_Aerospace Daily

By Jefferson Morris
Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) intends to award follow-on study contracts to Lockheed Martin and Sikorsky as part of the VXX Presidential Helicopter replacement program, in anticipation of releasing a request for proposals (RFP) for the next phase of the program this fall. Lockheed Martin, Sikorsky, and Bell Helicopter delivered study contracts to NAVAIR earlier this year on how their candidate aircraft - Lockheed Martin's US101, Bell's V-22, and Sikorsky's S-92 - could be tailored for the executive transport mission.

Aerospace Industries Association

Staff
WINDOW WORK: Zygo Corp. of Middlefield, Conn., will supply custom sapphire windows to Northrop Grumman for use in advanced infrared target acquisition systems, the company said Aug. 27. Zygo's windows will be used in the F-16 Block 60's integrated forward-looking infrared system, the company said.

Aerospace Industries Association

Staff
CHANDRA SUPPORT: The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Mass., will provide science and operational support for NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory under a $373 million follow-on contract, the aerospace agency said Aug. 26. The contract will extend the observatory's original contract through July 31, 2010, NASA said. The work includes mission operations and data analysis.

Aerospace Industries Association

Columbia Accident Investigation Board

Staff
NEW DELHI - India's Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) will build components for and help maintain 18 Sukhoi Su-30 MKM aircraft that Russia is building for Malaysia, the company said. The work is worth up to 10 percent of the $900 million deal and includes the supply of airframes. HAL already has set up the infrastructure to build up to 140 similar Su-30 MKIs under license for its own military. HAL also offered to provide maintenance for the Malaysian fighters, which a HAL official said helped Russia close the deal on the sale.

Stephen Trimble
The first delivery of an F/A-22 Raptor to a U.S. Air Force operational squadron next month also marks the debut of a Boeing-developed training system for pilots and maintainers. The F/A-22's sophisticated cockpit systems, driven by two million lines of software code, require unique training tools for pilots learning to fly the aircraft, Lt. Col. Jeff Harrigian, commander of the 43rd Fighter Squadron, said in an Aug. 26 interview.

Staff
NEW DESIGNATION: The U.S. Navy has officially designated Raytheon's Advanced Vertical Launching System as the MK 57 Vertical Launching System, the company said. The launcher, which will be able to fire all Navy missiles, is being designed for the DD(X), the Navy's next-generation destroyer.

Marc Selinger
The release of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board's (CAIB) final report Aug. 26 prompted lawmakers to unveil a host of proposals of their own, including a multi-billion dollar budget increase for NASA and the creation of at least two panels to guide future space policy.

Nick Jonson
Connexion by Boeing will lease satellite capacity on Eutelsat's SESAT satellite to provide a link between Europe and Asia for its airborne Internet service, Boeing said Aug. 26. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The satellite, which carries 18 Ku-band transponders, is located at 36 degrees East and covers an area that ranges from the eastern Atlantic Ocean across Europe to Central Asia.

Nick Jonson
The Boeing Co. plans to resume work on the first of 10 satellites ordered by ICO Global Telecommunications to meet a scheduled launch date in early 2005. The delivery date corresponds to the terms of the original construction contract signed in 1995. Work on that contract stopped after ICO, based in London, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in August 1999. The struggling company emerged from bankruptcy in May 2000 after former Teledesic executive Craig McCaw and a team of international investors poured $1.2 billion into it.

By Jefferson Morris
The final report of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB), released Aug. 26, places heavy emphasis on institutional problems as contributors to the Feb. 1 disaster and recommends a thorough overhaul of NASA's safety infrastructure. "In four simple words, the foam did it," CAIB member Scott Hubbard said during a press conference in Washington, referring to the insulating foam from the shuttle's external tank that broke loose and damaged the orbiter's left wing shortly after liftoff on Jan. 16.

Stephen Trimble
A $498 million plan to dramatically boost force protection and security capabilities at U.S. Air Force bases worldwide will be spearheaded by four companies, the Pentagon announced late Aug. 25. The Electronic Systems Center at Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass., selected Northrop Grumman Corp., EER Systems Inc., ECSI International and Abacus Technology Corp. to fill orders under the Integrated Base Defense Security System (IBDSS).

Staff
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) said Aug. 26 that the U.S. Air Force's (USAF) proposal to lease 100 Boeing KC-767A tanker aircraft would cost $1.3 billion to $2 billion more than a purchase. In a letter to Senate Budget Committee Chairman Don Nickles (R-Okla.), CBO disagreed with the Air Force's conclusion that a lease would cost only $150 million more than a purchase.

Columbia Accident Investigation Board

Staff
SIRTF LAUNCHED: NASA's Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) was launched successfully Aug. 25 from Kennedy Space Center, Fla., spacecraft builder Lockheed Martin said. SIRTF is the largest infrared space telescope ever built and will study the most distant and coldest objects in the universe, according to NASA.

Staff
The first of six volumes in the Columbia Accident Investigation Board's (CAIB) final report on the Feb. 1 shuttle disaster will be released Aug. 26. The CAIB already has issued five sets of recommendations to NASA to assist in the agency's return-to-flight effort. NASA has appointed a task force to ensure that all of the CAIB's recommendations are fully implemented (DAILY, May 23). Reinforced Carbon-Carbon (issued April 17):

Stephen Trimble
Air Force Undersecretary Peter Teets on Aug. 25 endorsed for the first time a month-long Boeing campaign to emphasize corporate ethics and integrity in three space business units banned from new government work. In a written statement, Teets said he is "pleased with the actions that Boeing has taken thus far to improve how they conduct their launch business."

Staff
In a surprise move, the Bush Administration says it plans to renominate Gordon England to be secretary of the Navy, just months after he left that post to join the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as deputy secretary. "He did a fine job as the secretary of the Navy prior to moving to the Department of Homeland Security, and I look forward to working with him again," Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said in an Aug. 23 Pentagon statement.