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9 juillet 2012 1 09 /07 /juillet /2012 07:53

EADS

 

July 09, 2012 by Dave Majumdar - FG

 

Farnborough - EADS (OE13) is displaying an unmanned air vehicle built wholly by a three-dimensional printer using a process known as additive layer manufacturing (ALM).

 

The battery-powered UAV was designed by students from the University of Leeds under EADS supervision. A version with metallic, flight-capable wings will be manufactured in EADS's Filton facility in the UK.

 

ALM involves using a laser to heat up powdered metal to form a shape, to which layers are added in the same form until it reaches the desired thickness.

 

"EADS has developed the technology to the extent that it can manipulate metals, nylon and carbon-reinforced plastics at a molecular level, which allows it to be applied to high-stress, safety-critical aviation uses," says the company.

 

3D printing has become relatively common in aviation as a technique for building very light custom designs. While no aircraft are in service using 3D-printed components, several test structures and entire UAVs have been built for testing purposes.

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9 juillet 2012 1 09 /07 /juillet /2012 07:43

Atlas 06.07.2012 photo EADS

photo EADS

 

July 09, 2012 by Craig Hoyle – FG

 

Farnborough - For the second major European air show running, engine issues have relegated Airbus Military's A400M to making only a static display appearance at Farnborough.

 

The setback is a major frustration for the European manufacturer, which has brought its production-standard development aircraft MSN6 to the UK amid worries over its interrupted campaign of function and reliability testing.

 

MSN6 had completed around 160h of a planned 300h period of intensive testing in support of the A400M's civil-type certification activities when metal chips were detected inside one of its Europrop International TP400-D6 engines. This was replaced, but Airbus Military is now awaiting the results of an inspection to determine whether the problem was a one-off issue, or could affect other TP400s and potentially rule out the function and reliability work conducted so far.

 

The fresh delay has prompted Airbus Military to officially drop an earlier ambition to deliver the first of 174 production aircraft late this year. However, it notes that it will meet its contractual requirement to hand over the transport aircraft to the French air force by the end of March next year.

 

Meanwhile, the A400M was given a new name on the eve of the show, with programme nations Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Spain, Turkey, the UK and export buyer Malaysia having adopted "Atlas".

 

The new title was confirmed by Royal Air Force's chief of the air staff, Air Chief Marshal Stephen Dalton, during a rain-drenched ceremony at the Royal International Air Tattoo (RIAT) on 5 July. The Atlas will "give air forces the ability to project air power directly into the battlespace", he said.

 

Airbus Military managing director Domingo Ureña thanked his company's customers for "maintaining their faith - and funding - even through difficult times," referring to a more than three-year delay in the start of production deliveries.

 

Visitors to RIAT on 6 July got the only opportunity to see the Atlas in an air display this summer, with MSN6 having participated in a flypast involving the RAF's current air transport and tanker types. It will enter use with the service in 2014.

 

The A400M's participation at last year's Paris air show was also downgraded to a static appearance after a separate gearbox issue with the TP400.

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9 juillet 2012 1 09 /07 /juillet /2012 07:38

Forces armees belgique source mil.be

 

08 Juillet 2012 RTL.be (Belga)

 

L'armée va pouvoir entamer le renouvellement d'une partie de son matériel, après l'accord donné par le Conseil des ministres à plusieurs programmes d'acquisition, dont celui de deux nouveaux navires pour la Marine, a-t-on appris dimanche auprès du ministère de la Défense.

 

Le gouvernement a en effet autorisé vendredi le ministre de la Défense, Pieter De Crem, à lancer cinq procédures de marché public. Ces achats font partie du Plan d'investissements pour la Défense et la Sécurité (PIDV) d'un montant total de 489,5 millions d'euros que M. De Crem souhaite réaliser d'ici 2014, dont 242 millions à engager cette année. Les programmes dont le lancement a été approuvé vendredi comprennent, selon un porte-parole de la Défense, l'acquisition de deux patrouilleurs ("Ready Duty Ship", RDC) pour la composante Marine, de 70 tourelles pour améliorer la protection des véhicules blindés LMV ("Light Multirole Vehicle"), de quatre nacelles (pods) supplémentaires de désignation et de guidage de type Sniper ATP-SE destinés à équiper les chasseurs-bombardiers F-16, de systèmes d'armement air-sol pour reconstituer les stocks de bombes utilisées durant l'opération "Unified Protector" de l'Otan en Libye l'an dernier et carabines multifonctionnelles de diverses versions. (GGD)

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9 juillet 2012 1 09 /07 /juillet /2012 07:22

Typhoon No1(F) Squadron photo RAF

 

Jul. 8, 2012 - By ANDREW CHUTER Defense News

 

New Radar, Missile, Upgrades In the Works

 

LONDON — The four nations behind the Typhoon program have asked the Eurofighter consortium for firm proposals to develop an active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar to be ready for fielding on the combat jet by 2015.

 

The NATO Eurofighter and Tornado Management Agency (NETMA), the group responsible for overseeing the program for the British, German, Italian and Spanish governments, issued a request for proposals (RfP) to Eurofighter last week.

 

Development of an AESA radar is deemed critical to Typhoon’s ability to compete against export rivals from the U.S., France and Sweden, all of whom either have the capability in service or are committed to gaining it. Officials are also looking at integrating a new air-to-air missile, among other improvements.

 

One executive said the RfP for the AESA radar “covers an agreed specification from the four partner nations for the AESA requirement.”

 

If the program stays on schedule, the governments and industry could be under contract to develop the radar early next year.

 

Eurofighter and Euroradar, the Selex Galileo-led consortium tasked with supplying radars for the Typhoon, signed a letter of intent with the nations to develop an AESA radar in mid-2011.

 

The arrangement, though, was funded by industry rather than the governments. This time around, the nations are committing their own funds to a development plan, with radar specifications agreed on by all four partners.

 

The AESA move is one of several steps underway to help address some of the capability issues that dogged the jet when it lost a multibillion-dollar face-off with Dassault Aviation’s Rafale for a large Indian order earlier this year.

 

Euroradar already produces the mechanically scanned Captor radar used on the jet and has been working on an AESA system marrying the processing capabilities of the existing unit to an actively scanned front end.

 

Separately, Selex is well advanced in the development of an AESA radar for the Saab Gripen and continues to work with the British on progressing aspects of the technology.

 

Details on the RfP are scarce, but executives said they expect the in-service target date for the radar to be 2015, the same timeline as requested by the Indians during the competition with Rafale.Potential export customer requirements remain the driver for the moment. Malaysia, Oman and the United Arab Emirates are among a list of potential new buyers for Typhoon. Saudi Arabia will likely buy a second batch of aircraft on top of the 72 already ordered.

 

One drawback, though, remains the reluctance of the four cash-strapped European partners to commit to series production at this stage.

 

But industry executives see the nations’ decision to fund the program and specify their detailed technical requirements as a strong statement of intent.

 

“They may not have given a date to fit the radar in their own aircraft, but they wouldn’t be spending scarce cash resources unless they were firmly committed,” one executive said.

 

New Missile, Other Upgrades

 

In another move to hike capability, the Typhoon partners have agreed to the first test-firing of the new MBDA Meteor beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile from a BAE Systems test aircraft in the final quarter of this year, said Bob Smith, BAE Systems combat air engineering director. No missile integration contract yet exists, and Smith said that will be part of the debate after delivery next year of the second of two upgrades to Typhoon being carried out under the Phase 1 Enhancement (P1E) program.

 

P1E is the biggest boost to the aircraft’s operational capability since it entered service. The first enhancement, known as P1Ea, is due to be delivered to NETMA this month and should be cleared for service by next spring.

 

The work integrates the Litening III laser designator pod with the Paveway IV and EGBU-16 precision-guided bombs with improved man/machine interface and an expanded communications fit.

 

The second P1E phase is scheduled to be delivered next year and will allow the aircraft to undertake simultaneous air-to-air and air-to-ground engagements, and other improvements.

 

Previously, Typhoon had been limited to the use of Enhanced Paveway II in the air-to-ground role. The aircraft made its combat debut in Libya last year and received a further boost in June with the performance of Luftwaffe Typhoon pilots in the exacting Red Flag Alaska exercise.

 

A Eurofighter spokesman said the “P1E program, the E-Scan radar and the Meteor are important milestones on the way for further enhancements of the Typhoon’s operational capabilities.”

 

The Eurofighter consortium consists of BAE Systems, EADS and Finmeccanica for the four governments. Smith said the Eurofighter firms are assessing what more they could do to improve Typhoon’s export credentials outside of technology insertions wanted by the four partner nations.

 

“There is some small amount of industry funding to look at equipment we would like to investigate for the export market. What we are saying is, do the partner nations want this [capability]? If they do, it can be part of a common program; if not, should industry be putting the money in to cover it?” he said.

 

Rafale gained the nod from India earlier this year to conduct final negotiations for the Asian nation’s multirole combat aircraft requirement after it beat Typhoon on price. Those price negotiations remain ongoing, leaving Eurofighter on the sidelines awaiting the opportunity to enter a new bid if Dassault fails to seal the deal.

 

Industry executives here said the sort of deals won by Rafale are never secured on price alone; other factors are normally involved.

 

Speaking to the Italian parliament in February, Italian procurement secretary Gen. Claudio Debertolis was downbeat about the Eurofighter program, stating, “Unfortunately, India has shown that the cost of the aircraft — the competition was lost above all on cost — as well as the air-to-ground capabilities, are factors in making the aircraft uncompetitive.”

 

Since the Indian decision, the Typhoon nations and industry have been doingmore than just licking their wounds. The governments and industry have been moving to sharpen their act on price, process, political co-coordination, technology growth commitments and other issues.

 

Speaking to reporters in June, Brian Burridge, vice president for strategic marketing at Finmeccanica UK, said having the AESA radar on contract and having weapon systems integrated on an earlier timescale, particularly Meteor, would have made a difference in India.

 

Now the nations are starting to address some of the growth shortcomings.

 

For some in industry, though, it’s much later than it should have been.

 

“It’s great, but it’s two years too late. Eurofighter is nearly the best multirole fighter in the world, and it’s the ‘nearly’ bit that’s been the problem,” one executive said.

 

Doug Barrie, the senior air analyst at the International Institute of Strategic Studies in London, said the partners had remained focused on the original interceptor capabilities of Typhoon longer than they should have once it became apparent requirements were changing and there were substantial export opportunities available.

 

“They haven’t got there quickly enough. There remain a number of missile types that need to be added.

 

“The long pole in the tent, though, is the AESA radar. It needs to be integrated as quickly as possible. The Captor mechanically scanned radar they currently use has great capability, but AESA will give you more performance and at a lower through-life cost.”

 

———

 

Tom Kington contributed to this report.

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9 juillet 2012 1 09 /07 /juillet /2012 05:30

Le-drone-Camcopter-S-100-sur-le-patrouilleur-L-Adroit.jpg

 

Le drone Camcopter S-100 sur le patrouilleur L'Adroit

crédits : MARINE NATIONALE

 

09/07/2012 MER et MARINE

 

La Direction Générale de l'Armement a décidé d'acheter à la société autrichienne Schiebel un drone Camcopter S-100. L'acquisition de l'engin, en cours d'expérimentation sur le patrouilleur hauturier L'Adroit, sera effective dans le courant du mois. La Marine nationale devient, ainsi, la première en Europe à disposer d'un drone aérien pouvant être mis en oeuvre pour des missions opérationnelles. A cet effet, la DGA a validé un domaine d'emploi pour le Camcopter S-100 et a délivré une autorisation de vol pour différentes utilisations. En plus de la machine, la DGA a acheté un lot de pièces de rechange pour les opérations d'entretien préventif et les interventions curatives. L'entretien du Camcopter S-100 (hors moteur) sera effectué par le détachement drone du Centre d'expérimentations pratiques et de réception de l'Aéronautique navale (CEPA/10S).


Appontage du Camcopter S-100 sur L'Adroit (© : MARINE NATIONALE)


L'Adroit vu par la caméra du Camcopter S-100 (© : MARINE NATIONALE)

Préparer le programme SDAM

Initialement, la DGA ne devait pas acquérir le Camcopter déployé sur L'Adroit, un patrouilleur d'expérimentation construit sur fonds propres par DCNS et mis à disposition de la marine durant trois ans, avec des moyens prêtés par différents équipementiers. La solution de l'achat s'est, néanmoins, révélée plus pertinente pour des questions règlementaires et de coûts. Propriété de la DGA, le drone sera mis à disposition de la Marine nationale durant trois ans dans le cadre d'un programme d'expérimentation. L'objectif est d'évaluer l'utilisation, la mise en oeuvre et le maintien en condition opérationnelle (MCO) sur une longue période d'un drone aérien embarqué. Cela permettra notamment de déterminer la charge de travail et les procédures logistiques liées à la mise en oeuvre d'un tel système sur un bâtiment de surface.


Essais avec le Little Bird, ici en mode piloté (© : DCNS)

Cette campagne de longue durée servira aux travaux préparatoires liés au futur programme de SDAM (Système de Drones tactiques Aériens pour la Marine). Il complètera notamment le contrat signé avec DCNS et Thales sur un prototype de système de décollage et d'appontage/atterrissage verticaux automatiques pour drones à voilure tournante. Après avoir mené des essais à terre aux Etats-Unis avec le Little Bird, un drone de 2 tonnes développé par Boeing, la Démonstration technologique d'un système d'appontage et d'atterrissage pour drones (D2AD) comprendra aussi des essais en mer sur un bâtiment de la Marine nationale. Ce n'est qu'une fois toutes ces expérimentations menées à bien que le choix du futur drone de l'aéronautique navale interviendra et que le programme SDAM sera lancé.


Le Camcopter S-100 sur L'Adroit (© : MARINE NATIONALE)


Le Camcopter S-100 sur L'Adroit (© : MARINE NATIONALE)

Le Camcopter S-100 sur L'Adroit

Il n'est d'ailleurs pas à exclure que les essais D2AD se déroulent sur L'Adroit, qu'on appelle désormais Patrouilleur Hauturier d'Expérimentation (PHE) au sein de la marine. En attendant, l'équipage du bâtiment dispose donc de son Camcopter S-100, qui a été mis aux couleurs de l'aéronautique navale, avec sa cocarde frappée d'une ancre. Affichant un poids à vide de 110 kilos et une masse maximale au décollage de 200 kilos, le drone de Schiebel mesure 3 mètres de long pour 1 mètre de haut, son rotor ayant un diamètre de 3.4 mètres. Capable de voler durant 6 heures environ (sans réservoir supplémentaires et avec une charge utile de 50 kilos), le drone présente une vitesse de croisière de 55 noeuds (environ 100 km/h) et peut atteindre 120 noeuds (environ 220 km/h). Il est actuellement équipé d'un système Agile 2 (Thales) doté de caméras électro-optique et infrarouge, avec retransmission des images en direct sur le bâtiment porteur via une liaison UHF. Il est toutefois envisagé de tester une autre boule optronique, fournie par Wescam. En dehors de cette capacité initiale, l'engin pourra être équipé d'un système d'identification automatique des navires (AIS) ou encore d'un radar, même si ce n'est pas encore prévu. Très utile pour l'identification de cibles et le recueil de renseignements, le Camcopter S-100 a réalisé, ces deux derniers mois, 35 heures de vol à partir de L'Adroit et, d'ici 3 ans, les marins devraient le faire voler un millier d'heures. Côté allonge, le drone a pour le moment été mis en oeuvre à 25 nautiques du PHE, l'objectif étant d'augmenter progressivement cette portée à 60 nautiques.


L'Adroit (© : DCNS)
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8 juillet 2012 7 08 /07 /juillet /2012 14:53

Europe Flag

 

juil 8, 2012 Nicolas Gros-Verheyde (BRUXELLES2 à Nicosie)

 

Bien que « petit » pays, Chypre participe à la plupart des missions de l’Union européenne. Et durant sa présidence, il entend pousser la politique européenne de défense et sécurité commune (PeSDC). Une série de conférences et séminaires vont ainsi rythmer les prochains mois.

 

Pousser la réflexion sur la Défense européennes, stratégie et capacités


Les chypriotes veulent mettre autant le focus sur la politique de défense comme sur les capacités. Un séminaire est ainsi organisé le 30 octobre à Bruxelles intitulé « sur la route avec la PSDC. Planification et conduite (des opérations), capacités, stratégie ».

 

Deux autres séminaires seront centrés plus spécifiquement sur les capacités. L’un à Bruxelles, le 19 septembre, en coopération avec l’agence européenne de défense et l’Institut d’Egmont autour de la coopération « innovante » en matière de défense « Pooling and consolidating demand ». L’autre à Paphos, les 18 et 19 octobre, sur la manière d’améliorer le processus du développement des capacités militaires. Un atelier de travail de la Headline task force se tiendra à ce moment là également.

 

Deux séminaires sur la sécurité maritime sont organisés : l’un à Paris le 6 septembre, l’autre à Larnaca (l’un des principaux ports de l’ile) les 8 et 9 novembre.

 

Des olympiades


Point original, Chypre a entamé des « olympiades » de la PeSDC. Réunissant les « cadets » des différentes armées européennes, il commence d’abord par une série d’apprentissage à distance, par internet. A la fin de cette formation, les étudiants devront plancher sur une étude en lien avec les sujets de la PSDC. Et le tout se clôturera à Paphos, les 4 et 5 octobre, au bord de la mer, avec la présentation des essais par les étudiants et la remise des prix pour les meilleurs d’entre eux par l’UE et le ministère chypriote de la Défense. Les essais seront ensuite réunis sous forme d’ouvrage.

 

Battlegroups et comité Athena


Les réunions plus classiques se dérouleront également. Après la réunion informelle des directeurs de la défense (à Nicosie qui vient de s’achever les 4 et 5 juillet), ce sera au tour des experts (financiers) du comité Athena de se réunir à Larnaca les 20 et 21 septembre. Les membres du comité militaire de l’UE sont, eux, attendus, les 11 et 12 octobre, à Larnaca. Tandis que la conférence de coordination des battlegroups aura lieu le 19 septembre… à Bruxelles et les directeurs du renseignement seront en « conclave » le 13 novembre, également à Bruxelles !

 

Lire aussi :

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8 juillet 2012 7 08 /07 /juillet /2012 08:00

Atlas 06.07.2012 photo EADS

 

Jul 6, 2012 by Craig Hoyle – FG

 

London - Airbus Military's A400M transport has been formally named the Atlas by its European customer nations, during a rain-affected ceremony at the Royal International Air Tattoo (RIAT).

 

UK Royal Air Force chief of the air staff Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton was given the responsibility of naming the A400M, which he says will "give air forces the ability to project air power directly into the battlespace".

 

Airbus Military managing director Domingo Ureña thanked his company's customers for "maintaining their faith, and funding, even through difficult times," referring to a more than three-year delay in the start of production deliveries.

 

The first of a combined 174 A400Ms on order for Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Spain, Turkey, the UK and export buyer Malaysia will be delivered to the French air force in early 2013. Airbus Military has officially dropped an earlier ambition to hand the aircraft over late this year, due to a delay caused by a new problem with the Europrop International TP400-D6 engine. However, it notes that its contractual requirement is to deliver the first Atlas by the end of March next year.

 

Aircraft MSN6, which is on static display at RIAT at RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire, southern England this weekend and also to be on the ground at the Farnborough air show next week, encountered the issue during an intensive period of function and reliability testing. Metal chips were detected inside one engine, which has now been replaced.

 

Airbus Military is waiting on an inspection of the turboprop engine to determine whether the problem was a one-off issue, or whether it could affect other TP400s and potentially rule out the 160h of reliability testing conducted so far with MSN6.

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7 juillet 2012 6 07 /07 /juillet /2012 16:40

Shipping-the-6-000-tonne-LB02-hull-section-of-HMS-Queen-Eli.jpg

 

July 6, 2012 Tamir Eshel - defense-update.com

 

Assembly of the first new Queen Elizabeth Class aircraft carrier for the Royal Navy has marked another milestone at Rosyth, as the third massive Super Block (SB03) and second Lower Block (LB02) are positioned at one location, as part of the Assembly Cycle B – the second of three cycles undertaken by prime contractor Babcock.

 

According to Babcock, the assembly of the first carrier at Rosyth is progressing well, and to schedule. The docking of LB02 (measuring some 60 meters long by 38 meters wide and 21 meters deep and comprising predominantly accommodation compartments with some auxiliary machinery spaces), which arrived from BAE Systems in Portsmouth at the beginning of June, marked the start of Assembly Cycle B. In this second cycle Babcock will integrate LB02 with Lower Block 01 (the forward sections from the keel up to the flight deck, including the bulbous bow), previously built by Babcock at its Appledore shipyard in Devon, and Super Block 03 (SB03) already assembled in the dock.

 

This cycle will continue until spring 2013, to be followed by Assembly Cycle C for the remaining blocks, including the stern sections and island structures, with the hull fully assembled by 2014.

 

Assembly Cycle A, successfully completed to schedule by Babcock in May, saw the assembly of Super Block 03, comprising the mid-hull section (LB03) and four sections making up Centre Block 03 (CB03) plus associated sponsons. Outfitting of the nine major upper blocks integrated with LB03 in this cycle, including installation of electrical cabling, mechanical pipe systems, ventilation and fittings and equipment, is scheduled to complete later this year.

 

The Aircraft Carrier Alliance (ACA), a partnering, is building the two carriers, HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales. Partnering this alliance are BAE Systems, Babcock Thales and the Ministry of Defence. Six shipyards around the UK are constructing the large individual blocks that will be joined to assemble the final vessel. This work is shared between BAE Systems and Babcock. After completion of each of the blocks they are transported to Babcock’s Rosyth facility for final assembly and integration.

 

The 65,000 ton QE Class aircraft carriers will be the UK’s largest (280 meters long, 74 meters wide, and 56 meters high) and most powerful warships, providing the armed forces with four acre military operating bases that can be deployed worldwide.

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7 juillet 2012 6 07 /07 /juillet /2012 12:00

Panavia Tornado strike aircraft photo Cassidian

 

06 July 2012 eads.com

 

        Tornado combat aircraft fleet to remain serviceable until beyond 2025

        New operational capabilities after ASSTA 3.0 upgrade

 

At the end of June, Cassidian delivered the first two Tornado aircraft upgraded to the new ASSTA 3.0 (Avionics System Software Tornado Ada) capability standard, to the German Air Force. After several months of retrofitting, certification and acceptance by Cassidian and by Bundeswehr Technical Centre 61 in Manching, the aircraft are now being returned to Fighter Bomber Wing 33 in Büchel. "Today marks a great leap forward in the development of the Tornado weapon system," said Erik Jensen, Head of Cassidian's Air Services business line, at a handover ceremony attended by representatives of industry and the German Air Force. "With ASSTA 3.0, the German Tornado fleet is being adapted to meet the Armed Forces's current requirement for all-weather, high-precision and network-centric capabilities." All 85 Tornados in service with the future German Air Force fleet are scheduled to be upgraded to this standard by 2018.

 

Besides the integration of the network-centric data communication system MIDS (Multifunctional Information Distribution System / Link 16), the ASSTA 3.0 standard includes a state-of-the-art radio device, a digital video and data recorder (DVDR), and the integrated Laser Joint Direct Attack Munition (LJDAM) which can be guided to its target by means of satellite navigation or by laser. While activities for ASSTA 3.0 are ongoing, the development of ASSTA 3.1 has already begun. This involves replacing the monochrome CRT monitors in the rear cockpit with colour displays and greatly expanding the functionality of the MIDS.

 

On behalf of Panavia GmbH, Cassidian is responsible for the project management, development, manufacture and installation of the combat efficiency improvements for the German Tornados in close cooperation with Alenia Aermacchi in Italy and BAE Systems in the UK. As an industrial partner in the trinational Tornado programme, Cassidian was in charge of developing and manufacturing all of the Tornado's centre fuselage sections, and was also responsible for the avionics, the communication system , the flight control system and the aircraft's entire computer system.

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 17:20

A400M 136630 1

 

6 Jul 12 UK MoD -  An Equipment and Logistics news article

 

The RAF's next generation military transport aircraft has officially been named Atlas at the Royal International Air Tattoo, which is taking place at RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire.

 

The aircraft, which has until now been known as the A400M, will replace the RAF's existing C-130 Hercules fleet and, along with the Voyager and C-17, will provide the UK military's future air transport force.

 

The UK is buying 22 of the aircraft from Airbus Military, and the first Atlas is expected to be delivered to the RAF in 2014.

 

Able to carry twice as much as the Hercules, Atlas can transport 32 tonnes of cargo over a range of 4,500km, providing unprecedented capability to support the UK Armed Forces.

 

It can move up to 116 paratroopers and large armoured vehicles such as Mastiffs as well as vast amounts of humanitarian and disaster relief. The aircraft's ability to land on semi-permanent runways and rough ground means Atlas can fly its cargo into the centre of operations, supplying tactical forward bases or evacuating casualties or refugees.

 

The Minister for Defence Equipment, Support and Technology, Peter Luff, said:

 

    "Atlas will be a uniquely capable aircraft and will provide both tactical and strategic airlift capabilities for use in peace, crisis and war. The name Atlas reflects the potential of this mighty aircraft to provide help and support to our Armed Forces and others in need across the globe.

    "The programme is a good example of how European partners can work together to deliver world-class military capability."

 

Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton, said:

 

    "Atlas is going to be a major capability for Defence and the Royal Air Force is looking forward to Atlas joining our world-class fleet of air mobility aircraft.

    "Atlas will offer a step-change in the Royal Air Force's capability, and with its significant payload it will be able to transport every type of UK protected mobility vehicle directly to where they are needed as well as supporting forces on the ground through significant tactical air drops.

    "Atlas, together with the C-17 Globemaster, C-130J Hercules and the new Voyager aircraft now entering service with the RAF, will give us the ability to rapidly move people and equipment around the globe for military and humanitarian operations for decades ahead."

 

The UK is one of seven nations who will be purchasing Atlas from Airbus Military. The development and build of the aircraft has created or secured work for 8,000 people in the UK.

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 16:40
C-27J Spartan Refuels from KC-767A Tanker

 

July 6, 2012 defense-aerospace.com

(Source: Alenia Aermacchi; issued July 5, 2012)

 

C-27J: Positive Tests for the Fight-Refueling with the KC-767A Tanker

 

TURIN, Italy --- The C-27J is carrying out flight-refueling tests with the KC-767A tanker at the Italian Air Force Base in Pratica di Mare with the collaboration of the 14th Stormo of the Italian Air Force, Alenia Aermacchi, Rolls Royce and Dowty, the latter two responsible respectively for the engines and propellers of the aircraft.

 

After a series of ground test that did not present any complications, the flight test conducted had the C-27J perform a series of contacts with the KC-767 at various altitudes between 10.000 and 20.000 ft. and speeds up to and near 220 kts, including night flight-refueling with the aid of Night Vision Goggles; in turning pattern, in turbulence and during an emergency decent.

 

The preliminary results highlighted the exceptional flying quality of the C-27J, in both the day and night contacts. The test confirmed the high capability of fuel transfer (up to 2800 liters\min) predicted in the planning phase, allowing for a complete replenishment of the tanks in only 5 minutes.

 

Also confirmed during these test was the superior quality of the C-27J as an aircraft receiver also in conditions of slipstream turbulence generated by the tanker.

 

An aircraft piloted by Alenia Aermacchi test pilots was used for these tests, modified with the integration of a complex instrumentation dedicated to controlling the engine parameters, propellers, transfer of fuel and flight controls, in order to meet the requirements requested by the military certification.

 

The objective of these tests was to achieve the certification of the flight-refueling system, that so far has been adopted on the 12 C-27Js in service in Italy and on one of the three units in service with the Lithuanian Air Force.

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 14:53

Parliament-creditHouseofCommons

 

July 6, 2012 defense-aerospace.com

Released June 27, 2012 Source: UK House of Commons Library Reference: Standard Note: SN/IA/6369

 

EU bibliographies: Defence Equipment Directives

 

The EC defence procurement Directive (2009/81/EC of 13 July 2009) was implemented in the UK by The Defence and Security Public Contracts Regulations 2011 SI 2011/1848 with effect from 21 August 2011.

The EC intra-Community transfer of defence products Directive (2009/43/EC of 6 May 2009) will be implemented in the UK through an amendment to the Export Control Order 2008.

It is the intention to meet the 30 June 2012 deadline for this.

This note brings together documents relevant to legislation and the draft directives on EC defence equipment.


(PDF format)  Full text

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 12:26

Europe Flag

 

06 July, 2012, Robert Bridge, RT.com

 

Arguing that security in Europe depends on the cooperative efforts of all countries, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said that NATO, and Russia should work together on the controversial missile defense system.

 

While many European officials have remained silent on US plans to construct a missile defense system smack in the heart of Eastern Europe, Germany’s Foreign Minister offered some candid remarks on the thorny subject in an interview published in the Friday issue of Nezavisimaya Gazeta.

 

"I keep openly stressing time and again that security in Europe can be strengthened only through common efforts, and only together with Russia,” Westerwelle said. “I insist on continuing and, if possible, expanding cooperation between Russia and NATO. This concerns a common missile defense system as well."

 

At the same time, the German Foreign Minister said Russia’s concern that it could be a future target of NATO’s missile defense system is unwarranted, while pointing to areas of cooperation between Russia and NATO, like in combating terrorism in Afghanistan.

 

"Security of Russia, Europe and the U.S. can be ensured only by joint efforts rather than against each other," he said.

 

Whether Germany weighing in on the debate on missile defense brings Russia on board the project remains to be seen, but Westerwelle stressed that Germany is actively involved in addressing issues of global security and Europe's security.

 

Russia has warned the US and NATO on a number of occasions that unless an agreement is reached on missile defense, the world could face another arms race.

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 11:58

IdZ-ES-system.jpg

 

German Army soldiers using the extended future infantrymen system

Photo Bundeswehr/BWB

 

6 July 2012army-technology.com

 

Rheinmetall Defence Electronics has received a contract from the German Federal Office of Defence Technology and Procurement (BWB) to supply the first extended future infantrymen series systems (IdZ-ES) to Germany's Armed Forces.

 

The systems delivered under the terms of the unspecified contract will be used to ensure the establishing of a mission-oriented initial capability for the German troops currently serving in Afghanistan.

 

An upgraded variant of the company's previous future soldier system, the IdZ-ES is an advanced communications system designed to bring the army's infantry, mechanised infantry units and vehicles into the network-enabled operational loop, comprising of reconnaissance, command and control components.

 

An IdZ-BS system consists of a modular bullet-proof vest, C4I equipment, NaviPad for situational awareness and transmitting messages, target data and images, night vision device, tactical radio, laser range finder and thermal image sighting device.

 

Featuring digital voice, data and video communication systems, the new system is capable of eliminating the shortcomings in the command and control capabilities and combat effectiveness, which have been identified in the earlier version.

 

Operating as the army's command and control information system (CCIS), the idZ-ES will enable commanders to integrate the dismounted soldier level into network enabled operations by means of combat vehicles or command posts.

 

The system is fully interoperable with the existing FuInfoSys command and information system; it can also be used by the country's air and naval forces, which are deployed as infantry units to complete their mission with reduced risks.

 

Deliveries under the contract are scheduled to take place in 2012 and 2013.

 

Rheinmetall and subcontractors have also developed and supplied a series of highly modular system for clothing, protective and load-carrying gear, weapons, optics, optronics, as well as command, control, computers, communications and information (C4I) to the army.

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 11:41

Safran_logo.jpg

 

Munich, le 6 juillet 2012 Sagem (groupe Safran)

 

Sagem (groupe Safran) et MTU Aero Engines ont signé aujourd’hui un accord portant sur la création de la société commune Aerospace Embedded Solutions GmbH (AES). Cette joint venture détenue à parts égales développera ses activités dans le domaine des logiciels et équipements critiques pour les applications militaires et civiles.

 

L’accord a été signé par Philippe Petitcolin, président-directeur général de Sagem (groupe Safran), et Egon Behle, président-directeur général de MTU Aero Engines, en présence de Jean-Paul Herteman, président-directeur général du groupe Safran.

Cette signature vient ainsi confirmer le protocole d’accord signé fin 2011 par Sagem et MTU Aero Engines.

 

« L’apport de compétences clés au sein d’AES constitue une étape déterminante pour gagner ensemble de nouveaux marchés. Cette joint venture nous offre de nouvelles perspectives commerciales très prometteuses. Avec Sagem, nous pourrons ainsi nous positionner sur de nombreux programmes d’avenir de l’industrie aérospatiale et de défense. » souligne Egon Behle, président-directeur général de MTU Aero Engines.

 

AES comptera environ 200 personnes issues principalement de MTU avec quelques ingénieurs de Safran. L’offre produits d’AES comprendra principalement des systèmes de régulation moteur notamment pour le turbopropulseur TP400-D6 de l’avion de transport militaire A400M, ainsi que des systèmes électroniques embarqués destinés au pilotage avion (contrôle de commandes de vol, de train, de freins et systèmes d’information et de monitoring avion). AES consolidera ses compétences et son savoir-faire en s’appuyant sur la division Safran Electronics de Sagem qui apportera à la nouvelle joint venture son support et l’accès à un large portefeuille d’applications en électronique embarquée.

 

Selon Philippe Petitcolin, président-directeur général de Sagem « La création d’AES marque pour MTU et Sagem une étape importante vers une consolidation de pôles d’excellence européens dans les technologies critiques de l’aéronautique et de la défense. Avec notre partenaire, nous pourrons ainsi mieux répondre aux besoins des nouveaux programmes européens grâce à une offre compétitive et innovante. »

 

La nouvelle société s’appuiera sur le savoir-faire de personnels spécialisés dans le domaine du développement des logiciels et équipements électroniques critiques, le management de programmes et les processus de qualité et de certification. Capitalisant sur l’expérience de ses équipes, AES interviendra au profit de Safran et de MTU ainsi que pour d’autres industriels.

 

Le siège d’AES sera implanté sur le campus de MTU à Munich (Allemagne). Christophe Bruneau (Sagem) occupera les fonctions de directeur exécutif et Thomas Faehr (MTU) celles de directeur technique. La joint venture AES pourra débuter ses activités dès la fin de l’année, sous réserve de l’approbation de cet accord par les autorités de réglementation compétentes.

 

A propos de Sagem (groupe Safran)

Sagem, société de haute technologie du groupe Safran, est un leader mondial de solutions et de services en optronique, avionique, électronique et logiciels critiques, pour les marchés civils et de défense. N°1 européen et n°3 mondial des systèmes de navigation inertielle pour les applications aéronautiques, marines et terrestres, Sagem est également n°1 mondial des commandes de vol pour hélicoptères et n°1 européen des systèmes optroniques et des systèmes de drones tactiques. Présents sur tous les continents via le réseau international du groupe Safran, Sagem et ses filiales emploient 7 500 personnes en Europe, en Asie du Sud-est et Amérique du Nord. Sagem est le nom commercial de la société Sagem Défense Sécurité.

Pour plus d’informations : www.sagem-ds.com

 

A propos de MTU

MTU Aero Engines est le leader allemand dans le domaine de la fabrication de moteurs, et, comme acteur industriel, le seul constructeur indépendant du pays. MTU est un leader technologique. Les turbines à basse pression, les compresseurs à haute et basse pression, la fabrication et les techniques de réparation constituent ses domaines d’excellence. La société emploie 8200 personnes et a réalisé un chiffre d’affaires consolidé de 2,7 milliards d’euros. MTU Maintenance est le plus grand industriel au monde pour le service de maintenance et de réparation des moteurs (MRO). Dans le domaine militaire, MTU est l’industriel leader en Allemagne pour la presque totalité des moteurs aéronautiques utilisés par les forces armées du pays.

Pour retrouver l’ensemble des communiqués de presse et photos de MTU, merci de consulter : http://www.mtu.de

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 11:07

aw159-10_lynx_wildcat.jpg

 

July 6, 2012 W. Alibrandi / Forecast International – defpro.com

 

NEWTOWN, Conn. | AgustaWestland is scheduled to deliver the first Lynx Wildcat helicopter to Britain's Ministry of Defense at the Farnborough air show on July 11. The Wildcat is replacing the British Army and Royal Navy's legacy Lynx fleets, and in total, 62 aircraft will be delivered.

 

Powering the new variant are twin LHTEC CTS800-4 turboshafts, rated at 1,362 shp, which have replaced the original Lynx powerplants, the Rolls-Royce Gem.

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 07:55

European Satellite Communication Procurement Cell (ESCPC) p

 

juil 5, 2012 Nicolas Gros-Verheyde (BRUXELLES2)

 

Le projet d’achat en commun de liaisons satellite militaires va pouvoir entrer en vigueur. La cinquième signature de l’accord permet à ce projet mené sous couvert de l’Agence européenne de défense (EAD) d’entrer en vigueur et de franchir le cap de la Capacité opérationnelle initiale (IOC). Les cinq pays membres du projet – l’Italie, la France, la Pologne, la Roumanie et le Royaume-Uni – vont pouvoir former une force de frappe d’achat de créneaux satellites auprès des fournisseurs de service de communication, au lieu de d’acheter de façon séparée. Les communications satellites sont aujourd’hui un élément essentiel du champ de bataille que ce soit pour le commandement et le contrôle (C2) ou le dispositif de renseignement, de surveillance, de ciblage d’objectifs et de reconnaissance (ISTAR). Et la « demande augmente avec l’utilisation croissante des drones qui requièrent des capacités de Satcom pour le contrôle et la transmission des données des capteurs » précise-t-on à l’Agence.

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 07:38

British Army.svg

 

Jul. 5, 2012 - By ANDREW CHUTER Defense News

 

LONDON — Seventeen major units are to be culled by the British Army as part of a transformation plan that will see regular force personnel numbers reduced to 82,000 from the current level of 102,000, the defense secretary announced July 5.

 

The extent of the personnel cuts was flagged 12 months ago by the Ministry of Defence as part of its austerity budget effort. But it has taken until this week for the details to emerge of exactly which units would be affected.

 

The plan is to reduce regular Army numbers while building a 30,000-strong force of reservists better able to integrate and deploy with front-line troops than the current arrangements allow.

 

The transformation plan, known as Army 2020, will ax five infantry battalions; three of the 14 Royal Engineer units will go, as well as three of 15 Royal Logistics Corps units.

 

Dropping infantry battalions from some of Britain’s most famous regiments has caused controversy in the media and elsewhere, masking the deep cuts to engineering and logistics capabilities that will in part be taken up by contractors and reserves.

 

Other units to be cut will be two Armoured Corps units and one unit each from the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, the Army Air Corps, the Royal Artillery and the Military Police. The latest cuts bring to 23 the number of units to be axed by the Army since the government rolled out its 2010 strategic defense and security review.

 

Most of the cuts to units will kick in during the 2013 to 2015 time frame, but the Army expects to complete the wider structural changes involved in its Army 2020 plan over a five-year period. The outline plan involves high-readiness reaction forces aimed at meeting the Army’s contingency tasks, and adaptable forces based on a regional footprint and held at lower readiness.

 

A third force will encompass specialist support units, such as logistics and intelligence and surveillance.

 

The high readiness forces comprise an air assault brigade with two attack helicopter regiments and three armored infantry brigades. The lower readiness units will be made up of seven infantry brigades, comprising paired regular and reserve units.

 

Roles for the adaptable forces will include manning garrisons in the Falkland Islands and elsewhere overseas, and the generation of additional brigade-sized units for enduring operations.

 

A rebasing plan for the Army, including units returning from Britain’s pullback from Germany, is expected by early 2013.

 

Speaking to reporters ahead of his announcement in Parliament, Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said the Army is “thinking ahead beyond the end of combat operations in Afghanistan in 2014. Looking at that challenge, the Army needs to reshape to face an increasingly uncertain world, and go back to its more usual posture of contingent capability to deal with unknown events, while the last decade has largely been about structuring the Army around a very much known event in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

 

The cuts were condemned by Jim Murphy, the Labour Party’s shadow defense secretary, during a speech in Parliament. He said Britain’s Army is getting weaker as instability around the world increases and the U.S. military is increasingly focused on Asia.

 

“Plans to deliver the smallest Army since the Boer War is an entirely inadequate response,” Murphy said. “The U.K. is cutting a higher proportion of our Army than many major allies.

 

“With a cut of 20,000, it is inconceivable that there won’t be an impact on force projection, in particular in light of cuts to combat support and key enablers,” he said. “These plans may provide flexible forces, but it’s far from certain that it will provide sustainable military utility.

 

“This isn’t just a smaller Army, it’s also a less powerful Army in a less influential nation,” Murphy said.

 

A spokesman for a military lobby group, the UK National Defence Association, said, “These are dangerous cuts, as they can only be interpreted as an admission by the government that we can no longer play an influential role on the world stage. The government’s intention to plug some gaps in our military capability by expanding the Territorial Army is hopelessly unrealistic.”

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6 juillet 2012 5 06 /07 /juillet /2012 07:15

British Army.svg

 

Jul 5, 2012 ASDNews (AFP)

 

Britain gave details Thursday of major army cuts which will see it lose 20,000 regular soldiers by 2020, taking force levels to their lowest since the early 19th century.

 

Defence Secretary Philip Hammond told the House of Commons that 17 major units would be axed as part of an overall reduction from 102,000 regular troops to 82,000.

 

The cuts come as Britain battles to impose budget savings across the board in a troubled economic climate.

 

"After inheriting a massive overspend from the last government, we have had to make tough decisions to implement our vision of a formidable, adaptable and flexible armed forces," Hammond said.

 

"After a decade of enduring operations, we need to transform the army and build a balanced, capable and adaptable force ready to face the future."

 

Four infantry battalions are among those which will be scrapped while a fifth will be reduced to carrying out public duties only.

 

The changes will also see Britain become more reliant on part-time soldiers, with the number of reservists expected to double to 30,000. That will give a combined force size of 120,000.

 

The extent of the cuts has been known for a year but the decision to axe famous battalions of the British army has provoked sharp criticism.

 

The BBC reported that they will leave the regular army around half the size it was during the Cold War era -- in 1978, it was 163,000 strong.

 

Brigadier David Paterson has written to General Peter Wall, the chief of the General Staff, to say that he is "bitterly disappointed" by proposals to axe some of the country's most celebrated battalions, the Daily Telegraph reported Tuesday.

 

"It cannot be presented as the best or most sensible military option," wrote Paterson, the honorary Colonel of the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers.

 

Richard Dannatt, a former head of the army, told BBC radio that the cuts would entail "some risks."

 

"It (the army) won't be capable of conducting two operations simultaneously of the scale of Iraq and Afghanistan as we have done over the last 10 years," he said.

 

"It will mean that we can do less but we will still do an enormous amount."

 

Britain currently has around 9,500 troops serving as part of the international force in Afghanistan.

 

But Wall defended the plan, saying it would allow the army to become "better integrated and fully adaptable".

 

"The changes... will demand resilience, flexibility and genuine adaptability from our talented and committed officers and soldiers," he said.

 

"It is inevitable that some units will be lost or will merge but we have done this in a way that I believe is fair across the whole army."

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5 juillet 2012 4 05 /07 /juillet /2012 18:43
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5 juillet 2012 4 05 /07 /juillet /2012 18:40

vbci_a400-source-FOB.jpg

 

05.07.2012 par Guillaume Belan (FOB)

 

Alors que la « Naming ceremony » baptisera demain en Angleterre, le futur transporteur militaire A400M d’Airbus, qui répondra donc dorénavant au nom d’ « Atlas », la commission défense du Sénat vient de rendre un rapport d’information « A400M : Simply the best » sur l’état d’avancement du programme. Première conclusion, l’avion sera (enfin!) livré à l’armée de l’air en temps et en heure, voir même un peu en avance, c’est à dire au tout début 2013. Sauvé de justesse en 2011, par les six États participants au programme (Allemagne, France, Espagne, Royaume-Uni, Belgique, Luxembourg) et l’industriel EADS (rallonge de plus de 6 milliards d’euros et décalage de livraison de 3 ans), le rapport conclut « les difficultés sont maintenant derrière nous ». Le premier Atlas doit contractuellement être livré au mois de mars 2013 à l’armée de l’air française, il arrivera selon Airbus au tout début de l’année, soit janvier ou février. A la fin de l’année prochaine, c’est quatre A400M qui seront aux mains des pilotes français d’Orléans. « Les inquiétudes sont balayées » assurait le rapporteur Jacques Gautier ce matin. Le logiciel de régulation du moteur (FADEC…) fonctionne dorénavant bien, tout comme la nacelles ou les aubes de compression. Reste un problème en passe d’être résolu, sur le réducteur (ou power gear box), qui fera que le transporteur européen ne volera pas demain à Farnborough, par « simple mesure de précaution ».

 

Le rapport pointe cependant une préoccupation: le soutien aéronautique. Du côté industriel, la proposition de contrat de soutien global n’est pas simple à mettre en œuvre, particulièrement sur le moteur, le TP400. Il faut dire que pas moins de quatre industriels interviennent sur le groupe propulsif (Snecma, Rolls-Royce, MTU et ITP) et que du côté étatique, les nations ne s’entendent pas sur les termes et arrivent en ordre dispersé. Une situation qui n’est « pas acceptable » selon le sénateur des Hauts-de-Seine, « un soutien commun doit être mis en place ». Résultat, la France doit signer un contrat de soutien provisoire pour 18 mois, qui n’est aujourd’hui toujours pas signé…

 

Reste que l’A400M est un avion « bien pensé » selon le rapport, le seul avion militaire au monde à permettre à la fois des missions stratégiques et tactiques, avec un moteur exceptionnel. L’Atlas sera propulsé par le turbo-prop le plus puissant au monde, équivalent en puissance à cinq TGV Sud-Est! Il est dimensionné pour pouvoir transporter un NH90, un Tigre ou un VBCI. Et très vivement attendu par les armées, la flotte de C-160 étant à bout de souffle.

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5 juillet 2012 4 05 /07 /juillet /2012 17:40

british-forces-source-LdDef.jpg

 

05.07.2012 par P. CHAPLEAU Lignes de Défense

 

Coupes claires dans les rangs des "habits rouges"! Le secrétaire d'Etat à la défense vient d'annoncer les détails de la refonte qui sera mise en oeuvre à partir de 2015 (date de la future LPM en France...). L'armée de terre comptera alors 82 000 hommes et 30 000 réservistes, tel que prévu par le plan "Army 2020".

 

L'ordre de bataille va évoluer avec la disparition ou la fusion de 23 unités. Sont concernées:

 

• Le Queens Royal Lancers et le 9th/12th Royal Lancers (Prince of Wales's) qui vont fusionner, ainsi que le 1st Royal Tank Regiment et le 2nd Royal Tank Regiment.

 

• Deux régiments d'artillerie (39 Regiment Royal Artillery and 40 Regiment Royal Artillery) seront dissous, de même que quatre régiments du génie: 24 Commando Engineer Regiment,  25 Engineer Regiment, 28 Engineer et 38 Engineer Regiment (le 67 Works Group sera aussi dissous).

 

• L'infanterie sera particulièrement touchée avec la dissolution du 2e bataillon du Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, du 2e bataillon du Yorkshire Regiment et du 3e bataillon du Mercian Rgt; le 5e bataillon du Royal Rgt of Scotland sera réduit à une compagnie. Le 2e bataillon du Royal Welsh sera absorbé par le reste du régiment, alors que le 1er bataillon du Royal Irish Rgt rejoindra la Prince of Wales Division.

 

• Le 1er et le 9e Army Air Corps fusionneront.

 

• Le Royal Logistic Corps perdra les 1er, 2e, 23e (Pioneer), 8e, 24e régiments et la 19e compagnie de soutien. Le 101e bataillon de soutien sera aussi dissous.

 

• La police militaire perdra son 5e régiment et les 3 régiments restant seront réorganisés.

 

Sont épargnés: les Royal Gurkha Rifles qui gardent leurs 2 bataillons, les 3 bataillons de renseignement et les unités de l'Army Medical Services.

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5 juillet 2012 4 05 /07 /juillet /2012 17:30

Les futurs porte-avions britanniques de la classe Queen Eli

 

Jul 5, 2012 ASDNews Source : Babcock Inernational

 

A further milestone has been reached in the assembly of the first of the UK’s new Queen Elizabeth Class aircraft carriers by Babcock at Rosyth, where the massive Super Block 03 (SB03) has been moved 90 metres north to meet Lower Block 02 (LB02) in a major hydraulic skidding operation, as part of Assembly Cycle B (the second of the three assembly cycles) which has now begun (June).

 

The aircraft carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales – being delivered by the Aircraft Carrier Alliance (ACA), a unique partnering relationship between BAE Systems, Babcock Thales and the Ministry of Defence – are being built in large individual blocks at six shipyards around the UK, which are then transported to Babcock’s Rosyth facility for final assembly and integration.

 

Assembly of the first carrier at Rosyth is progressing well, and to schedule.  The docking of LB02 (measuring some 60 metres long by 38 metres wide and 21 metres deep and comprising predominantly accommodation compartments with some auxiliary machinery spaces), which arrived from BAE Systems in Portsmouth at the beginning of June, marked the start of Assembly Cycle B.  In this cycle Babcock will integrate LB02 with Lower Block 01 (the forward sections from the keel up to the flight deck, including the bulbous bow), previously built by Babcock at its Appledore shipyard in Devon, and Super Block 03 (SB03) already assembled in the dock.

 

Assembly Cycle A, successfully completed to schedule by Babcock in May, saw the assembly of Super Block 03, comprising the mid-hull section (LB03) and four sections making up Centre Block 03 (CB03) plus associated sponsons.  Outfitting of the nine major upper blocks integrated with LB03 in this cycle, including installation of electrical cabling, mechanical pipe systems, ventilation and fittings and equipment, is scheduled to complete later this year.

 

Following a critical weighing exercise of the completed SB03, the block was moved out of dock to allow the combined docking of SB03 and the newly arrived LB02.  Immediately this docking had been successfully accomplished, Babcock started a highly demanding assembly programme involving one major block lift per week (using the Goliath crane), plus numerous additional lifts, and most recently the major hydraulic skidding operation just completed (end June), which has moved SB03 some 90 metres north to meet LB02.  Assembly Cycle B will continue until spring 2013.

 

Assembly Cycle C will then see assembly of the remaining blocks, including the stern sections and island structures, with the hull fully assembled by 2014.

 

Babcock Warship Programmes Director Sean Donaldson commented: “To date Babcock has achieved or bettered the programme schedule milestones for block erection and completion of steelwork integration.  The start of Assembly Cycle B is an intensive period and we are focusing the team on continuing to deliver successfully and to-schedule.”

 

The 65,000 tonne QE Class aircraft carriers will be the UK’s largest (280 metres long, 74 metres wide, and 56 metres high) and most powerful warships, providing the armed forces with four acre military operating bases that can be deployed worldwide.

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5 juillet 2012 4 05 /07 /juillet /2012 16:50

LogoEDA COLOR

 

Séminaire «Initiatives européennes dans l'environnement maritime - capacités futures, technologies et synergies civiles et militaires» à Nicosie, à Chypre

 

2012-07-04 Cordis

 

Un séminaire intitulé «Initiatives européennes dans l'environnement maritime - capacités futures, technologies et synergies civiles et militaires» (European Defence Agency Seminar: «European initiatives in the maritime environment - future capabilities, technologies and civil-military synergies») aura lieu le 18 et le 19 octobre 2012 à Nicosie, à Chypre.

 

L'évènement contribuera à promouvoir les initiatives européennes dans l'environnement maritime et tentera de poursuivre les efforts actuels pour une surveillance maritime intégrée, et pour discuter des problèmes maritimes plus vastes. Les discussions se concentreront sur le besoin d'une approche européenne et sur l'identification des synergies entre le secteur civil et militaire. L'agenda du programme comprend également la capacité topique et les questions de recherches et de technologies et sur la manière dont l'industrie navale peut soutenir les capacités européennes.

 

Pour de plus amples informations.

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5 juillet 2012 4 05 /07 /juillet /2012 16:30

Typhoon No1(F) Squadron photo RAF

 

Jul 5, 2012 ASDNews Source : Eurofighter

 

Eurofighter Typhoons of the Royal Air Force (RAF) will be on high alert during the Olympic Games in order to secure the air space over London. Prior to the start of this international event which lasts from 27th July to 12th August, the RAF conducted extenstive training.

 

During the earlier training, Air Commodore Gary Waterfall, Deputy Air Component Commander of the RAF said: “Whilst there is no specific threat to the Games, we have to be ready for whatever occurs and play our part in what will be a safe and secure Olympics for all to enjoy”.

 

Eurofighter CEO, Enzo Casolini, commented: “Eurofighter Typhoon has always offered unparalled air-to-air capabilities offering deterence to all  kinds of threats. Now this swing-role aircraft can highlight once again its outstanding operational performance just as the athletes will prove their elite sporting performance during the Olympics”.

 

The Air Security Plan for the Olympic Games builds on the RAF’s existing defence of UK air space which requires Eurofighter Typhoons to be on Quick Reaction Alert (QRA) duty 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. During the Games, Eurofighter Typhoon will be on rotation from the air forces’ six Typhoon squadrons with additional assets holding QRA from RAF Northolt, Middlesex.

 

Eurofighter Typhoon has been regularly involved in large event security since its first operational mission undertaken by the Italian Air Force defending the airspace over Turin during the 2006 Winter Olympics. Since this time, the aircraft has supported events such as the Euro 2008 Football Championship in Austria and Switzerland and annually protecting the skies over the World Economic Forum in Davos.

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