US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
SM-3/6 interesting reports and seems SM-6 can attack ships as SM-2MR. Interesting for new Zumwalt and Burke/Austin pending LRASM.
With also SM-2 Block IV which can intercept aircrafts and BM unlike SM-3 ( only ABM but very long range) and SM-6 ABM later.

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navyreco

Senior Member
U.S. Navy To Test And Evaluate Lockheed Martin FORTIS Exoskeletons
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Lockheed Martin has received a contract through the National Center for Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS) for the U.S. Navy to evaluate and test two FORTIS exoskeletons. This marks the first procurement of Lockheed Martin’s exoskeletons for industrial use. Terms of the contract were not disclosed.

The FORTIS exoskeleton is an unpowered, lightweight exoskeleton that increases an operator’s strength and endurance by transferring the weight of heavy loads from the user’s body directly to the ground.

The objective of this effort is to mature and transition exoskeleton technology to the Department of Defense industrial base and perform testing and evaluation for industrial hand-tool applications at Navy shipyards.
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Jeff Head

General
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World Maritime News said:
The crew of the U.S. ship MV Cape Ray has completed the work of neutralizing Syrian chemical weapons components, Pentagon Press Secretary Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby said in a statement on Monday.

“This morning (August 18th), Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel called Navy Captain Rich Dromerhauser aboard the US ship MV Cape Ray to congratulate the ship’s crew on finishing their unprecedented work of neutralizing, at sea, the most dangerous chemicals in Syria’s declared stockpile,” Kirby said.

US Defense Secretary congratulated the crew saying that by “ridding the world of these materials, they – as part of an ongoing international effort to eliminate the Syrian chemical weapons arsenal – have helped make an important and enduring contribution to global security.”

“Today’s milestone would not have been possible without the contributions of our many international partners, or the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction program, which provided the funding to carry out these operations. While the international community’s work to completely eliminate Syria’s chemical weapons program is not yet finished, the secretary believes this is a clear demonstration of what can be achieved when diplomacy is backed by a willingness to use military force,” Kirby added.

Cape Ray started the destruction of the chemical weapons on July 7 under the umbrella of UN’s Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). The U.S. ship has two field-deployable hydrolysis systems in its holds. The systems mix the chemicals in a titanium reactor to render them inert.

The byproducts will now proceed to facilities in the United Kingdom, the United States and Finland for final processing.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
U.S. Navy To Test And Evaluate Lockheed Martin FORTIS Exoskeletons

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And so it begins. I suspect that by the mid 2020s we will see wide spread use of Exoskeletons in all the US services and some foreign militaries to. For the Navy the technical role seems especially suited particularly ship building and maintaining as well as Carrier operations. Imagine a 200 pound sidewinder missile being loaded on a FA18 by one person.
 

Bernard

Junior Member
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The U.S. military is planning a new type of high-tech tank which will use less armor but provide greater mobility to troops and present a much smaller target to enemies.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has launched a program called Ground X-Vehicle Technology (GXV-T) which aims to revolutionize mechanized warfare. Since tanks made their combat debut during the First World War, more protection has typically meant adding more armor.










Now, however, the ability of weapons to penetrate armor has advanced faster than armor's ability to withstand the weapons, according to DARPA. "GXV-T's goal is not just to improve or replace one particular vehicle - it's about breaking the 'more armor' paradigm and revolutionizing protection for all armored fighting vehicles," said DARPA Program Manager Kevin Massey, in a statement.

DARPA is pursuing what it describes as "a layered approach to protection" that uses less armor more strategically and improves vehicles' ability to avoid detection, engagement and hits by enemy forces.

Massey hopes to emulate the success of the longstanding X-plane program which tests new airplane and helicopter designs. "Inspired by how X-plane programs have improved aircraft capabilities over the past 60 years, we plan to pursue groundbreaking fundamental research and development to help make future armored fighting vehicles significantly more mobile, effective, safe and affordable," he said.

Compared to today's armored fighting vehicles, GXV-T aims to reduce vehicle size and weight by 50 percent and also reduce the onboard crew needed to operate the vehicles by 50 percent. Other goals include increasing vehicle speed by 100 percent and the ability to access 95 percent of terrain, particularly off-road environments. Another key element of the program is reducing the "signatures" that could disclose a vehicle's position to enemy forces, such as noise, infrared and even electromagnetic data.

DARPA also gave the ability to perform "agile motion," or dodging incoming missiles, as an example of potential GXV-T technology. Others include novel track/wheel configurations and automation of crew functions similar to commercial airplane cockpits.

Clearly keen to tap into new sources of innovation, DARPA is "particularly interested in engaging nontraditional contributors to help develop leap-ahead technologies," according to the statement on the agency's website.

The agency will be holding a Proposer's Day for contractors to find out more about GXV-T at its offices in Arlington, Virginia on Sept. 5. Initial contract awards are currently planned for on or before April 2015, with GXV-T technologies to be developed over the following 24 months.

The pace of innovation in military vehicles is rapid. Recent developments include glass that is 50 percent stronger than the hardest glass currently installed on military vehicles, enhanced networking, and a flying dune buggy for special operations.

Last year manufacturer Supacat launched its Light Reconnaissance Vehicle 400 (LRV 400) prototype, an off road military vehicle designed in partnership with race car designers.
 

Jeff Head

General
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Naval Today said:
Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Ingalls Shipbuilding division christened the company’s fifth U.S. Coast Guard National Security Cutter (NSC), James (WMSL 754) on August 16.

Charlene James Benoit, great-great niece of the ship’s namesake, Capt. Joshua James, is the ship sponsor. At the culmination of the ceremony, Benoit smashed a bottle across the bow of the ship, proclaiming, “May God bless this ship and all who sail in her.”

“The boundaries surrounding illegal migrant activity, weapons, drug smuggling and terrorism continue to blur and converge,” said Vice Adm. Peter Neffenger, vice commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard and the ceremony’s principal speaker. “The challenges created by that convergence require a 21st century Joshua James. We need his spirit and his adherence to our values. We need his adaptability, his staying power and his multi-mission focus.

“As we take Joshua James’ legacy with us from the 19th century into the future, we do so in the face of one of the most challenging times in Coast Guard history,” Neffenger continued. “New challenges, driven by complex and uncertain times, require new ways of thinking, new strategies and the right platforms for 21st century mission execution. Platforms like the National Security Cutter.”

Speaking of the Ingalls shipbuilders, HII CEO and President Mike Petters said, “Like Capt. James, we are not motivated by notoriety, distinction or fame. The work is its own reward. We love building these ships, and we would love to build more. And we love knowing they help save lives—while also protecting our American way of life.”

Ingalls has delivered three NSCs, and three more, including James, are currently under construction. A seventh NSC, Kimball WMSL 756, is scheduled to begin construction in early 2015. James is scheduled to deliver next summer.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Army researchers test 3-D printed chow
Aug. 18, 2014 - 06:00AM |

By Joe Gould
Staff writer
FILED UNDER
News
Military Technology
It sounds like science fiction, but the Army is taking a real look at 3-D printing food, an idea that may lead to customizable meals for the battlefield with nutrient yields tailor-made to the individual service member, on demand.

“There really are no 3-D food printers printing out complex foods, so we would start at the very beginning,” said Lauren Oleksyk, who leads the Food Processing and Technology Team in the Defense Department’s Combat Feeding Directorate, at the Army’s labs in Natick, Massachusetts.

Researchers at Natick Labs say generating rations on-site would be a cheaper, more efficient alternative to bringing food in from overseas. The effort is in partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Lincoln Labs, and has the support of the other services.

The Army is already looking at using 3-D printers for building rapid prototypes out of plastic, concrete or metal, and even 3-D bioprinting that seeks to print skin cells on a patient recovering from war wounds.

What you need to know:

Starting with basics
One day, a 3-D printer at a base camp would provide soldiers with performance-boosting custom meals based on their operating environment or sensors they wear — without the logistical tail, packaging or waste of rations today. At first, scientists might more feasibly create a nutrient-rich porridge, or something uniform and simple, like a chocolate bar, before they figure out how to print a caramel chocolate bar, a hamburger or beef stew.

Customized for the troops
The goal is to enhance physical and cognitive performance through nutritionally balanced foods. With 3-D printed foods, a service member who isn’t getting enough protein, carbohydrates or fat could get a custom-made meal with extra Omega-3s, anti-inflammatories, extra fiber or reduced salt. “If they were deficient in certain vitamins or minerals, or could perform better with optimized nutrition, we could add things,” Oleksyk said.

Lighter load, less waste
Among the potential benefits, Oleksyk says, is that it could lighten troops loads by eliminating food and packaging waste. A printer does not carve an object out of plastic, it builds it exactly as it was designed, which means no waste — a technique Oleksyk says could apply to food.

When will it be ready?
Researchers must answer some big questions: Does a printer reduce a food’s nutritional content or otherwise alter its chemistry? How would the printer be kept sanitary and safe? Can they make the printer run quickly? The applied research project is set to launch in fiscal 2015 or 2016, designing and building with MIT a first-of-its-kind prototype 3-D food printer. The Army team would demonstrate its prototype in 2018 or 2019.

Will soldiers want to eat it?
The challenge will be making complex, shelf-stable foods appetizing to troops abroad. Making pizza, for instance, the printer could have individual nozzles that print the sauce, the dough and the cheese. Scientists plan to test the printed rations with military feedback, Oleksyk said, which means feeding some military folks. “Everything is war-fighter tested, war-fighter approved before it ever makes it into the field.”
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Air Force grounds 82 F-16Ds after cracks discovered
Aug. 19, 2014 - 06:12PM |


By Aaron Mehta
Staff writer
FILED UNDER
News
Military Technology
WASHINGTON — The Air Force has grounded over half of its F-16D Fighting Falcons, the service’s Air Combat Command (ACC) announced Tuesday.

The initial damage, described in a Pentagon release as “canopy sill longeron cracks found between the front and rear pilot seats,” was discovered after a routine post-flight inspection on one of the jets. The discovery of cracks led to a fleet-wide inspection order.

Of the 157 F-16Ds in the fleet, 82 were found to have cracks and have been ordered to stand down. The remaining 75 have been cleared to resume normal activities. The Air Force is working with Lockheed Martin engineers to discover the cause of the cracks and what repair options there are.

“As aircraft accumulate flight hours, cracks develop due to fatigue from sustained operations,” Lt. Col. Steve Grotjohn, deputy chief of the Weapon System Division, said in a service statement. “Fortunately, we have a robust maintenance, inspection and structural integrity program to discover and repair deficiencies as they occur.”

The other 812 F-16 jets, which include a number of different variants, are not impacted by the inspections.

The F-16 recently celebrated its 40th year of production, but Lockheed officials see the market for the jet as relatively stable, particularly as older models are upgraded.

Top Air Force generals, including ACC commander Mike Hostage, have said they must keep an eye on the wear and tear on the F-16s. That tradeoff is part of the reason the Air Force decided to fund an F-16 service-life extension program (SLEP) over the combat avionics programmed extension suite (CAPES) program in its FY 2015 budget request.

“Honestly, I wish I had enough money to both refurbish my legacy fleet and continue to keep the replenishment on track because what I would like to have is the 1,763 F-35 fleet and then whatever residual legacy fleet I still have would still be tactically capable and be aerodynamically capable,” Hostage said in January. “In other words, there is SLEP and CAPE.”

“If I could only do one, [SLEP] is the one I would do because I would still have something to fly; it is just going to be tactically nonviable sooner because I did not do the CAPE,” Hostage said. “If I do the CAPE only and do not do the SLEP, then it becomes unsafe to fly long before it becomes tactically nonviable.

“So, if I am going to do one or the other, I would do SLEP first. I can fly with lesser capability, but I have just become that much more dependent even sooner on a strong fifth [generation] fleet.”
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Navy flies manned, unmanned carrier jets together for first time
Aug. 18, 2014 - 06:00AM |

By Meghann Myers
Staff Writer
FILED UNDER
News
The goal for the day was to launch and land the Hornets within 90 seconds of the X-47B. After a couple tries, the team was able to land the X-47B, fold its wings and move it out of the way to make way for the manned jet within 90 seconds. ZOOM
The goal for the day was to launch and land the Hornets within 90 seconds of the X-47B. After a couple tries, the team was able to land the X-47B, fold its wings and move it out of the way to make way for the manned jet within 90 seconds. (MCSA Alex Millar/Navy)
US-MILITARY-UAV ZOOM
The testing was an important step in the Navy's push to advance its aerial strike and surveillance technology, figuring out where unmanned capabilities can enhance the effectiveness of the carrier air wing. (MCSA Alex Millar/Navy)
NORFOLK, VA. — It was one small button push for man and one giant catapult launch for the Navy’s unmanned air combat program Sunday as the X-47B flew its first takeoffs and landings with F/A-18s on the aircraft carrier Roosevelt.

Off the Virginia coast, two Hornets and one X-47B practiced launches and traps in the same pattern, testing the unmanned jet’s ability to take off and land safely, then move out of the way to allow a manned aircraft to come in right behind it.

It was a first for the Navy’s Unmanned Combat Air System Aircraft Carrier Demonstration program, said Rear Adm. Mat Winter, program executive officer for Unmanned Aviation and Strike Weapons at Naval Air Systems Command in Patuxent River, Maryland.

The testing was an important step in the Navy’s push to advance its aerial strike and surveillance technology, figuring out where unmanned capabilities can enhance the effectiveness of the carrier air wing.

“It’s not an unmanned over all others,” Winter said. “It’s a blending of manned and unmanned capabilities.”

The X-47B isn’t like other unmanned aerial systems. For starters, it’s bigger than a fighter jet, with a 62-foot wingspan, 17 feet wider than the F/A-18E Super Hornet.

It also operates autonomously, rather than having a pilot on the ground moving a joystick and throttle. It flies preprogrammed routines, so the deck operator only controls the jet while it’s moving in and out of position on the flight deck. From there, it’s a series of button pushes to make it fly.

The X-47B flew about half a dozen programs during the demonstration, said UCAS-D program manager Capt. Beau Duarte. Those included takeoff, flying downwind, turning around to the back of the carrier, landing, folding its wings and others, he said.

The goal for the day was to launch and land the Hornets within 90 seconds of the X-47B. After a couple tries, the team was able to land the X-47B, fold its wings and move it out of the way to make way for the manned jet within 90 seconds.

A regular Hornet wing lands jets at closer to 60-second intervals, Winter said. As tests continue into the week, Duarte said they would try to tighten up the times if possible.

“We’ll see what level of interaction between the two aircraft we can achieve, and we will let that feed our future concept of operations,” he said.

The next program goal is to try an aerial refueling of the unmanned aircraft, which requires new software programming, Duarte said.

The X-47B is funded through fiscal year 2015, but beyond that its future is unknown. However, its technology will feed into the follow-on Unmanned Carrier-Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike program, Winter said.

Once the UCLASS hits the fleet in 2020 to 2021, the Navy will figure out who will operate the aircraft and how it fits into the current carrier air wing structure.

“Whether that person is a pilot, a naval flight officer or enlisted, we will figure it out in those early operational deployments,” Duarte said.

From there, feedback will determine whether X-47B’s surveillance and strike capabilities are more suited to a stand-alone squadron, Winter said, or perhaps as part of an E-2 Hawkeye surveillance or F/A-18 attack squadron.
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Divers confirm wreck is USS Houston, sunk in 1942
Aug. 19, 2014 - 10:03AM |



The Associated Press
FILED UNDER
News
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii Navy divers from the U.S. and Indonesia confirmed that a sunken vessel in the Java Sea is the World War II wreck of the USS Houston, a cruiser sunk by the Japanese that serves as the final resting place for about 700 sailors and Marines, officials announced Monday.

The Japanese sank the Houston during the Battle of Sunda Strait on Feb. 28, 1942. The ship carried 1,068 crewmen, but only 291 sailors and Marines survived both the attack and being prisoners of war. The Houston’s commanding officer, Capt. Albert H. Rooks, posthumously received the Medal of Honor for extraordinary heroism.

U.S. Pacific Fleet commander Adm. Harry Harris said Monday that divers have documented evidence the watery gravesite has been disturbed.

Assessments conducted in June to determine the condition of the Houston found that hull rivets, a metal plate and unexploded ordnance were removed from the ship. There is also oil actively seeping from the hull.

Officials are working on measures to keep the site from further disturbance.

“In my discussions with our Indonesian navy partners, they share our sense of obligation to protect this and other gravesites,” Harris said in a statement. “Surveying the site, of course was only the first step in partnering to respect those sailors who made the ultimate sacrifice to ensure the freedoms and security that we richly enjoy today.”

The Navy History and Heritage Command concluded that all of the recorded data is consistent with the identification of the former USS Houston.

The Houston was nicknamed the “The Galloping Ghost of the Java Coast.” Resting off the west coast of Java, Indonesia, the ship, which remains sovereign property of the United States, is a popular recreational dive site, the Navy said.

The Navy estimates there are more than 17,000 sunken ships and aircraft resting on the ocean floor worldwide.
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navyreco

Senior Member
U.S. military successful demonstration using K-MAX and SMMS unmanned systems
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Lockheed Martin, in collaboration with the U.S. Army Tank Automotive Research, Development and Engineering Center (TARDEC), successfully conducted a fully autonomous resupply, reconnaissance, surveillance and target-acquisition demonstration using its Squad Mission Support System (SMSS) unmanned ground vehicle, K-MAX unmanned helicopter and Gyrocam optical sensor.

During the “Extending the Reach of the Warfighter through Robotics” capability assessment at Fort Benning, Georgia, K-MAX delivered SMSS by sling load to conduct an autonomous resupply mission scenario for soldiers defending a village. At mission completion, SMSS proceeded to an observation point where it raised its Gyrocam sensor and began scanning the area for enemy forces. In an actual mission, upon observation of enemy forces, the remote operator would notify the commander on the ground, who would assess the threat and determine the appropriate method of neutralizing it.

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Bernard

Junior Member
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Engine technology being developed for a British space plane could also find its way into hypersonic aircraft built by the U.S. military.

The U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory is studying hypersonic vehicles that would use the Synergetic Air-Breathing Rocket Engine (SABRE), which the English company Reaction Engines Ltd. is working on to power the Skylon space plane, AFRL officials said.










"AFRL is formulating plans to look at advanced vehicle concepts based on Reaction Engine's heat-exchanger technology and SABRE engine concept," officials with AFRL, which is based in Ohio, told Space.com via email last month. [The Skylon Space Plane (Images)]

A bold British space plane concept

SABRE and Skylon were invented by Alan Bond and his team of engineers at the Abingdon, England-based Reaction Engines.

SABRE burns hydrogen and oxygen. It acts like a jet engine in Earth's thick lower atmosphere, taking in oxygen to combust with onboard liquid hydrogen. When SABRE reaches an altitude of 16 miles and five times the speed of sound (Mach 5), however, it switches over to Skylon's onboard liquid oxygen tank to reach orbit. (Hypersonic flight is generally defined as anything that reaches at least Mach 5.)

Two SABREs will power the Skylon space plane — a privately funded, single-stage-to-orbit concept vehicle t-hat is 276 feet long. At takeoff, the plane will weigh about 303 tons.

The SABRE heat exchanger is also known as a pre-cooler. It will cool the air entering Skylon's engines from more than 1,832 degrees Fahrenheit down to minus 238 degrees Fahrenheit in one one-hundredth of a second. The oxygen in the chilled air will become liquid in the process. [Skylon's Many Possible Missions (Video)]

"The [pre-cooler] performance has always been pretty much what we predicted," Bond explained in an interview with Space.com at the Farnborough International Airshow in England on July 16. "We've now done over 700 actual tests. It's now done as much service as a pre-cooler would in a real engine."

Bond's team has also successfully tested the pre-cooler for a problem aviation jet engines have to deal with: foreign objects being sucked in.

"We know it [the pre-cooler] can take debris, insects, leaves," Bond said.

Working with the U.S. military

Bond estimates that the pre-cooler is now at a technology readiness level (TRL) of about 5. NASA and AFRL use a 1-to-9 TRL scale to describe a technology's stage of development. According to NASA's TRL descriptions, 5 represents "thorough testing" of a prototype in a "representative environment."

The AFRL work is being carried out under a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with Reaction Engines that was announced in January. AFRL officials told Space.com that they are using computers to model SABRE.

"The Air Force research laboratories in the States have carried out some modeling to verify that the SABRE does actually work, that it is a real engine, and so I am hoping they are going to confirm that very soon," Bond said.

"This is obviously opening doors in the United States, and again, I can't say a great deal about that, but we have very good dialogue going across the Atlantic," he added. "In the next couple of years, it's going to be quite exciting."

Bond declined to confirm rumors of organized support within the U.S. aerospace community that involves former senior program managers of the U.S. military's most high-profile defense projects.

Bond sees Skylon as an international project that would include the U.S. and Europe.

"We're in dialogue with people across Europe in regard to supplying [rocket engine components]. We don't want to reinvent the wheel; we'd like to be the engine integrator and put it on our test facilities and run it," he explained.

Milestones approaching

Two SABRE engines are expected to be tested in 2019. "Hopefully, the earlier part of 2019," Bond said. "I'd like to feel we can test them on Westcott. That is where the rocket propulsion establishment used to be." (In the 1950s and 1960s, the United Kingdom had its own space program; the nation launched a satellite called Prospero with its last rocket, Black Arrow, in 1971. Westcott is about a one-hour drive from Reaction Engines' headquarters).

The SABRE development program is expected to cost 360 million British pounds ($600 million at current exchange rates). "We've got 80 million [British pounds] of the 360 million lined up. We're well on our way to that," Bond said.

Of the 80 million pounds, 60 million is from the U.K. government. As with the commercial ventures NASA supports, Reaction Engines has to meet milestones to acquire those government funds.

"We have to meet milestones, but those are programmatic issues," Bond said. "There is nothing contentious about that; it is just a matter of getting the work done to get there. I think of it as an R&D program, and we've done the 'R' bit, and this part forward is the 'D' bit. We've spent years making sure the technology actually works."

In January, this R&D program reached its third phase, which is split into four sections, known as 3A, 3B, 3C and 3D. Sections 3A and 3B are being carried out in cooperation with the European Space Agency (ESA).

Section 3A began in January and will last until April 2015. It involves the engine's system design, revising the engine's layout and studying the impact on Skylon's performance. This work will cost 8 million euros ($10.7 million, or 6.4 million British pounds), half of which will come from the U.K. government and ESA and the other half from Reaction Engines' private investment.

"This is it for real now; this isn't studies anymore," Bond said. Section 3A will continue until spring 2015, and section 3B is due to start in January 2015, he added. "That is the preliminary design phase,." Bond said.”

Section 3B will last until the end of 2015. During this section, the characteristics of the engine components will be defined and technical specifications produced.

Section 3C, which starts from mid-2015, will see 10 million euros ($13.37 million, or 8 million British pounds) from the U.K. government spent. The section 3C work with suppliers overlaps section 3B. This is because some of the components will get specifications during 3B before other parts of the engine are fully defined. Those detailed components with specifications can then be given to prospective suppliers during the first few months of section 3C.

"In 3C, we start to do detailed design — what the bearings will look like, who is the supplier going to be, that sort of stuff. This is really exciting stuff. We're starting to pull the real engine together during the course of next year," Bond said.

He explained that for section 3C, his company will spend "some of the U.K. government money alongside some of our own private investment." The government money has "enabled us to raise quite a few millions of private investment to go alongside that, and we're continuing that [fund-raising] activity," Bond said.
 
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