_Aerospace Daily

Staff
Hawker Pacific Aerospace has signed a contract with AIR 2000 to provide landing gear overhaul services for AIR 2000's B757-200 and B767-300ER fleets, which currently total 20 aircraft. The 10-year contract is worth about $4.5 million, Sun Valley, Calif.,-based Hawker announced May 23. AIR 2000 is a charter airline based at London's Gatwick Airport.

Staff
NASA's long-lived Galileo space probe will make its closest pass yet to Callisto, Jupiter's largest outermost moon, on May 25, according to the space agency. At 7:24 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time, Galileo will skim over Callisto at an altitude of 76 miles (123 kilometers). According to NASA, if Callisto were the size of a baseball, that would be just a nickel's thickness away. NASA mission managers expect the pull of the moon's gravity to alter Galileo's orbit around Jupiter - in fact, they're counting on it.

Nick Jonson ([email protected])
The head of Lockheed Martin's Missiles and Fire Control business has been selected as the new president of MEADS International, a joint venture between LM and European partners for the air defense system. Joel Strickland, who has held the post of executive vice-president for the company for the past three years, was elected by the company's board of directors last week to succeed Dr. Jurgen Ebmeyer.

Staff
CAE of Toronto has been selected to upgrade the U.S. Army's AH-64A Combat Mission Simulator, located at Storch Barracks, Illesheim, Germany. The initial program value is about $9 million USD, the company announced May 23. CAE will provide its Medallion visual system with sensor capabilities, and will develop new visual databases and integrate a new tactical threat environment using its Tactical Environment Management System application.

Staff
GENERAL DYNAMICS COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS was awarded a contract by the Air Force to provide program management, engineering, maintenance and support services to sustain the DIRECT Emergency Action Message system. DIRECT includes receive and transmit interfaces to all communications systems used for Emergency Action Messages at National Command Authority and Nuclear CINC command centers around the world.

Rich Tuttle ([email protected])
Northrop Grumman Corp. and Raytheon Co. this August are slated to test relatively inexpensive methods of destroying ground vehicles from standoff ranges. The technology effort, part of the Affordable Moving Surface Target Engagement (AMSTE) program sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the Air Force Research Lab (AFRL), is intended to defeat such threats as mobile missile launchers. Northrop Grumman is conducting a series of tests at Eglin AFB, Fla. Raytheon is testing at China Lake, Calif.

Staff
American Airlines and HEICO Corp., a leading designer, manufacturer and distributor of FAA-approved replacement parts for jet engines and airframe components, today are expected to announce they are forming a joint venture which will accelerate development of replacement parts, Aerospace Daily affiliate Aviation Daily reported. AMR and HEICO Aerospace also will cooperate with technical services and marketing support on a worldwide basis, the two companies said.

John Fricker, [email protected]
A new Ministry of Defence contract calls for an experimental pod-mounted synthetic aperture surveillance radar program to be installed and flight tested on a Royal Air Force Tornado. Britain's Defense Experimental&Research Agency (DERA) and Racal-Thorn Defense were originally selected by the MoD in 1999 to undertake a single concept study for the proposed SAR pod, for use by RAF Tornadoes and Eurofighters.

Staff
Quantum Technologies, Inc., and Thiokol Propulsion Corp. announced May 22 that the world's most advanced hydrogen storage testing facility will open soon at Thiokol Propulsion's NASA space shuttle rocket booster manufacturing facility in Promontory, Utah. The testing facility is owned and operated under a teaming agreement between the two companies and will be accessible to manufacturers of compressed gas storage tanks for applications in the aerospace, defense, automotive and industrial markets.

Dmitry Pieson ([email protected])
Plans to restructure Russia's aircraft industry will likely lead to the creation of two huge new holdings that would develop and produce both civilian and military aircraft, including helicopters and some aircraft subsystems. A number of top-level government meetings on the issue have been held this month, and industry observers say the creation of diverse holding companies was chosen over the idea of branch monopolies, which would have included Combat Tactical Aviation, Heavy Aircraft and Russian Helicopters.

Staff
In a DAILY story on May 23, it was erroneously reported that the Global Hawk and F-22 aircraft would be at the 2001 Paris Air Show in Le Bourget, France next month. Neither aircraft will be on exhibit, although there will be a full-scale model of Global Hawk on display. Aerospace Daily regrets the error.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
If Sen. James Jeffords (R-Vt.) leaves his party and votes to give Democrats control of the Senate, the Bush Administration will face greater resistance to its plans to deploy a robust missile defense system, analysts and congressional sources told The DAILY May 23.

Nick Jonson ([email protected])
With the Globalstar investment failure behind it, Loral Space and Communications Ltd. will concentrate on improving shareholder value by focusing on its two core business units, company chairman and chief executive officer, Bernard Schwartz, said May 23. Schwartz, speaking during the company's annual shareholders meeting in New York, acknowledged 2000 "was a very difficult one for Loral shareholders."

Staff
The International Space Station Alpha's Expedition Two crew on May 23 began unloading 1.5 tons of supplies - including critical computer equipment - that were brought to them aboard a Russian Progress supply ship on May 22. Russian commander Yuri Usachev and American flight engineers Jim Voss and Susan Helms were unpacking a spare command-and-control computer hard drive for the station's U.S. laboratory module Destiny along with other supplies and fuel for the orbiting outpost.

Staff
The first of four Boeing C-17s leased by the Royal Air Force for its Brize Norton base in Oxfordshire arrived on May 23. However, upcoming elections have led to government-imposed media restrictions, which limited public awareness of the event. Although the lease program has been cited by the Ministry of Defence as a model of its kind, Boeing was unable to invite the press to view the C-17's arrival, which was over a month ahead of the original schedule.

Staff
The European Commission has cleared the acquisition by French company Thales of the whole of Airsys ATM, a joint venture active in the field of Air Traffic Management systems and turnkey airport systems. Airsys is currently owned by Thales and Siemens of Germany. The EC said the acquisition does not raise any competition problems. Siemens had included an option in the 1997 joint venture agreement by which it could require Thales to buy all of Siemen's shares in Airsys ATM, and it has now exercised that option.

Staff
FAA yesterday ordered operators to inspect the wiring of static port heaters on some DC-9, MD-80 and MD-90 series aircraft for chafing, loose connections and evidence of arcing, and to make any repairs necessary. Operators also must determine if the surrounding insulation is covered with metalized Mylar, which must be removed or replaced with Tedlar-covered insulation, Aerospace Daily affiliate Aviation Daily reported. The order affects 593 U.S.-registered aircraft operated by Delta, Alaska, American, Continental, Midwest Express, TWA and US Airways.

Staff
ENGLAND CONFIRMED: The Senate May 22 confirmed Gordon England, a former executive at General Dynamics and Lockheed Martin, to be secretary of the Navy.

By Jefferson Morris
Competitors Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Raytheon are awaiting the final contract award for the Air Force's Advanced Targeting Pod (ATP) program, expected on or about July 23. Planned for installation on Block 30 and 50 F-16s, the winning ATP concept could also see service on Block 40 F-16s, Boeing F-15Es and Fairchild A-10 attack planes.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
The Marine Corps expects to field its first operational squadron of the V-22 Osprey in about 2004 after fixing the tiltrotor aircraft's hydraulics, flight control software and other problem areas, Maj. Gen. Robert Magnus told the Defense Writers Group May 23. The Navy Department is restructuring the V-22 program to address various deficiencies identified recently by a Defense Department-appointed blue-ribbon panel (DAILY, April 19), which was set up to review the program after two fatal crashes last year.

Staff
AGUSTAWESTLAND announced the company is negotiating with major U.S. defense companies to joint produce the EH-101 helicopter, the company's newest product, in the United States. It is already in service in the United Kingdom, Italy and Japan. A decision as to which U.S. company will be selected is expected soon.

Linda de France ([email protected])
The first flight of Lockheed Martin's short takeoff vertical landing (STOVL) version of its Joint Strike Fighter will be a vertical liftoff at Palmdale, Calif., and is expected to take place some time next month. Lockheed Martin's JSF concept demonstrator program has differed considerably from competitor Boeing's program, but nowhere is this more apparent than with the companies' two very different approaches to vertical flight.

Nick Jonson ([email protected])
Even if machinists at the Boeing military aircraft plant in St. Louis went on strike, financial losses probably would not be significant, according to one industry analyst. Nor would the U.S. Navy be likely to suffer substantially from the delayed aircraft delivery time, said Richard Aboulafia, senior military aircraft analyst at the Teal Group in Fairfax, Va.

Staff
BAE Systems has completed a series of live fire tests of the Advanced Threat Infrared Countermeasures/Common Missile Warning System (ATIRCM/CMWS) at the White Sands Missile Range, N.M. The tests were conducted from April 4 to April 24, and completed a major phase of the developmental test/operational test - a critical requirement for the Low Rate Initial Production (LRIP) decision expected early next year. ATIRCM/CMWS is the next-generation countermeasure to protect aircraft from infrared-guided missiles.

Staff
China Southern Airlines and MTU yesterday laid the cornerstone for the new MTU Maintenance Zhuhai Co. Ltd., which will work on IAE V2500 and other aircraft engines when it opens in 2002. The center is a 50% each joint venture between the two companies, Aerospace Daily affiliate Aviation Daily reported. It is located in Zhuhai, one of China's special economic zones, close to Hong Kong and Macao. Capacity is expected to grow for up to 150 engine overhauls a year by 2006.