed in Airbus' Beijing, China, training site in fourth quarter 1996 and its Toulouse, France, training site in late 1998.

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A July 26 test of a GPS-Aided Munition (GAM) from a B-2 bomber marked completion of the exploration of all aspects of the weapon's footprint, Northrop Grumman said. The test, at the China Lake, Calif., Land Ranges, was the most accurate of the three tests so far, the company said.

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BEECH AIRCRAFT CORP., Wichita, received a $6.6 million modification to an earlier contract for updated AQM-37C aerial targets, portable mission loader/verifier aerial target test sets and related services and data. U.S. Naval Air Systems Command awarded the contract on July 28.

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July 27, 1995

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HARRIS CORP. said yesterday that its win of a $39 million contract from the U.S. Air Force to provide the Next Generation Target and Control System (DAILY, July 25, page 120) will enable the USAF to increase the number of targets in an exercise and extend the size of a range area that can be used. Harris, teamed with Interstate Electronics and Lockheed Martin Services, said it will provide a modern target-control system based on Global Positioning Satellites to operate ground, sea and airborne drone targets at Pt.

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PRB ASSOCIATES, Hollywood, Md., will integrate the AN/TSQ-142 Tactical EA- 6B Mission Support (TEAMS) system with the Tactical Aircraft Mission Planning System (TAMPS) under a contract being negotiated on a sole source basis with U.S. Naval Air Systems Command. "This two phase development program will span a 24 to 30 month period, during which a fully functional and operationally approved EA-6B Mission Planning Module will be provided," NavAir said in a July 18 Commerce Business Daily notice.

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July 26, 1995

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July 27, 1995

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NAVAL AIR WARFARE CENTER, Training Systems Div., Orlando, Fla., is soliciting industry for a program to replace the visual system in a P-3 Operation Flight Trainer (OFT). The center said in a July 12 Commerce Business Daily notice that the solicitation will include the following requirements; seven additional OFT replacement options, options for Contractor Field Services, options for training, option for additional Visual Scenes, and an option for an Off-line database modeling system.

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July 26, 1995

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The Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Joint Project Office is getting ready to test a communication data relay on a Hunter Joint Tactical UAV. "It's the idea of using the UAV like a surrogate satellite" to improve communications for forward deployed troops, said Robert Glomb, UAV JPO's director for joint programs and demonstrations. "The ground troops can get extended range with their radios," he said.

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Military users and planners see a variety of applications for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, but a shortage of funds is constraining development of payloads, a UAV official says. "Being very, very limited funding-wise, we couldn't take a strategy that we were going to develop any new kinds of payloads ourselves, so basically we're looking at what's on the shelf that we can get," Robert Glomb, director of Joint Programs and Demonstrations at the UAV Joint Project office, said during an interview in his office.

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July 24, 1995

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LORAL SYSTEMS CO., Akron, Ohio, on July 11 was awarded an $8.7 million modification to an earlier contract for one platoon level precision range integrated maneuver exercise system trainer and logistic support services for Kuwait, and three months of contractor logistics support for the U.S. Army's precision range integrated maneuver exercise system trainer located at Ft. Hood, Tex.

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JOHNSON CONTROLS WORLD SERVICES INC., Cape Canaveral, Fla., on July 24 received a $126,463 increment for a 60 day phase-in period under a contract potentially worth $109.4 million to provide installation support services to the National Training Center.

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Tropical Storm Erin has complicated planning at Kennedy Space Center for field repairs to the Redesigned Solid Rocket Motors (RSRMs) poised to lift the Space Shuttle Endeavour to orbit later this month, forcing managers to consider rolling the Shuttle stack back to the Vehicle Assembly Building today to avoid high winds.