3 décembre 2023 | International, Terrestre
Canola Council, Bombardier register to lobby feds
The Canola Council of Canada and Bombardier were both named in new lobbying filings.
23 mars 2022 | International, Aérospatial
Le Pentagone s'apprêterait à diminuer la commande de F-35 pour l'année fiscale 2023. Il n'y a aucune indication sur un changement du nombre total de F-35 commandés, il s'agirait plus d'un ralentissement des livraisons annuelles suite aux très nombreux retards et défaut sur cet appareil.
https://air-cosmos.com/article/le-pentagone-diminue-de-35-sa-commande-de-f-35-pour-2023-28835
3 décembre 2023 | International, Terrestre
The Canola Council of Canada and Bombardier were both named in new lobbying filings.
30 mars 2020 | International, Aérospatial
Steve Trimble The design of the Northrop Grumman B-21's trailing edge has led to speculation about a high-altitude role for the secretive stealth bomber, and new U.S. Air Force statements appear to confirm that analysis. As the U.S. Air Force enters a legally required environmental impact review process for basing the new bomber, service officials disclosed a few new details about the design on large poster boards displayed at public meetings since February. The posters are now available on B21EIS.com, a clearinghouse web site set up by the Air Force to share data during the year-long process to complete the final environmental impact statement. “The B-21 is not expected to use low altitude training routes,” the Air Force poster says. The B-2 was originally conceived as a high-altitude bomber, but a last-minute requirements change during the development phase forced Northrop Grumman to redesign the bomber for a low-altitude mission. As a result, the trailing edge was transformed from a simple W-shape to the sawtooth design seen today. The B-2, like the preceding B-52 and B-1B fleets, need low-altitude training routes. The renderings of the B-21 released by the Air Force so far reveal a trailing edge that resembles the original, high-altitude design for the B-2. The Air Force has never confirmed operational details about the future stealth bomber. Another comment on the Air Force's poster provides the first official description of the B-21's acoustic signature, as well as the performance of the engines. “The B-21 engine noise is expected to be quieter than the B-1B and about the same or quieter than the B-2,” the poster says. Previously, the only detail released by the Air Force about the B-21's engines is that Pratt & Whitney is named as one of seven of Northrop's suppliers. The poster data appears to confirm expectations that the B-21 would use a non-afterburning engine, like the similarly subsonic, flying wing-shaped, B-2. The supersonic B-1B is powered by afterburning engines. The Air Force has selected Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakora as the site for the first B-21 operational squadron, followed by Dyess AFB in Texas and Whiteman AFB, Missouri. The environmental impact review is evaluating Ellsworth and Dyess for the main operating beddown 1 location. https://aviationweek.com/defense-space/aircraft-propulsion/new-usaf-materials-hint-high-altitude-role-b-21
30 juin 2022 | International, Aérospatial
Après avoir acheté 24 Rafale, la Grèce veut acquérir 20 F-35 à Lockheed Marti...