søndag 31. januar 2021

Europeiske jagerfly diskuteres i AW&ST

 

Future Fighter Investment Is Keeping Eurocanards Competitive

 



Eurofighter Typhoon
The Phased Enhancement packages have expanded the Eurofighter Typhoon’s air-to-ground capabilities. The Long-Term Evolution initiative and multinational work on the FCAS and Tempest should keep it operational and relevant out to the 2060s, an important factor for upcoming export campaigns.
Credit: Royal Air Force

Europe may be gearing up for the development of two next-generation combat aircraft, but its trio of so-called Eurocanards have managed to hold sway in the international fighter market.

  • France plans to keep the Rafale in service until 2070
  • German Eurofighter orders should sustain production into the 2030s
  • Gripen C/Ds will supplement Gripen Es in enlarged Swedish air power plans

As little as five years ago, the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter seemed set to rule the roost in Europe, and the production of the Eurofighter Typhoon and the Dassault Rafale was deliberately drip-fed as industry extended production in hopes of securing a place in future fighter contests.

Today, however, production of both types looks assured: Export sales and top-up orders from domestic nations will take production of both aircraft well into the late 2020s and their service lives out to 2060-70. Meanwhile, development of Saab’s Gripen E continues apace, and the aircraft it was supposed to replace, the C/D model, now looks set to enjoy a career with the Swedish Air Force into the 2030s, paving the way for a new upgrade path into a future as a firm fixture on the international fighter market.

“There has been a confluence of military, political, financial and industrial considerations that has kept these aircraft in production,” says Douglas Barrie, senior fellow for military aerospace at the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.

Because these platforms were originally designed for Cold War-era threats, the expectation was that if the Cold War had continued, the successors to these platforms would have already entered the inventory or at least been well into development.

The collapse of the Soviet Union and the resulting reduction in tensions instead saw the pace of fighter development slacken. Financial concerns put future fighter needs on the back burner, and largely incremental upgrades were delivered by industry to keep their skills ready for future programs.

“In recent years, however, the deterioration in the security environment and renewed concerns with Russia have given the European fighters and their American counterparts a second wind,” Barrie says.

The F-35 is another key factor. Some European countries view the U.S. fighter as a threat to their national industry and sovereignty, and the type is perceived as having strings attached to security and operational uses. Furthermore, the cost of operation has so far been high, and the weaponry options that come with European platforms are not available on U.S. platforms. Both the Eurofighter and the Gripen, however, are integrated with many different U.S. munitions. All three European fighters can now use the ramjet-powered MBDA Meteor beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile, and export customers can also access standoff weapons such as the Storm Shadow, Scalp and Taurus KEPD 350 air-launched cruise missiles, all largely free of strict U.S. regulation—a significant element for Middle East customers.

Yet even with their replacements now on the distant horizon, the future development road map for the three European fighters appears more certain than ever.

Both the French-German-Spanish Future Combat Air System (FCAS) and the UK-Italian-Swedish Tempest initiatives look set to benefit the platforms they will replace.

Rafale in flight
The Rafale is finding success with customers that operated its predecessor, the Mirage 2000, but is likely to have a much longer career, with France planning to keep the type in service alongside the FCAS New-Generation Fighter through the 2060s. Credit: G. Gosset/Dassault Aviation

French plans call for the Rafale to remain in service until 2070, supplementing the New-Generation Fighter (NGF), which will be at the heart of the Future Combat Air System when it enters service around 2040 (AW&ST Nov. 25-Dec. 8, 2019, p. 46).

The F4 upgrade for the Rafale includes improvements to the aircraft’s communications suite and delivers additional weaponry. The F5 upgrade, meanwhile, planned for the early 2030s, will enable the Rafale to make use of the FCAS’ remote-carrier concept and introduce a virtual cognitive assistant to support the pilot in high-workload situations. Work on the artificial intelligence is already underway through the Man-Machine Teaming advanced study program launched by Thales and Dassault in March 2018.

Plans for F6 and F7 upgrades, likely to emerge in the 2040s, are envisioned to align with the upgrade path for the NGF.

One of the drivers for the Rafale’s retention is France’s aim to have a two-type fighter fleet: one to meet high-end threats and another lower-cost platform to take on less complex threats.

Currently, the Rafale takes that lead role, and the Dassault Mirage 2000 supplements it, but once the NGF enters service, the Rafale will augment that platform.

A wave of Rafale orders has helped to sustain that development activity, led first by Egypt and Qatar and then  followed by India after the long-drawn-out agreements were finalized.

Greece joined the Rafale operators club in January, the first European customer outside France to do so, with an order for 18, including several second-hand aircraft from French Air Force stocks.

The Rafale is also in contention in Finland and Switzerland, and an export deal is said to be close in Indonesia. Top-up orders from France are in the offing, too: Twelve are on order to offset those aircraft being delivered to Greece, while another 30 Rafales are planned for delivery in 2027-30.

The four Eurofighter partner nations—Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK—managed to draw out production for domestic use over 17 years, keeping production warm for potential future orders. This was a strategy that finally paid off in 2016: Kuwait ordered 28 aircraft, and a year later Qatar ordered 24. The two orders boosted the business case for investment in an active, electronically scanned array (AESA) radar for the aircraft, and Germany’s Quadriga order will bring new enhancements to the AESA sensor. The order for 38 Tranche 4 Eurofighters to replace its Tranche 1 fleet keeps the production lines and platform development moving and adds an improved AESA radar and updated electronic warfare systems to the type’s optional extras list. Another top-up order should come later this year from Spain, whose Halcon requirement calls for the purchase of an additional 20 airframes.

The Eurofighter also will benefit from both the Tempest and FCAS development streams, but much of how this will pan out is still subject to agreement among the four nations.

Jointly, they have been studying proposals for the Eurofighter’s Long-Term Evolution (LTE) described as a midlife update for the platform. Studies for the LTE, launched by the four-nation consortium at the Paris Air Show in 2019, aim to expand on the performance-enhancement packages already being rolled out across the fleet and build on the fighter’s mission-system architecture, defensive-aids suite and human-machine interface. The LTE studies also will consider a wide-area display cockpit as well as the integration of new weapons and enhanced engine performance.

LTE will likely feature on the planned Tranche 5 Typhoons that Germany wants to introduce to replace its Panavia Tornado fleet. Airbus has suggested the first LTE aircraft could fly in 2027-28.

Other opportunities are in the offing, too. Like the Rafale, the Eurofighter is competing in Finland and Switzerland, and the potential exists for further orders from the Middle East. Saudi Arabia might use the platform to replace its Tornado fleet, which is due to exit service around 2030. Agreements signed by Riyadh in 2018 for another 48 aircraft are yet to be exercised.

Output from the LTE study has been submitted to Eurofighter customers for review and consideration, Eurofighter’s head of strategic marketing, Raffael Klaschka, tells Aviation Week.

“We are actively supporting that process, and we will continue to do so until it concludes. . . . A positive outcome will allow us to progress toward the next phase of the program and bring Typhoon LTE aircraft into service through the latter half of the decade,” Klaschka says. “We are confident that the LTE study report contains cost-effective long-term solutions that will maintain Typhoon’s position as a world-leading multirole fighter aircraft, providing the foundation for the continued development of the weapon system well into the 2060s.”

In support of the FCAS introduction, Airbus is proposing a combat cloud network for both the Eurofighter and Rafale that would be ready for operations in 2030 and might even pave the way for use of remote carriers—unmanned aircraft that are envisaged to accompany the FCAS into hostile airspace. The UK also is discussing the use of its Lightweight Affordable Novel Combat Aircraft alongside the Typhoon as an additive capability before the Tempest enters service. Additionally, the UK is advancing plans for a more capable AESA radar with an electronic-attack capability (AW&ST Sept. 14-27, 2020, p. 28).

Development of Saab’s Gripen E is continuing rapidly; efforts are now taking place across two continents with the arrival of Brazil’s first aircraft in-country in late 2020.

Saab views the Gripen E as a new-generation fighter aircraft. Because of the differences between the E and C/D models, the company argues there are now four Eurocanards. Although production of the Gripen C/D is currently on ice, Saab has said it could quickly restart production should new orders for the older version emerge.

“Gripen E is a completely new aircraft,” says Mikael Franzen, vice president and head of marketing and sales at Saab’s aeronautics business. “Of course, we use this very optimized configuration that we have on Gripen, but we have redesigned the complete airframe internally. . . . Pretty much every system in there has been redesigned.”

The Gripen E is a stockier, heavier machine than its predecessor. Broader wing roots allow it to carry 40% more fuel, and wider air intakes feed the more powerful General Electric F414-GE-39E turbofan engine. Two additional belly-mounted pylons expand weapon load capacity, while faceted wingtip pods feature an enhanced electronic-warfare capability. Its empty weight is up by 1,200 kg (2,650 lb.) to 8,000 kg, and all-up weight is increased by 2,500 kg to 16,500 kg, yet the jet has been designed to remain within the strict parameters that allow the Swedish Air Force to use the newer version from its network of austere bases and road runways. Internally, Saab has focused on the development of advanced sensor and electronic-warfare capability, while a federated architecture separates critical flight control systems from the tactical systems.

Gripen E in flight
The Gripen E has logged more than 600 flight-test hours and is on track to secure its military type certificate this year or in early 2022. The aircraft will supplemented by the Gripen C/D in Swedish Air Force service into the 2030s. Credit: Jamie Hunter via Saab

Saab says the federated approach will make the Gripen E’s avionics and mission systems more easily and quickly upgradable; tactical upgrades could be written, tested and installed in weeks rather than months or even years.

“The technology is working, and we are talking weeks rather than months or years for upgrades,” Franzen says.

The challenge will be for customers to adapt to this new rapid pace of change. Air forces will need to develop ways to approve the new upgrades and then train their pilots to be able to fight with the modified aircraft, Franzen adds.

The Gripen E’s new sensors should allow it to surpass the capability of the Gripen C/D when it reaches the front line in 2023. Among the systems onboard is what Saab refers to as human-machine collaboration: If the pilot is focused on an air-to-ground task, for instance, the aircraft systems will continue to monitor the aerial picture and warn the pilot if a potential threat emerges ahead.

Sweden would like the aircraft to be able to carry a standoff weapon by the end of the decade, and Brazil sees its Gripen Es carrying a cruise missile, the domestically developed MICLA-BR, in the coming years.

Meanwhile, the Swedish government’s decision to keep 40 Gripen C/D aircraft in service to supplement the Gripen E fleet in response to the enhanced threat posed by a resurgent Russia has prompted Stockholm to consider how to keep the older, smaller Gripen model relevant into the 2030s, which could bolster its chances on the international market once again, too. The last Gripen C/D sale was to Thailand 13 years ago, but the fighter has struggled to find a sale since; at least one country has cited a lack of AESA on Gripen C/D as a reason for its rejection. Saab subsequently self-developed and flew an X-band AESA in the Gripen last year, and that could form part of the platform’s development road map, particularly for the retained Swedish fleet.

Franzen says the study work will initially focus on removing obsolescence from the aircraft before looking at capability areas. “We will, of course, try to get all of the ground support system [and] planning stations into one track to support both aircraft,” he says.

The Gripen E orderbook stands at 96 aircraft: 60 for Sweden and 36 for Brazil. But Brazil has ambitions to double or triple that number. Like its European rivals, the Gripen is competing hard for Finnish requirements.

Saab is developing a road map for the Gripen E, likely to build off Sweden’s partnership with the UK and Italy on the Tempest technology work.

Both British and Italian industry have cited Sweden’s experience with the rapid development of the Gripen E as a key ingredient to achieving success with the Tempest.

Ironically, after years of ferocious competition, Europe’s fourth-generation fighters will be intrinsically linked together and will end up sharing technologies developed through the political and industrial links established to help replace them.

Space - SpaceX Starships #9 og #10 på launch pad - #9 Skulle vært i luften - NASA

 For oss som fulgte Apollo programmet, så slepte det seg avgårde i forhold til dette racerkjøret til Elon Musk. Det går tydeligvis for fort for FAA`s Space Division. (Red.)



Musk, FAA Spar Over Next Mars Rocket Launch

0

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has gone to war with the FAA after the agency denied the company permission to launch its SN9 prototype deep space rocket as scheduled on Jan. 28. The agency issued a last-minute notice about five hours before the scheduled launch and said it was rescheduled until the following day. The delay launched a Twitter tirade from Musk who clearly laid the blame on the agency. “Unlike its aircraft division, which is fine, the FAA space division has a fundamentally broken regulatory structure,” Musk tweeted. “Their rules are meant for a handful of expendable launches per year from a few government facilities. Under those rules, humanity will never get to Mars.” The rocket still hasn’t launched and may go Feb. 1.

Helikopter - Ikke godt å si om noen ble alvorlig skadd her -Twitter video

 Kan se ut som om maskinen landet på noen av repellantene - Detaljene er ukjent: https://tinyurl.com/yxm2s826

F-117 får igjen tanke fra KC-135 - Rollen til Nighthawk er uklar - Tyler Rogoway

 

F-117s Cleared To Refuel From All KC-135s As "Retired" Stealth Jets Expand Operations



The Air Force's Air Mobility Command (AMC) has issued a formal order that all KC-135 Stratotankers are now cleared to execute aerial refueling operations with F-117 Nighthawks. The order is quite the 'back to the future' directive as the F-117 was first cleared for aerial refueling operations in the mid-1980s and has been officially retired for 13 years now, although this really isn't the case for a number of the remaining 'Black Jets.' 

This new unclassified order, which is titled "Air Refueling Operations Approval for KC-135 and F-117 Aircraft," states, in part:

"HQ AMC/A3V FCIF 21-01-01. This FCIF is approved for release by Maj Gen Joel. D Jackson and applies to all KC-135 units. Retain until rescinded... KC-135s are approved to conduct air refueling operations with the F-117. With no current Standard Related Documents (SRD) guidance available, previous air refueling procedures and the existing F-117 TCA are to this FCIF... Block 45 equipped KC-135s will not refuel with the autopilot engaged... KC-135 crews will review the attached documents prior to flying operations and be familiar with all general information, notes, cautions, and warnings applicable to air refueling F-117s..."


USAFA section of F-117s, including the flag scheme jet, fly off a KC-135R's wing.

It is signed by Air Force Major General Joel D. Jackson, the Director of Operations, Strategic Deterrence, and Nuclear Integration, at Headquarters, Air Mobility Command, and has been confirmed as authentic by multiple sources. The now-approved Flight Crew Information File (FCIF), which appears to be dated January 1, 2021, came from Air Mobility Command's Directorate of Operations, Aircrew Standardization, and Evaluation, or A3V.

This serves as additional evidence that the F-117's post-retirement operations are becoming more widespread and far less reclusive in nature. The F-117s, some of which have remained flying for the vast majority of the type's official retirement, at least to a limited degree, have drastically expanded their operational footprint in recent years and are now actively acting in the operational test and development support role and as stealthy dissimilar aggressors. Once bound to their original home at the remote Tonopah Test Range Airport (TTR), the F-117s have ventured increasingly further from it to higher-profile locations, especially in recent months. Now they are even forward deploying to operational airbases in order to support things like carrier strike group work-ups. The F-117s have also even been calling on Nellis Air Force Base in broad daylight as their use as stealth aggressors have broadened, with the type even playing a major role in recent Red Flag international air combat exercises.



F-117S PHOTOGRAPHED FLYING OUT OF NELLIS AFB FOR THE FIRST TIME IN OVER A DECADEBy Tyler RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE

CHECK OUT THESE CLOSE-UP SHOTS OF F-117S DEPLOYED TO MIRAMARBy Tyler RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE

F-117 NIGHTHAWKS NOW APPEAR TO BE FLYING AS ADVERSARIES IN RED FLAG AERIAL WAR GAMESBy Tyler RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE

THE DARK WORLD OF USAF SPECIAL OPS AIR REFUELERS AND THEIR MODIFIED KC-135RT TANKERSBy Tyler RogowayPosted in THE WAR ZONE

YES, SERBIAN AIR DEFENSES DID HIT ANOTHER F-117 DURING OPERATION ALLIED FORCE IN 1999By Thomas NewdickPosted in THE WAR ZONE

After the type's formal retirement, the super-shy pocket force of F-117s was relegated to tanking from a small fleet of test tankers based out of Edwards Air Force Base and KC-10 tankers from Travis Air Force Base that support clandestine flight testing regularly, going by the callsign Sierra 99. In more recent years, KC-135s that go by the callsign Sierra 98 have also taken up this mission, which usually occurs over or near the expansive and desolate Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR)

Making it so any KC-135 can refuel the F-117s will allow them to more easily be integrated into large force employment (LFE) exercises and major training cycles. It also means they will be able to more easily travel much farther from home. As such, it is possible we could see an east coast detachment of F-117s in the not so distant future in order to support an exercise or training evolution with their stealthy characteristics.

USAF


The F-117 and KC-135 have been tied at the hip since not long after the type's first flight in 1983. Here two 4450th Tactical Group F-117As refueling from KC-135 tanker and an A-7D chase plane Nevada. Note the aircraft in the foreground with the grey/black paint, this is the first F-117, 780. This photo dates from about 1984

Acting in a stealthy aggressor role, they will help bridge the gap until the services stand up low-observable aggressor forces, whether that be with 5th generation F-35s, which will be arriving to take up this role at Nellis in the near future, or stealthy unmanned aircraft.

Regardless, it is absolutely amazing that after 13 years of officially being in mothballs, the Nighthawk force, which amounts to around 45 jets in total, most of which remain partially disassembled in storage at Tonopah, is now significantly expanding its operations. With Red Flag underway right now at Nellis, we may see the F-117s pop up once again towards the end of the big exercise. And this time they can suckle from a standard KC-135R, like the rest of the aggressor force. 




USA viser seg frem, såvidt, på indisk airshow - Twitter

Vi har sett at Pakistan innretter seg mot kinesiske våpensystemer. Sist med kjøp av  fregatt og våpenbærende droner. Det er derfor viktig for USA og den vestlige verden, å bevare India i folden. (Red.)



US B-1B long-range heavy bomber to perform 'fly-by' at Aero India

13th edition of Aero India 2021 will be held at Yelahanka Airforce Station












CHENNAI: A United States' B-1B Lancer heavy bomber will perform a fly-by during Aero India air show at Yelahanka Air Force station in Bengaluru.
The 13th edition of the Aero India international air show, organised by the defence research and development organisation (DRDO) is scheduled to take place from February 3 to 5 at Air Force station Yelahanka.
"Among the highlights of the show, a B-1B Lancer heavy bomber, of the 28th Bomb Wing based out of Ellsworth Air Force base in South Dakota, will perform a fly-by," the US consulate, Chennai, said in a statement on Friday.
The B-1B Lancer, a supersonic heavy bomber, is a truly remarkable aircraft, capable of carrying out missions worldwide from its bases in the United States, as well as from forward-deployed locations, according to the consulate.Don Heflin, US Charge d'Affaires, said that the United States' participation in the air show is another example of the deepening defence and strategic partnership between the US and India.
Heflin will lead a high-level delegation of US government officials and defence industry representatives to the event.
Leading US defence companies are also participating in Aero India 2021, including Aerospace Quality Research and Development LLC, Airborn Inc., Boeing, IEH Corporation, GE Aviation, General Atomics, Hi-Tech Import-Export Corporation, L3Harris, Laversab India, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Trakka Systems.
"I am pleased to head this year's US delegation to Aero India to show our continued commitment to strengthening US-India defence cooperation, in line with India's status as a major defence partner," Heflin said.
"US participation in Aero India 2021 reflects our increasingly close bilateral defence ties and our shared vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific region," he added.
The consulate said that US participation in Aero India 2021 provides both the US industry and the US military services an opportunity to strengthen military-to-military relations and defence cooperation with India.
"Our two militaries work together to uphold a rules-based international order in the Indo-Pacific. Public and private participation by the US in Aero India 2021 demonstrates the importance the US places on its strategic partnership with India," the statement read.

In the spirit of bilateral support for India's first hybrid defence exhibition, the United States Air Force Band of the Pacific based out of Hawaii will also perform with Indian percussion (ghatam) artist Giridhar Udupa. The collaboration will be broadcast at a later date on the US embassy and consulate's Facebook and Instagram pages.
The US government delegation, the US consulate assured, will follow all directed government of India and US department of defence protocols and requirements to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

Norwegians MAX og Boeing - ABC Nyheter

 

Eiere av Norwegians fly krever plass i søksmålet mot Boeing

NTB

31. jan. 2021 07:57 – Oppdatert 31. jan. 2021 09:45


Like før et rettsmøte mellom Norwegian og Boeing skulle ta fatt i Chicago onsdag, meldte seks eiere av det norske selskapets fly seg inn i kampen om et oppgjør.

Onsdag klokken 17.30 norsk tid møttes Norwegian og den amerikanske flyprodusenten Boeing hverandre til et telefonmøte i den føderale distriktsdomstolen i Nord-Illinois i Chicago.

Dommer Andrea R. Wood skulle etter flere utsettelser ta en siste orientering mellom partene før hun skulle bestemme veien videre for erstatningskravet som Norwegian har anlagt mot Boeing og datterselskapet Boeing Commercial Aviation Services Europe.

Men da det rettslige telefonmøtet skulle til å starte hadde nok en part meldt seg på i erstatningssøksmålet.

Seks klienter

På telefonlinje fra en adresse bare noen kvartaler unna domstolen i sentrum av Chicago beklaget advokat Mitchell A. Orpett at han bare minutter før rettsmøtet hadde sendt en begjæring om å ta del i Norwegians søksmål.

Jeg representerer dem som ønsker å intervenere i denne saken. Det er seks av dem, sa Orpett ifølge en utskrift av rettsmøtet NTB har fått fra domstolen.

Flyanalytiker Hans Jørgen Elnæs sier til NTB at det ikke er sikkert at det er negativt for Norwegian at en gru.


1 milliard dollar

I månedsvis har de to partene kranglet om et oppgjør på opptil 1 milliard dollar. Norwegian krever dette etter at de måtte sette 18 fly av typen Boeing 737 Max på bakken etter at to ulykker med flytypen i oktober 2018 og mars 2019, kostet 346 mennesker mistet livet.

Fra før slet flyselskapet med omfattende tekniske problemer med de nye langdistanseflyene Dreamliner som også Boeing hadde levert.

Da koronapandemien kom på toppen av alle disse problemene, tårnet problemene seg opp for Norwegian. Selskapet hadde også en bestilling inne hos Boeing på kjøp av ytterligere 92 737 Max-fly, en ordre de måtte kansellere da problemene ble for store.

Ukjent tredjepart

I rettsmøtet onsdag hadde verken advokatene til Norwegian eller Boeing hørt noe om at en tredjepart skulle vise interesse for å blande seg inn i den allerede kompliserte erstatningssaken.

Helt kort så er mine klienter utleiere av flere, men ikke alle, flyene som omfattes av Norwegians søksmål, sa advokaten videre.

Advokat Orpett forklarte at utleierne mener de har krav på en eventuell erstatning som retten skulle komme til fordi Norwegian og Boeing ved salg av flyene også overdro alle rettigheter til de nye eierne.


Så i utgangspunktet er de flyets eiere og alle rettigheter til å bli tilkjent erstatning fulgte med salget. Disse rettighetene eies av mine klienter, sa Orpett.

Frist til onsdag

Dommer Wood, som i utgangspunktet hadde vært klar til å avsi en kjennelse om videre behandling av saken, ga Norwegian og Boeing frist til onsdag 3. februar med å gi retten sine vurderinger av hvordan den nye tredjeparten kan påvirke rettsprosessen videre.

Verken Norwegian eller Boeing har svart på spørsmål om hvordan den nye situasjonen vil påvirke erstatningssaken. Det er ikke utdypet fra Norwegians side hvilken betydning et mulig finansielt oppgjør på flere hundre millioner dollar med Boeing var kan ha i flyselskapets pågående redningsplan i Norge og Irland.

Tidsforskjellen er ikke i vår favør når det gjelder Boeing-saken, og vi vil dessverre ikke ha tilstrekkelig informasjon til å kunne kommentere på dette i løpet av denne arbeidsdagen, var alt kommunikasjonsdirektør Esben Tuman ville si til NTB torsdag.

Mye på spill

Flyanalytiker Elnæs ser det slik at leasingselskapene inntreden i saken vil kunne styrke saksøkerne, og gjøre det vanskeligere for Boeing å trekke saken ut i tid.

De aller fleste flyselskapene har nå fått til en avtale med Boeing etter skandalen med 737-Max-flyene, men ikke Norwegian. Det er nesten det eneste selskapet igjen. Nå er det mye som står på spill for begge parter, så det kan være fint med noen hvite riddere som kan støtte Norwegian i prosessen, sier Elnæs.

Noen timer før rettsmøtet mellom Norwegian og flyprodusenten Boeing skulle starte i Chicago onsdag, hadde konsernsjef Jacob Schram og finansdirektør Geir Karlsen lagt fram en kriseplan hos byfogden i Oslo.

Der gikk det fram at selskapet er i full sving med å nedskalere driften med å kutte kostnader og redusere rutenettet til kun å omfatte kortdistansetrafikk i Norden og Europa.

Kriselån

Fredag foreslo regjeringen som ventet å gi flyselskapet 1,5 milliarder kroner i et evigvarende hybridlån som også skal lokke øvrige investorer til å bidra med ytterligere 3 milliarder kroner.

The Irish Times skrev torsdag at Norwegian forsøker å levere tilbake 36 fly til leasingselskaper og at selskapet har bedt High Court i Dublin om bistand til å annullere kontraktene.

Flyparken, som på det meste har vært oppe i mer enn 160 fly, skal reduseres til 53 i første omgang.

Samtlige av de kostbare langdistanseflyene skal, eller er allerede, ute av selskapet, og det irske datterselskapet Torskefjorden Leasing, som lånte ut 24 av de totalt 37 maskinene til det norske morselskapet, ble slått konkurs av domstolen i Dublin forrige fredag.

Når du allikevel ikke har noe å gjøre frem til hopp kl 1610.......

 ..... kan du sjekke denne fra høstens NAS Oceana Aishow. 4:10 med goodies; alt hva US Navy kan varte opp med og et sabla show fra USAFs F-22 Raptor 2:26 uti der og F/A-18 3:36.. P-8 var også på besøk med bomb bay åpen. 


Sjekk hele showet her: Sjekk her:  https://tinyurl.com/y3lkfn99

NAS Oceana ligger rett øst for Norfolk, ved Viginia Beach. Da vi gikk på det første Orion kurset, sltså FAETULANT  (Fleet Airborne Electronics Training Unit Atlantic) på NAS Norfolk, tok vi en tur østover, men vi kom ikke lenger enn til Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek. Der var det allsang; sing along, og vi var med. Sangboka har jeg enda. 

lørdag 30. januar 2021

Vulcan - Siste nytt

Farnborough 2010 - Foto: Per Gram


Sjekk her:  https://tinyurl.com/y3lkfn99

 

Vulcan Monthly Newsletter

29 January 2021


Ubåt - Forbedret Kilo Class til den russiske stillehavsflåten - Stillere blir det ikke......

Voldsom stemme på denne karen: https://tinyurl.com/y2eqxn7s 



Covert Shores


Parat er skuffet - Ingen kompensasjonsordning / Stabiliseringspakke - Parat

 

Skuffelse over regjeringens mangler i støtte til luftfarten

Holsether minner om at Stortinget har anmodet regjeringen om å legge frem et forslag til kompensasjonsordning. Foto: Trygve Bergsland.
Leder for Pilotforbundet i Parat, Oddbjørn Holsether, spør hvor stabiliseringspakke for luftfarten er i regjeringens krisepakke. Han minner om at regjeringen og FrP tidligere har avtalt at det skal etableres en kompensasjonsordning for luftfarten innen utgangen av januar. 
Av Trygve Bergsland Publisert dato 29.01.2021 15:55
Holsether minner også om at Stortinget har anmodet regjeringen om å legge frem et forslag til kompensasjonsordning. 
– Det er for oss vanskelig å forstå at regjeringen unnlater å følge opp stortingets vedtak, i tillegg til den avtalen regjeringen selv har inngått med FrP. Denne kompensasjonsordningen må komme på plass nå straks, sier pilotlederen.

Holsether sier det er bra at Norwegian ser ut til å bli reddet fra konkurs, men minner om at hele bransjen står midt i en akutt situasjon nesten uten inntekter.
– Skal vi opprettholde norske selskaper i norsk luftfart, har regjeringen dårlig tid. Fly står på bakken og ansatte er permittert. Her må det tilføres likviditet, lik de kompensasjonsordninger det øvrige næringslivet får for å overleve, sier han.

fredag 29. januar 2021

Dagens bilde - Lockheed L-188 Electra

 

Space - 20 dager til Rovers landing på Mars - Curt Lewis video

 

(Illustration courtesy: NASA/JPL-CalTech)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NASA’s Perseverance Rover Just 20 Days From Mars Landing

Seven minutes of harrowing descent to the Red Planet is in the not-so-distant future for the agency’s Mars 2020 mission.

NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover mission is just 20 days from landing on the surface of Mars. The spacecraft has about 23.9 million miles (38.4 million kilometers) remaining in its 292.5-million-mile (470.8-million-kilometer) journey and is currently closing that distance at 1.6 miles per second (2.5 kilometers per second). Once at the top of the Red Planet’s atmosphere, an action-packed seven minutes of descent awaits – complete with temperatures equivalent to the surface of the Sun, a supersonic parachute inflation, and the first ever autonomous guided landing on Mars.

Only then can the rover – the biggest, heaviest, cleanest, and most sophisticated six-wheeled robotic geologist ever launched into space – search Jezero Crater for signs of ancient life and collect samples that will eventually be returned to Earth.

“NASA has been exploring Mars since Mariner 4 performed a flyby in July of 1965, with two more flybys, seven successful orbiters, and eight landers since then,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate at the agency’s headquarters in Washington. “Perseverance, which was built from the collective knowledge gleaned from such trailblazers, has the opportunity to not only expand our knowledge of the Red Planet, but to investigate one of the most important and exciting questions of humanity about the origin of life both on Earth and also on other planets.”

Jezero Crater is the perfect place to search for signs of ancient microbial life. Billions of years ago, the now-bone-dry 28-mile-wide (45-kilometer-wide) basin was home to an actively-forming river delta and lake filled with water. The rock and regolith (broken rock and dust) that Perseverance’s Sample Caching System collects from Jezero could help answer fundamental questions about the existence of life beyond Earth. Two future missions currently in the planning stages by NASA, in collaboration with ESA (European Space Agency), will work together to bring the samples back to Earth, where they will undergo in-depth analysis by scientists around the world using equipment far too large and complex to send to the Red Planet.

“Perseverance’s sophisticated science instruments will not only help in the hunt for fossilized microbial life, but also expand our knowledge of Martian geology and its past, present, and future,” said Ken Farley, project scientist for Mars 2020, from Caltech in Pasadena, California. “Our science team has been busy planning how best to work with what we anticipate will be a firehose of cutting-edge data. That’s the kind of ‘problem’ we are looking forward to.”

VIDEO

Testing Future Tech

While most of Perseverance’s seven science instruments are geared toward learning more about the planet’s geology and astrobiology, the mission also carries technologies more focused on future Mars exploration. MOXIE (Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment), a car-battery-size device in the rover’s chassis, is designed to demonstrate that converting Martian carbon dioxide into oxygen is possible. Future applications of the technology could produce the vast quantities of oxygen that would be needed as a component of the rocket fuel astronauts would rely on to return to Earth, and, of course, the oxygen could be used for breathing as well.

The Terrain-Relative Navigation system helps the rover avoid hazards. MEDLI2 (the Mars Entry, Descent, and Landing Instrumentation 2) sensor suite gathers data during the journey through the Martian atmosphere. Together the systems will help engineers design future human missions that can land more safely and with larger payloads on other worlds.

Another technology demonstration, the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter, is attached to the belly of the rover. Between 30 and 90 days into the rover’s mission, Ingenuity will be deployed to attempt the first experimental flight test on another planet. If that initial flight is successful, Ingenuity will fly up to four more times. The data acquired during these tests will help the next generation of Mars helicopters provide an aerial dimension to Mars exploration.

Getting Ready for the Red Planet

Like people around the world, members of the Mars 2020 team have had to make significant modifications to their approach to work during the COVID-19 pandemic. While a majority of the team members have performed their jobs via telework, some tasks have required an in-person presence at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which built the rover for the agency and is managing the mission. Such was the case last week when the team that will be on-console at JPL during landing went through a three-day-long COVID-adapted full-up simulation of the upcoming Feb. 18 Mars landing.

“Don’t let anybody tell you different – landing on Mars is hard to do,” said John McNamee, project manager for the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover mission at JPL. “But the women and men on this team are the best in the world at what they do. When our spacecraft hits the top of the Mars atmosphere at about three-and-a-half miles per second, we’ll be ready.”

Less than a month of dark, unforgiving interplanetary space remains before the landing. NASA Television and the agency’s website will carry live coverage of the event from JPL beginning at 11:15 a.m. PST (2:15 p.m. EST).

More About the Mission

A key objective of Perseverance’s mission on Mars is astrobiology, including the search for signs of ancient microbial life. The rover will characterize the planet’s geology and past climate, pave the way for human exploration of the Red Planet, and be the first mission to collect and cache Martian rock and regolith.

Subsequent missions, currently under consideration by NASA in cooperation with ESA (European Space Agency), would send spacecraft to Mars to collect these sealed samples from the surface and return them to Earth for in-depth analysis.

The Mars 2020 mission is part of a larger program that includes missions to the Moon as a way to prepare for human exploration of the Red Planet. Charged with returning astronauts to the Moon by 2024, NASA will establish a sustained human presence on and around the Moon by 2028 through NASA’s Artemis lunar exploration plans.

JPL, which is managed for NASA by Caltech in Pasadena, California, built and manages operations of the Perseverance rover.