_Aerospace Daily

Staff
CAE of Toronto has sold simulation equipment to Airbus Industrie and has joined with United Arab Emirates airline Emirates to open a Gulfstream business jet training center. The company announced Nov. 6 that it will update the image generators in the Airbus simulators used to evaluate and test its A318, A319, A320, A321, A330 and A340 aircraft. It will install its Tropos image generator, which the company said incorporates the latest three-dimensional technology in a small package.

Staff
ENGINE WORK: Rolls-Royce plc has won new engine work potentially worth $475 million from Emirates, the airline of the United Arab Emirates. Emirates signed a letter of intent for eight Airbus Industrie A340-600s at the Dubai air show. Each A340-600 is powered by four Rolls-Royce Trent 500 engines. Emirates also ordered three A330-200 twinjets, which are powered by Trent 700 engines.

Sharon Weinberger ([email protected])
The Boeing Co. is not involved in any efforts to reopen the Czech government's fighter modernization program in order secure export orders of the Czech-made L-159 jet trainer, according to a company spokesperson. Recent Czech press reports have said Aero Vodochody and Boeing Ceska were attempting to strike a deal whereby the Czech government would lease used F-16s from the U.S. in exchange for the U.S. buying L-159s.

Staff
FIRST JET: Boeing has delivered its first Next-Generation 737-700 Convertible jet with the Quick Change option. The Quick Change option includes pallet-mounted seats, allowing the conversion from passenger to freighter configuration to take place in less than an hour, according to Boeing.

Staff
Rockwell Collins Inc., the Cedar Rapids, Iowa-based avionics and communications company, reported $816 million in sales for the fourth quarter of 2001, up from $702 million for the same period the year before. However, it reported an overall loss for the quarter of $48 million, or 26 cents per share, due to an asset charge and a company restructuring in the wake of "the unexpected decline in the air transport market" after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
The House Science Committee plans to publicly scrutinize an independent review panel's recommendation that the International Space Station program pursue staff cuts and fewer space shuttle trips to rein in costs. The committee has scheduled a Nov. 7 hearing on the panel's findings. Sean O'Keefe, deputy director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, and A. Thomas Young, the review panel's chairman, are slated to testify.

Magnus Bennett
Aero Vodochody, the Czech aerospace company, has called for talks with Gripen International, the Swedish-British joint venture, to confirm public statements that the consortium may opt for final assembly of its Gripen fighters at Aero Vodochody if the Gripen JAS 39 wins the tender to supply up to 36 aircraft to the Czech military.

Rich Tuttle ([email protected])
A joint venture of Boeing, Lockheed Martin and TRW has received additional funding for work on the Space Based Laser, a satellite-borne weapon intended to defeat ballistic missiles in their boost phase. The venture, called Team Space Based Laser, won a $50 million contract from the Air Force on Nov. 1. It had previously won $232 million in two increments, the first in 1999 and the second in 2000. When the contract is completed in coming years, its value will be an estimated $3 billion.

By Jefferson Morris
Kaiser Electronics is developing a new multifunction F-22 cockpit display that uses rear projection rather than liquid crystal technology - the first such display for any aircraft, according to the company. The F-22 Raptor cockpit has six display screens - two up-front 3 x 4-inch active matrix liquid crystal displays (AMLCDs), three 6.25 x 6.25-inch secondary multifunction displays (SMFDs), and one 8 x 8-inch display, the primary multifunction display (PMFD).

Staff
October 31, 2001

Staff
FALCON CONTRACTS: TRW Aeronautical Systems will provide flight control and power generation systems for Dassault Aviation's new Falcon 7X business jet, contracts estimated to be worth $350 million over the life of the program, the company announced Nov. 4.

Staff
October 29, 2001 Northrop Grumman Systems, Corp., El Segundo, Calif., is being awarded a $19,945,108 firm-fixed-price contract to provide for structuring upgrade programs for F-5 aircraft. The work is expected to be completed December 2004. There was one firm solicited and one proposal received. Solicitation began May 2001; negotiations were completed September 2001. The Ogden Air Logistics Center, Hill Air Force Base, Utah, is the contracting activity (F42620-01/D-0069).

Nick Jonson ([email protected])
Big aerospace firms are increasingly turning to electronic auctions as a way to award contracts for bulk items more efficiently, but the response from some aerospace suppliers - especially long-time, preferred suppliers - has been guarded. Some suppliers fear their strategic relationships with larger aerospace firms will be undercut because e-auctions now give their competitors easier access, said David Johnson, director of Engineering Management with Aerospace Industries Association.

Staff
November 2, 2001

Rich Tuttle ([email protected])
The Army wants to upgrade or replace the aging radar warning receivers on its fleet of MH-47 and MH-60 Special Operations helicopters, some of which are seeing service in Afghanistan. The service wants to move rapidly on the program, which centers on the Northrop Grumman AN/APR-39A(V)1. Industry is being asked to respond by Nov. 9 to a request for information from the Army Technology Applications Office at Fort Eustis, Va.

Staff
October 30, 2001

Staff
October 29, 2001 Lockheed Martin Missiles and Space, Sunnyvale, Calif., is being awarded a $7,709,823 modification to a cost-plus-award-fee contract to provide for Defense Satellite Communication System III orbital support operations (fiscal year 2001/fiscal year 2002), which consists of satellite normal and anomalous operations and maintenance of ground systems. The work is expected to be completed September 2003. The Space and Missile Systems Center, Los Angeles Air Force Base, Calif., is the contracting activity (F04701-97/C-0042, P00044).

Staff
October 30, 2001

Sharon Weinberger ([email protected])
An RQ-1B Predator unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was reported lost over Afghanistan Nov. 2, with preliminary reports indicating that severe weather was the likely cause, according to a statement issued by U.S. Central Command in Florida. The Nov. 2 loss marks the 20th loss of a Predator air vehicle. The previous 19 have been lost "due to mishaps or losses over enemy territory," according to a senior Pentagon official. Each Predator system consists of four air vehicles, ground-control stations and satellite gear.

Sharon Weinberger ([email protected])
The Norwegian armed forces should increase its planned purchase of 48 fighters to 60, according to Kristin Krohn-Devold, Norway's new minister of defense. Krohn-Devold, a member of Norway's Conservative Party, was appointed last month after Norway's left-leaning government lost in general elections to the conservatives. The previous government had planned for flat or slightly declining defense budgets and advocated reducing the military infrastructure to achieve cost savings.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
Several military space technology programs will suffer serious setbacks if House-approved funding cuts become law, according to the Defense Department. In an "appeal" to the House-Senate conference committee on the fiscal year 2002 defense authorization bill, DOD wrote that a $10 million cut in the Air Force's $33 million request for space control technology will prevent the service in FY '02 from starting to develop a mobile system to block an enemy's use of space-based surveillance capabilities.

Nick Jonson ([email protected])
NASA will have to broaden its perspective on commercial use of the International Space Station (ISS) to find a way to offset the program's budget shortfall, said David Logsdon, manager of space operations for the Aerospace Industries Association. Logsdon cited the Independent Management and Cost Evaluation (IMCE) report released Nov. 2, which said NASA must cut staff and reduce shuttle flights to save station money (DAILY, Nov. 5).

Staff
LAUNCH LEVELING: A lack of differentiation in insurance rates for launch vehicles is having a "leveling effect" on pricing that is new to the industry, according to Mark Albrecht, president of International Launch Services (ILS). "We would like to see a bigger differentiation for proven vehicles," says Albrecht. "I think the insurance business tends to smooth the edges, and perhaps a more finely tuned insurance rate that directly relates to the performance of the vehicle, and separates on-orbit from the launch services, might be better for us ...

Staff
ATK Thiokol Propulsion Co. successfully conducted a static test-firing of a space shuttle Reusable Solid Rocket Motor (RSRM) at its Promontory, Utah, facility, on Nov. 1, the company announced Nov. 2. The test was part of the engineering test motor program, which is part of the shuttle's ongoing safety program to verify materials and manufacturing processes. It ran for two minutes, the same duration as the motors fire when launching the space shuttle.