All news – Page 6862

  • News

    Thomson to provide RAF Tornado training

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    Thomson Training &Simulation (TTS) is planning to build and operate two mission simulators under a UK Ministry of Defence contract to provide the Royal Air Force's Panavia Tornado GR4 synthetic training service. TTS was selected in November as the preferred bidder to provide Tornado training under the UK's Private ...

  • News

    USAF updates aircrew systems

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    The US Air Force is preparing to award contracts to operate and update some of its aircrew training systems. Competitions are under way to provide training services and systems for the Boeing B-1B and C-17, as well as Lockheed Martin C-5 and C-130 programmes. The C-5 competition is to ...

  • News

    More Mir missions planned after June

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    Russian cosmonaut Viktor Afanasyev, who will command the 27th resident crew to fly to the Mir space station in February, says that his mission will not be the final one to the space station, as planned originally. The mission will have a duration of just three months. A further ...

  • News

    Hughes technology transfer error helped China's missile programme

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    The US Department of Defense has confirmed that Hughes Space and Communications inadvertently aided China's missile and satellite programmes during an investigation into the failure of a Long March 2E launcher attempting to orbit the Hughes built ApStar 2 satellite in 1995. The Pentagon says that Hughes gave China ...

  • News

    Space Imaging will supply US agency

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    Space Imaging, which is due to launch its first Ikonos satellite in 1999, has been selected to provide images to the US National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA) and to provide the infrastructure to permit distribution of high resolution images within 22h of downlink, under a $4.4 million contract. ...

  • News

    Mars Climate Observer lifts off

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    Tim Furniss/LONDON A Boeing Delta II rocket was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on 11 December, carrying the first of two NASA spacecraft that will be used to conduct the next round of investigations into Mars. The Mars Climate Orbiter (MCO) is scheduled to culminate in an orbital insertion in ...

  • News

    Hessi plans

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    Spectrum Astro has completed the preliminary design review of the next primary mission satellite in NASA's Small Explorer (SMEX) programme. The High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (HESSI) will be launched in July 2000. Orbital Sciences will launch HESSI aboard a Pegasus in 2000. NASA has launched four SMEX craft. ...

  • News

    British Aerospace Royal Ordance's BROACH warhead

    1998-12-23T00:00:00Z

    British Aerospace Royal Ordance's BROACH multi-warhead system has been selected by Raytheon as the main alternative payload for the AGM-154C unitary-warhead variant of its Joint Stand-Off Weapon (JSOW), under development for the US Navy. A second successful test has been conducted, meanwhile, of the BROACH warhead for the US Air ...

  • News

    French resolve missiles/satellites dispute

    1998-12-16T15:29:00Z

    Julian Moxon/PARIS The French Ministry of Defence has brokered a deal ending the dispute between the country's two major electronics and aerospace/defence groupings over their respective missiles and satellites businesses. Under the agreement, Aerospatiale's stake in Sextant Avionique will be sold to Thomson-CSF. The two groups - Thomson-CSF/Alcatel/Dassault Industries and ...

  • News

    Ikonos delayed

    1998-12-16T11:40:00Z

    Space Imaging says the launch of the first commercial 1m-resolution remote sensing satellite, Ikonos 1, will be delayed again, to at least June, because of problems with a spacecraft "subsystem". The spacecraft will be at least a year late in flying. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Rotary action

    1998-12-16T11:39:00Z

    Rotary Rocket has successfully tested its "whirl tower" during the first rotor ground trials to qualify the unit for the landing system of the piloted Roton satellite delivery vehicle. More tests will be required before a maiden flight planned for late 1999. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Pegasus launch

    1998-12-16T11:38:00Z

    NASA's Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS) was launched at 00.58 GMT on 6 December by an air-launched Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL booster. The $64 million SWAS will investigate the process involved in the creation of stars, when gravity collapses interstellar clouds of gas. Source: Flight International

  • News

    Orbital transfer

    1998-12-16T11:36:00Z

    Intelsat has transferred five operational satellites, plus a sixth under construction, to New Skies Satellites, an independent company created by the international communications satellite organisation's 143 members, in its road towards full privatisation. The operational satellites are: 513 (183E), 703 (57E), 803 (338.5E), 806 (319.5E), Intelsat K (338.5E) and the ...

  • News

    Safety changes

    1998-12-16T11:27:00Z

    The US National Transportation Safety Board is urging the US Federal Aviation Administration to require safety-related changes for German-made Glaser-Dirks gliders. The recommendations, which result from a fatal accident in 1997 involving a DG-300 glider in Nevada, call for design changes to the aircraft which will enable "reliable jettison of ...

  • News

    Nimrod progress

    1998-12-16T10:56:00Z

    The BMW Rolls-Royce BR710 Mk 101 engine for the upgraded British Aerospace Nimrod MRA4 maritime patrol aircraft has completed altitude testing conducted by the UK Defence Research Agency, including a maximum operational altitude test. The engine will undergo a range of further tests in 1999, with the first flight in ...

  • News

    Uraguay's 206 delivery

    1998-12-16T10:55:00Z

    The Uruguayan air force has taken delivery of the first of 10 Cessna Stationair 206s. The aircraft, to be used for surveillance, training and medical evacuation duties, will replace Stationairs that have been in service since the 1960s. Most of the aircraft will be based in Montevideo. Source: Flight ...

  • News

    Global Hawk test

    1998-12-16T10:54:00Z

    The eighth flight of Teledyne Ryan Aeronautical's Global Hawk long-endurance unmanned air vehicle, on 4 December, demonstrated wideband satellite communications between the aircraft and its ground station. The second flight of air vehicle number two, it lasted 3h 18min, reaching 50,000ft (15,250m). Source: Flight International

  • News

    Indian refuelling

    1998-12-16T10:15:00Z

    Flight Refuelling of the UK is in talks with the Indian air force to supply Mk32 refuelling pods to give the air force's Sukhoi Su-30s a flight refuelling capability. The single pod would fit on the centreline pylon of the Sukhoi. Air force Jaguars could also perform buddy-buddy refuelling from ...

  • News

    Transport agreement

    1998-12-16T10:13:00Z

    Hindustan Aeronautics and the National Aeronautics Laboratory have signed a memorandum of understanding to co-operate on a 14-seater transport project known as Saras. The research organisation has been pursuing the programme for years, initially with the Russian aerospace industry. The 14-seater commuter aircraft will be used for an air ambulance ...

  • News

    Alaska Air plans marketing pact with American

    1998-12-16T00:00:00Z

    Alaska Airlines and regional affiliate Horizon Air have signed a letter of intent to enter a marketing partnership with American Airlines and American Eagle. Despite the tie-up, Alaska hopes to maintain its partnership with Northwest Airlines. Bill Ayer, president of Alaska Airlines, says the deal "considerably strengthens Alaska's and ...