WATCH: Eastern Florida State Will Host Aerospace Program Information Session on February 25 | – SpaceCoastDaily.com

The event will be held on the EFSC Cocoa Campus in Building 14, Room 129

ABOVE VIDEO: Eastern Florida State College will host an Information Session to highlight its Aerospace Technology Program on Tuesday, February 25 from 5-6 p.m.

BREVARD COUNTY COCOA, FLORIDA Eastern Florida State College will host an Information Session to highlight its Aerospace Technology Program on Tuesday, February 25 from 5-6 p.m.

The event will be held on the EFSC Cocoa Campus in Building 14, Room 129. The Cocoa Campus is located at 1519 Clearlake Road, Cocoa, FL 32922.

Aerospace Technology Program graduates earn an Associate in Science Degree in an exciting field of study that prepares them for entry-level positions in the aerospace and aeronautics industry.

Graduates will also qualify for many applied technology jobs such as testing, fabrication, assembly, repair and manufacturing.

Those interested in attending a session are encouraged to register in advance, CLICK HERE.

For more information about the Aerospace Information sessions, contact Philip Sweeney at sweeneyp@easternflorida.edu or (321) 433-5771.

CLICK HERE FOR BREVARD COUNTY NEWS

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WATCH: Eastern Florida State Will Host Aerospace Program Information Session on February 25 | - SpaceCoastDaily.com

JEC World 2020: SGL Carbon Presents New Solutions For Automotive, Aerospace And Industrial Sector – Textile World Magazine

WIESBADEN, Germany February 7, 2020 Tailor-made large-scale fabrics production at SGL Carbon, ideally suited for highly efficient realization of rather plane components such as battery enclosures and many more.

At this years JEC World, the largest trade fair for composites held from March 3-5, 2020 in Paris, SGL Carbon will focus on the topic of serial production for the automotive, aerospace and industrial sectors. The key is customized solutions with individual component designs combined with tailored materials and production processes ready for large scale production. Under the motto The Solution Provider, the company will present selective innovative component solutions from all three areas in Hall 6, Booth D25.

Thanks to our integrated value chain, from fibers to finished components, our Lightweight and Application Center, and our increasing portfolio of realized series-ready concepts, we offer our customers smart, tailor-made solutions all from a single source. In the future, we will increasingly apply our comprehensive expertise and highly efficient materials from the automotive industry into the aerospace and industrial sectors too, explains Dr. Andreas Wginger, Head of Technology of the Composites Fibers & Materials business unit at SGL Carbon.

In the field of automotiveapplications, SGL Carbon will present at the JEC World composite battery enclosures as a promising new application driven by increasing demand for electric vehicles and the resulting new flexible chassis platforms. The company demonstrates a prototype of a battery enclosure based on carbon fibers. However, hybrid composites with a mixture of glass and carbon fibers are also possible. In early January, SGL Carbon received a major order from a North American automotive manufacturer for the serial production of top and bottom layers for battery enclosures, with production to begin at the end of 2020.

In addition, SGL Carbon showcases for the first time a new leaf spring generation made of glass fiber composite that is used as a longitudinal leaf spring for the rear axle of the Ford Transit. In comparison to conventional leaf springs, the innovative composite leaf spring weighs up to 50 percent less while offering increased security standards and supporting a one-to-one compatibility with standard springs. The Ford leaf spring complements SGL Carbons large-scale production of transversal leaf springs for a great variety of Volvo models and the Mercedes Sprinter. In total, SGL Carbon has delivered more than 1.5 million leaf springs.

In the aerospacesector, SGL Carbon is also expanding its portfolio of realized projects and expertise relying on the trend to use more efficient materials and processes in this industry too.

In the area of primary structure components, the company will present a demo exhibit for the door frame of a passenger airplane realized in collaboration with external partners and based on 50k carbon fiber from the SGL Carbon, which is suitable for serial production. To further speed up its growth in the sector, the company entered into a development cooperation with Solvay at the end of last year to bring fiber materials for primary structural components based on large-tow carbon fibers to the market for the first time. Today, SGL Carbon already offers a wide range of semi-finished products for non-structural aerospace applications such as interior elements.

Additional submarkets in aerospace emerge for composite applications in small aircrafts, helicopters and air taxis. Here, SGL Carbon offers the full range of services, from engineering to finished components. On display at the JEC World is a carbon fiber-based concept for an innovative rotor arm for urban air mobility applications (air taxis) made with an innovative manufacturing technology. At the beginning of the year, the company started serial production of landing gears made of braided carbon fiber material, which will be used around the world in air taxis of an international manufacturer over the course of the next two years.

As an example for industrial applications, SGL Carbon will showcase at the JEC world a crossbeam made of carbon fiber reinforced plastics (CFRP) used in automated Schuler press lines. Besides weight savings of up to 40 percent compared with conventional materials, the crossbeam made of composites features a high rigidity and strength, as well as a low thermal expansion and especially good damping performance, which in turn minimizes machine vibrations. The use of CFRP not only boosts the production efficiency of the system, it also increases lifetime, due to lower wear and tear expectancy.

On all three exhibition days, visitors to the SGL Carbon booth (Hall 6, Booth D25) can experience live how their ideas can be implemented both sustainably and cost-effectively in composites thanks to simulations. Experts from the companys own Lightweight and Application Center demonstrate the path from the concept to virtual prototypes using simulation software, with the result visible either to the entire audience or just individual visitors. To prepare, interested parties can contact the team now at the following link: https://www.sglcarbon.com/anmeldung-jec.

On March 4, 2020, the SGL Carbon stand will host its traditional get-together for customers and friends starting at 4 p.m. no registration necessary.

Posted February 7, 2020

Source: SGL CARBON SE

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JEC World 2020: SGL Carbon Presents New Solutions For Automotive, Aerospace And Industrial Sector - Textile World Magazine

Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market Expected to Grow with a CAGR of 4.2% During the Forecast Period, 2020-2025 – ResearchAndMarkets.com -…

The "Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market Report: Trends, Forecast and Competitive Analysis" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The carbon fiber in aerospace and defense market is expected to reach an estimated $1.56 billion by 2025 with a CAGR of 4.2% from 2020 to 2025.

The future of the carbon fiber in aerospace and defense market looks attractive with opportunities in the commercial aircraft, regional aircraft, general aviation, helicopter, UAV and Others. The major drivers for the carbon fiber in aerospace and defense market are the increasing demand for advanced high-performance lightweight materials and growing end use industries, growth of aircraft with high carbon fiber penetration such B787, A350WXB, and A380.

Emerging trends, which have a direct impact on the dynamics of the industry, include the Increasing demand of continuous fiber reinforced thermoplastics and growing initiatives for recycling of carbon fiber.

North America is expected to remain the largest region during the forecast period. The growth of carbon fiber in North American aerospace & defense market is driven by increasing carbon fiber content and growth of aircraft deliveries of B787 and B777.

Some of the features of Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market Report: Trends, Forecast and Competitive Analysis include:

This report answers following 11 key questions:

Q.1. How big are the opportunities in the carbon fiber market in aerospace and defense industry by aircraft, by precursor type, by tow size, by modulus, and region?

Q.2. Which product segments will grow at a faster pace and why?

Q.3. Which region will grow at a faster pace and why?

Q.4. What are the key factors affecting market dynamics? What are the drivers, challenges, and business risks of carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense market?

Q.5. What are the business risks and competitive threats of carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense market?

Q.6. What are the emerging trends of carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense market and the reasons behind them?

Q.7. What are some of the changing demands of customers for carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense market?

Q.8. What are the new developments of carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense market and which companies are leading these developments?

Q.9. Who are the major players of carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense market? What strategic initiatives are being taken by key companies for business growth?

Q.10. What are some of the competing products for carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense market and how big of a threat do they pose for loss of market share by product substitution?

Q.11. What M&A activity has occurred in the last have years and what has its impact been of carbon fiber in the aerospace and defense industry?

Key Topics Covered:

1. Executive Summary

2. Market Background and Classifications

2.1: Introduction, Background, and Classification

2.2: Supply Chain

2.3: Industry Drivers and Challenges

3. Market Trends and Forecast Analysis from 2014 to 2025

3.1: Macroeconomic Trends and Forecast

3.2: Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market Trends and Forecast

3.3: Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market by Aircraft Type

3.4: Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market by Component

3.5: Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market by Precursor Type

3.6: Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market by TOW Size

3.7: Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market by Modulus

4. Market Trends and Forecast Analysis by Region

4.1: Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market by Region

4.2: North American Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market

4.3: European Carbon Fiber in Aerospace and Defense market

4.4: ROW (Including APAC) Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market

5. Competitor Analysis

5.1: Market Share Analysis

5.2: Operational Integration

5.3: Geographical Reach

5.4: Porter's Five Forces Analysis

6. Growth Opportunities and Strategic Analysis

6.1: Growth Opportunity Analysis

6.2: Emerging Trends of Carbon Fiber in the Aerospace and Defense Market

6.3: Strategic Analysis

7. Company Profiles of Leading Players

7.1: Toray Industries Inc.

7.2: Hexcel Corporation

7.3: Mitsubishi Rayon Corporation Limited

7.4: Cytec Solvay Group

7.5: SGL Carbon Group

7.6: Teijin Limited

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/4gzer8

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200203005444/en/

Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com

For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

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TP Aerospace Expands In Orlando – Aviation Week

TP Aerospace commenced operation at its new MRO facility in Orlando, Florida in late 2019 in a move to add further capacity and better position it to service customers in Central and Latin America as well as the U.S. east coast.

The 60,000 sq. ft hangar is around six miles from Orlando International Airport, was given the greenlight by the city authorities in late 2019. Its primary functions will be in wheel and brake repairs and overhauls, in addition to acting as a location to storeserviceable wheel and brake inventory for trading for aircraft ranging from ATR 42 regional aircraft to Boeing 777 widebodies.

We had a previous location already located in Orlando which was small and outdated, so this new facility is an upgrade from our previous location with more room and modern equipment, says Chris Carter, COO of TP Aerospaces Americas business. Orlando is a strategic location because we can service the entire East Coast as well as the Caribbean and Latin American countries.

The Orlando facility will also serve as Denmark-based TP Aerospaces Americas headquarters. In the U.S., it also operates a repair center in Las Vegas.

Carter says that during the building of the facility, it worked closely along the FAA regulator. Everything from storage racks, to work station layout and final inspection plans were provided in real time as we were going through it, he says. Feedback was taken into consideration along the way, so when it came to final approval there were no surprises.

TP Aerospace operates in 12 locations across the world, 10 of which are MRO workshops. It has embarked on a growth plan, which most recently saw approval for a new facility in Moscow, Russia last month.

The expansion follows the addition of its first UK MRO center close to East Midlands Airport near Derby in April 2019. The facility has volume for 10,000 units of repair and overhaul on aircraft wheels and brakes.

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TP Aerospace Expands In Orlando - Aviation Week

Ball Aerospace To Hire 1000 Workers As Business Continues To Rocket – Aviation Week

Ball Aerospace To Hire 1,000 Workers As Business Continues To Rocket | Aviation Week Network

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Did you know? Aviation Week has won top honors multiple times in the Jesse H. Neal National Business Journalism Awards, the business-to-business media equivalent of the Pulitzer Prizes.

Aerospace and defense leaders in industry and government, including those in Congress, the Pentagon, and their global counterparts, rely on Aerospace Daily & Defense Report for the latest, critical intelligence on programs, budgets and policies in defense, as well as military and civil space.

Credit: NASA

Ball Aerospace expects to hire around 1,000 new employees in 2020, following similar annual increases in recent years, executives said Feb. 6.

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Ball Aerospace To Hire 1000 Workers As Business Continues To Rocket - Aviation Week

Key supplier to aerospace industry has 75% revenue increase – Aerospace Manufacturing

Zoro announced that it has increased its revenue by more than 75% during 2019, delivering more than 360,000 items during last year.

The company offers a one-stop-shop for over 300,000 products in industrial consumables and equipment with free next day delivery throughout the UK mainland on many of its lines.

From launching its trade accounts in summer 2018 to the engineering industry, Zoro has rapidly increased its business customer base.

Marcus Nelson, managing director of Zoro UK, said: If you are an engineer or are working in an industrial SME and need that critical tool the next day, then Zoro will deliver it to you. And its not just tools we have over 300,000 products, from stationery to beverages which the small engineering company needs.

We are really excited to be able to offer such a wide product range to the aerospace supply chain. So, try us out you wont find anyone more competitive on pricing, delivery or expert knowledge.

Almost 50% of Zoros customers are now businesses, rather than sole traders, and the company is using digital innovation to save companies time and money.

During 2019, Zoro launched an automatic replenishment service for the engineering industry. This feature reduces the amount of time spent manually reordering products, minimising human error, which ensures smooth production.

When purchasing through Zoros order subscription service, customers can decide how frequently they would like to receive products by selecting a monthly, weekly or bi-weekly option. Customers can also set a start and end date for their subscription, or schedule a single order on a specific date of their choice.

http://www.zoro.co.uk

Michael Tyrrell

Digital Coordinator

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Key supplier to aerospace industry has 75% revenue increase - Aerospace Manufacturing

Industry Analysis: Should You Buy Raytheon Company (RTN) in Aerospace & Defense? – InvestorsObserver

Raytheon Company (RTN) is near the top in its industry group according to InvestorsObserver. RTN gets an overall rating of 75. That means it scores higher than 75 percent of stocks. Raytheon Company gets a 86 rank in the Aerospace & Defense industry. Aerospace & Defense is number 43 out of 148 industries.

Click Here to get the full Stock Score Report on Raytheon Company (RTN) Stock.

Analyzing stocks can be hard. There are tons of numbers and ratios, and it can be hard to remember what they all mean and what counts as good for a given value. InvestorsObserver ranks stocks on eight different metrics. We percentile rank most of our scores to make it easy for investors to understand. A score of 75 means the stock is more attractive than 75 percent of stocks.

These scores are not only easy to understand, but it is easy to compare stocks to each other. You can find the best stock in an industry, or look for the sector that has the highest average score. The overall score is a combination of technical and fundamental factors that serves as a good starting point when analyzing a stock. Traders and investors with different goals may have different goals and will want to consider other factors than just the headline number before making any investment decisions.

Raytheon Company (RTN) stock has gained 0.78% while the S&P 500 is down -0.54% as of 2:43 PM on Friday, Feb 7. RTN is higher by $1.78 from the previous closing price of $228.53 on volume of 1,576,416 shares. Over the past year the S&P 500 is higher by 22.97% while RTN is higher by 30.80%. RTN earned $11.93 a per share in the over the last 12 months, giving it a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.31.

To see the top 5 stocks in Aerospace & Defense click here.

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Industry Analysis: Should You Buy Raytheon Company (RTN) in Aerospace & Defense? - InvestorsObserver

Privately-owned rocket testing comes to Australia – Aerospace Testing International

Australia is hosting its first international rocket testing program through a partnership with UK company Raptor Aerospace, Queensland-based launch provider Black Sky Aerospace.

The test program at Beyond the Blue Aerospaces sub-orbital launch facility just outside of Goondiwindi in Queenslands outback is planned to start later this month. The Raptor Aerospace teams campaign to test and qualify their own launch vehicles and systems will be Australias first privately operated, international rocket motor test and sounding rocket launch campaign.

Land-based rocket testing, where test engineers want to recover the launch systems for analysis, is less difficult in the remote parts of Australia than in the UK because of the lower population density and less busy airspace. Beyond the Blue Aerospace is also able to provide a large launch and recovery area.

The project follows the UK Space Agency and Australian Space Agency recent announcement of a partnership designed to open up new trade opportunities.

Ben Jarvis, CEO of Raptor Aerospace, said, Whilst the development of the new space-ports in the UK will ultimately allow some of our commercial activity to occur on home soil, many customer payloads and test flights, where recovery of sensitive electronics after flight is critical, will need a land range to fly from.

Black Sky Aerospace have offered us access to a suitable inland site and invaluable expertise that we hope will lead to an ongoing commercial collaboration that forwards space access in both countries.

Blake Nikolic, CEO and founder of Black Sky Aerospace, said, Australia is playing an increasing role in the worlds space ambitions and we are playing a significant role in enabling access to an efficient, cost-effective service

This campaign with Raptor Aerospace will drive additional export opportunities of Black Sky Aerospaces technology, whilst solidifying Australias position as the place to conduct research and testing, before undertaking expensive orbital launches, continued Nikolic.

Raptor Aerospace provides practical training, simulation and small launch vehicles to the space industry and are developing a launch service for small payloads it intends to offer next year. Black Sky Aerospace is an aerospace manufacturer and launch provider based in Australia. Beyond the Blue Aerospace is a not-for-profit organization created to facilitate test rocket launches.

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Privately-owned rocket testing comes to Australia - Aerospace Testing International

Coronavirus Impacts Aerospace Manufacturing In China – Aviation Week

Coronavirus Impacts Aerospace Manufacturing In China | Aviation Week Network

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Credit: Airbus

FRANKFURTThe coronavirus outbreak is beginning to affect aerospace manufacturing with several Western manufacturers temporarily closing down facilities in China.

Most importantly, Airbus decided to extend the Chinese New Year holidays for workers in its Tianjin plant and therefore has stopped final assembly of A320 family aircraft at the site. Tianjin is currently producing six aircraft per month, 10% of Airbus global monthly single-aisle production rate of 60.

Airbus China is observing Chinese government requirements for staff to work from home and is facilitating with IT equipment so employees from all locations, including Tianjin, do not need to travel to work where possible, the company said in a statement. With regards to the business impact, China domestic and worldwide travel restrictions are posing some logistical challenges. The Tianjin Final Assembly Line facility is currently closed. Airbus is constantly evaluating the situation and monitoring any potential knock on effects to production and deliveries and will try to mitigate via alternative plans where necessary.

The disruption could not come at a worse time for Airbus as it is still far from having recovered from production delays incurred at its main single-aisle site in Hamburg, Germany. Wizz Air CEO Jzsef Vradi told Aviation Daily that its A321neos are routinely arriving six months behind schedule as a result, severely impacting the airlines network planning. Airbus CEO Guillaume Faury said in late 2019 that it will take Airbus into 2021 to get back onto a reliable schedule.

Airbus plans to increase output at its Mobile, Alabama assembly line to seven per month in 2021 and global production to 63 at the same time.

Safran Group is also affected. The company has extended vacations for its 2,500 workers in China until the beginning of next week, for now. Boeing has a 737-completion center in Zhoushan, but that is already impacted by the MAX production halt.

Based in Frankfurt, Germany, Jens leads Aviation Weeks global commercial coverage. He covers program updates and developments at Airbus, and as a frequent long-haul traveler, he often writes in-depth airline profiles worldwide.

As a subscriber to one of Aviation Week Networks market briefings, your searches only provide you with access to articles from within that product.

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As a subscriber to one of Aviation Week Networks market briefings, your searches only provide you with access to articles from within that product.

To find out about obtaining additional data including the most comprehensive details on organizations, fleets, personnel and programs click here or call +1.561.279.4661.

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Coronavirus Impacts Aerospace Manufacturing In China - Aviation Week

We Talk Giant V-Shaped Airships, Space, And Phoenix Lights With JP Aerospace’s Founder – The Drive

Unfortunately, a DoD document from 2012 states that the test flights of the NSMV that JP Aerospace built for the Air Force Space Battlelab were canceled due to issues with the craft's propulsion system and failed launches. In Floating to Space, John Powell writes that the 175-foot Ascender built for the NSMV project was destroyed "during a high wind accident while being prepared for its first flight." The Air Force terminated the program in 2005.

While lighter-than-air craft dont get the attention that traditional high-performance aircraft do, they nonetheless remain a vital subject of aerospace research within the Department of Defense, according to a 2012 report prepared by the Rapid Reaction Technology Office, part of the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering. The report discussed airship technologies that the Department of Defense's laboratories and contractors were developing or had developed at the time that enable viable lighter-than-air vehicles to contribute to our short, mid, and long term strategy for national security and defense and offered advanced intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and communications capabilities through integrated sensor payloads and on-board processing for real-time intelligence and post-mission forensics.

The report also noted that advances and investment in aerostat and airship technology are also being made in the private sector and that the DoD is monitoring this progress and will continue to look for opportunities to advance our objectives through commercially available technology. In addition to JP Aerospace, the report discussed recent airship platforms designed and constructed by the U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, the Defense Research Projects Agency (DARPA), NASA, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and other aerospace contractors.

A 2013 report that the Rapid Reaction Technology Office prepared added that "as the U.S. engaged in conflicts where airspace was less contested, such as Iraq and Afghanistan, interest increased in the development and use of LTA [lighter than air] vehicles for multiple purposes." Forward operating bases and small tactical units used tethered aerostats for persistent intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom, demonstrating the fact that airships and aerostats still have a use on the battlefield, especially low altitude ones. America's potential foes have followed suit in recent years.

While the Department of Defense still employs lighter-than-air vehicles primarily for ISR missions, many DoD laboratories are working towards developing hybrid airships for logistic airlift missions. As the armed forces continue their pivot towards space, companies like JP Aerospace that are willing to explore the possibilities of lighter-than-air spaceflight and find new paradigms will be increasingly important.

There is also great potential for replacing or augmenting communications satellite networks with LTA craft. This could be a key area of research and development for the DoD as space becomes increasingly contested and new issues arise such as orbital pollution. There is already precedent in the commercial sector for such LTA-based communication networks, such as the Loon project launched by Google's parent company Alphabet, Inc. Loon uses high-altitude balloons flying up to 11 miles up in the stratosphere to provide wireless broadband internet to those on the surface below.

With all this in mind, lighter-than-air flight is undergoing something of a modern renaissance, but the leap from more terrestrial uses to taking payloads into space certainly signifies the apex of imagination when it comes to what is the oldest form of non-organic flight. We can only hope that JP Aerospace continues to push the boundaries of airship-to-orbit technology so that maybe one day we all may be able to float to orbital space stations aboard massive V-shaped airships.

Contact the editor: Tyler@thedrive.com

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We Talk Giant V-Shaped Airships, Space, And Phoenix Lights With JP Aerospace's Founder - The Drive

When ballistic protection is a must – Aerospace Manufacturing

Permali Gloucester is a world leader in the manufacture of composite materials for the aerospace and defence markets, Ian Parker hears more about the companys ballistic protection solutions.

Military helicopters are often tasked to go where no other military vehicle could venture. They are excellent for putting personnel and equipment right into the action and for getting them out again. But they are vulnerable to attack by weapons including small arms. Complete protection is impossible, but it is possible to go some way towards it with ballistic protection material on some parts of the aircraft.

In the Vietnam war, the US lost about 5,000 helicopters to small-arms fire. This is defined as munitions containing projectiles that are 0.5 inches or less in calibre and no longer than approximately 4 inches. They are fired from various sizes of weapons, such as pistols, carbines, rifles, automatic rifles, shotguns, and machine guns.

Permalis water jet cutting in action

For example, last June a French Aerospatiale SA341 Gazelle observation and light attack helicopter crashed during operations in North Africa. The French Army Light Aviation (Aviation Lgre de LArme de Terre: ALAT) helicopter was reportedly hit by small-arms fire while flying near the border of Mali and Niger on Operation Barkhane. All three personnel onboard were immediately rescued.

Following a controlled crash landing, the two pilots were strapped to the landing gear of an Airbus Tiger attack helicopter. The third person, a special forces soldier, destroyed the damaged Gazelle before being rescued in another helicopter. France has been engaged in a counter-terrorism campaign throughout the Sahel-Sahara region of northern Africa since 2012, with helicopters supporting the core of combat and air mobility operations.

Helicopters are expensive and complex and their vulnerability has led to controversy in recent years. The downing of them with rounds less than half an inch in diameter does not sit well with the military top brass, the bill payers or the people on board. These days, ballistic protection is a must on military rotorcraft.

Making material gains

The UKs Permali is an expert in this and recently won a 2 million contract to supply ballistic protection to the Royal Navys Commando Merlin Mk4 helicopters. The contract is with Leonardo, which builds the rotorcraft, and covers 12 ship sets as well as some spares. It will keep Permali busy till the end of March and result in some six new jobs. So, what is the protection made from and how is it produced?

The core functional material is an ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene composite effectively polyethylene fibres arranged in multiple layers and cross-plied, begins company special projects director, Nick Baird. They are processed at high pressure and temperature using a multi-daylight platen press. This consolidates the material into a panel. The material is Honeywell Spectra Shield, although Permali also uses the competing DSM Dyneema product for other projects.

Permali then bonds on GRP skins to provide impact and wear resistance. The company uses a water jet cutter to create the various panel sizes and shapes. They are nested together on the pressed panels so that material utilisation is as high as possible. Nesting software is used to get the most efficient arrangement. The material is expensive, so waste is kept to a minimum. The edges are sealed and various inserts are added for attachment points to the aircraft.

Up to this point, manufacturing is machine intensive, but then it becomes more labour intensive with the finishing operations sealing the edges, boding in inserts, painting, etc.

Nick Baird, special projects director at Permali, holding a panel for a Merlin Mk4

Permali has supplied previous generations of the Merlin with similar kits as well as RAF Pumas and Chinooks. The company has also supplied Boeing for some of its export customers of the Chinook.

The protection is modular, allowing different role fits according to mission. It can add up to around 450kg to the weight of the aircraft, but Permali is not allowed to say what calibre of round the panels will stop. Thats classified. The panels are about a third of the weight of steel ones for the same level of protection.

The fibres have very high tensile strength and the faster they are stretched, the stronger they get. When the round hits, the panel deforms and absorbs the energy.

We are delighted to continue our close relationship with Leonardo Helicopters, and are honoured to be entrusted with the protection of British military personnel. The majority of the UKs Joint Helicopter Command aircraft rely on Permalis composite ballistic protection expertise, including the Chinook, Puma and Merlin fleets.

The strongest link

Ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene is a type of polyolefin. It is made up of extremely long chains of polyethylene, which all align in the same direction. It derives its strength largely from the length of each individual molecule (chain).

The bonds between the molecules are relatively weak for each atom of overlap between the molecules, but because the molecules are very long, large overlaps can exist, giving the ability to carry larger shear forces from molecule to molecule. Each chain is bonded to the others with so many Van der Waals bonds that the whole of the inter-molecular strength is high. In this way, large tensile loads are not limited as much by the comparative weakness of each Van der Waals bond.

When formed into fibres, the polymer chains can attain a parallel orientation greater than 95% and a level of crystallinity from 39% to 75%. In contrast, Kevlar derives its strength from strong bonding between relatively short molecules.

The need for ballistic protection on military helicopters is clear, but it may be increasingly applicable to civil and para-public helicopters in areas where guns are numerous. The panels are positioned mainly to protect the occupants so flooring and doors are frequently involved, but other vital systems on the rotorcraft may also be protected as a round through a fuel line or electrical system can lead to an aircraft being lost.

Helicopters are often on the front line and are very much in harms way aircraft. Ballistic protection is one of several techniques for aiding their survival.

http://www.permali.co.uk

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When ballistic protection is a must - Aerospace Manufacturing

Advanced Materials Push the Envelope in Aerospace Assembly – Assembly Magazine

Materials are important in every industry. But, theyre critical to aerospace manufacturers. If companies select the wrong material for a particular application, it can have catastrophic consequences.

Commercial and military aircraft are subjected to a wide variety of harsh conditions, such as atmospheric forces, temperature extremes and ultraviolet rays. Materials become even more complex and challenging when spacecraft are involved.

Aerospace engineers face many unique challenges. For instance, planes experience temperature changes between 20 and -40 C every time they take off and land, with huge differences in pressure and humidity. Materials need to withstand water condensing and freezing inside fuselages. They also need to endure lightning strikes and electromagnetic interferences.

A century ago, first-generation aerospace engineers were busy developing metal airframes and wings to replace flimsy wood fuselages and fabric-covered wings. As aircraft climbed higher and faster, aluminum eventually became the go-to material.

Today, aluminum is still widely used in aerospace applications, but advanced carbon-fiber composites and superalloys now captivate the attention of engineers scrambling to increase efficiency, optimize performance and reduce weight.

Replacing heavier materials is easier said than done. It requires the development of viable alternatives with lower densities and higher strengths. Many aerospace engineers are scrambling to find new production processes and assembly techniques to cost-effectively join dissimilar materials.

Materials use in the aerospace industry is extremely complex, because manufacturers must often support legacy programs at the same time that they are developing new aircraft, says George Nick Bullen, technical fellow at Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems.

For instance, in the defense sector, companies are typically engaged in aircraft modifications and updates that rely on traditional materials, explains Bullen. At the same time, manufacturers are constantly working on new programs that demand cutting-edge products.

Once materials are qualified, you generally dont change, claims Bullen. Therefore, older military aircraft, such as the F-18, use a mix of aluminum, composites and titanium. But, on the latest aircraft designs, composites are increasingly the dominant material. This recent trend has enabled engineers to produce airframes without the need for numerous fasteners, which is a big cost contributor because of issues related to drilling, filling and countersinking holes.

When fasteners are used to join traditional materials, there are more holes to drill and fill. By bonding a composite structure together, aerospace engineers eliminate those headaches.

Fasteners create numerous issues relating to tolerance and destacking, Bullen points out. They also contribute to lost-time injuries and defects.

However, composites have limits, warns Bullen. For instance, all hot spots, such as engine-fuselage interfaces or engine exhaust points, must be metal. Wing attach points also still contain a lot of metal, due to the high levels of stress that occur there.

As the aerospace industry continues to develop new types of aircraft ranging from hypersonic missiles to battery-powered urban air mobility vehicles, lightweight materials will ultimately determine their success or failure.

Flight systems are becoming more and more high-speed, even going into hypersonic systems, which are five times the speed of sound, says Richard Liang, director of the High-Performance Materials Institute at Florida State University. When you have speeds that high, theres more heat on a surface. Therefore, we need a much better thermal protection system.

The world of aerospace increasingly relies on carbon-fiber reinforced polymer composites to build the structures of satellites, rockets and jet aircraft, explains Liang. But, the life of those materials is limited by how they handle heat.

Liang and his colleagues have been experimenting with using carbon nanotubes to develop a new type of heat shield that protects hypersonic aircraft.

Existing heat shields are often very thick compared to the base they protect, Liang points out. [Our new design] lets engineers build a very thin shield, like a sort of skin that protects the aircraft and helps support its structure.

Integrating graphene and related materials into fiber-reinforced composites has great potential to improve weight and strength, and [it can] help overcome bottlenecks limiting the application of these [materials] in planes, claims Vincenzo Palermo, vice director of the Graphene Flagship, a European organization that is working with manufacturers such as Airbus.

Graphene-integrated composites are constructed by introducing thin graphene sheets, a few billionths of a meter thick, into hierarchical fiber composites as a nanoadditive that improves the materials mechanical properties.

Graphenes high aspect ratio, high flexibility and mechanical strength enable it to enhance the strength of weak points in these composites, such as at the interface between two different components, explains Palermo. Its tunable surface chemistry also means that interactions with the carbon fiber and polymer matrix can be adjusted as needed.

The fiber, polymer matrix and graphene layers all work together to distribute mechanical stress, resulting in a material with improved strength.

Whether the goal is to achieve lower weight, increase fatigue life or enable higher heat resistance, material advancements are critical to increasing aircraft performance, says Michael Eff, applications engineer at EWI. However, new materials come with a wealth of new challenges.

According to Eff, the biggest development in aerospace materials during the last five years has been the growing use of powder-based alloys and the joining of carbon-fiber composites to metals such as titanium.

Today, Eff says more aerospace manufacturers are looking at ceramic matrix composites (CMCs) and metal matrix composites (MMCs). CMCs offer elevated temperature options over conventional alloys, he explains. MMCs offer a weight savings without sacrificing performance.

CMCs are ideal for jet engine applications. They are made of coated ceramic fibers surrounded by a ceramic matrix. They are tough, lightweight and capable of withstanding temperatures 300 to 400 F hotter than metal alloys can endure.

A critical issue for wider use of CMC is the development of cheap, user-friendly joining methods to assemble large components into more complex structures, says Alber Sadek, technology lead for materials engineering at EWI. [That requires] joint properties comparable to base materials, including good mechanical strength, oxidation and corrosion resistance, good thermal shock resistance and leak-tight joints.

In many elevated temperature applications using CMC, there is a requirement to join them to other materials, such as metals, adds Sadek. Brazing is a highly effective joining technique for many ceramic-metal joint systems. However, the differences in coefficients of thermal expansion between CMC and metal require specialized approaches to accommodate the mechanical stresses introduced by joining.

In addition to brazing, Sadek says other CMC joining methods include diffusion bonding, reaction forming, microwave joining, electron beam joining and selective area laser deposition.

The mismatch in material properties and metallurgical incompatibility makes joining CMCs and MMCs difficult, warns Eff. Carbon fibers are difficult to join to any material, as there isnt much experience with the materials. Joining MMCs to traditional aluminum alloys is difficult, because fusion techniques dont provide the desired mechanical properties.

Interfaces have always been the Achilles heel for any system of materials or composite concepts, adds Timothy Bunning, Ph.D., chief scientist in the materials and manufacturing directorate at the Air Force Research Laboratory. Novel [manufacturing and design] tools are being explored.

[Were also exploring] nondestructive evaluation tools to certify structural performance in dissimilar materials, such as polymer matrix, ceramic matrix and metal-ceramic composites, says Bunning. The convergence of automation, big data and high efficiency computational tools is allowing for the exploration of systems with many elements via a smart, efficient, calculated manner vs. the historical empirical test methodology.

The method of materials discovery and design is becoming digital, and will exponentially accelerate as diverse experimental techniques, modeling approaches and databases are integrated into a future materials cloud, predicts Bunning.

During the past two decades, carbon-fiber composite has transformed aerospace manufacturing. The lightweight material is now found in a wide variety of applications, including fuselages, wings, bulkheads, overhead storage bins and other components.

Composites are here to stay, claims Bullen. I dont see any new materials emerging during the next 15 to 20 years. In fact, were just beginning to realize the benefit of fibers.

For instance, aerospace engineers have been learning how to orient fibers to achieve flexible control surfaces that could eventually replace traditional wing flaps, explains Bullen. Instead of mechanical, linear-activated control surfaces, fiber is enabling them to experiment with wing warping.

However, composites still present many unique challenges to aerospace engineers.

We can age-test aluminum and titanium, but theres no way to age-test composites, which tend to have a rapid failure rate, Bullen points out. And, although adhesive bonding is widely used to join composites, engineers still default to fasteners when assembling dissimilar materials.

In addition, bonded wings cannot handle the atmospheric and temperature extremes found at high altitudes, says Bullen. Aerospace engineers are always looking for composites that can withstand higher temperatures. Material properties have been improving, but not by leaps and bounds.

Aerospace manufacturers also face many pesky issues when creating molds to make components.

When you lay up a composite part, thickness can vary by 5 percent, laments Bullen. That creates big challenges when you try to mate airflow surfaces that dont have gaps or steps. In fact, thats the big benefit of using aluminum; you always get smooth surfaces and tolerances.

But, there have been some recent breakthroughs in the variability of composite materials that hold promise, says Bullen. For instance, engineers at Vanderbilt University are working on some interesting ways to maintain consistency.

Another recent innovation that is improving composite manufacturing is Ascent Aerospaces HyVarC (Hybrid InVar and Composite mold) process. Its a cost-effective, light weight, short lead time process for producing layup tooling for prototype and development applications.

HyVarC combines a thin Invar backup structure and facesheet with a bonded, high-temperature composite working surface, says Marisa Bennett, marketing manager at Ascent Aerospace. The resulting tool is 50 percent lighter with a 20 percent shorter lead-time than a traditional Invar layup mold, while maintaining the same superior vacuum integrity and dimensional precision.

Elements of HyVarC tools lend themselves to reduced cost and lead-time, as well as increased tool flexibility, claims Bennett. Cost and lead-time are always key drivers in the tooling market, but one of the biggest customer impacts that weve seen is flexibility and reconfigurability.

A major factor in aircraft development cycles is the tooling lead-time and the impact of surface changes on that tooling, explains Bennett. For some programs, ordering an entirely new tool is either too expensive or takes too much time, which can hamper the process in many ways.

At half the thickness of a traditional mold, the thin Invar backup structure takes less time to weld and manufacture. It serves as both the master mold and the deliverable mold, eliminating the time and cost of creating a second composite backup structure. Lead times can be reduced by at least 20 percent compared to an all-Invar or all-composite tool.

The machined composite working surface offers better dimensional accuracy than net-mold composite tooling, while the Invar structure provides vacuum integrity and durability, adds Bennett. A part fabricated on a HyVarC mold is bagged to the Invar face sheet, which provides vacuum reliability that is independent of the composite surface and does not degrade with age or thermal cycling.

We have seen a steady increase in the use of HyVarC tooling by our customer base, with over 40 tools built and delivered since this product hit the market, says Bennett. Our shop has fabricated a variety of shapes and sizes, from small, complex fairings and access panels to large wing skins and fuselage components.

HyVarC tools are now capable of having any feature of a full production tooling system, claims Bennett. That includes edge bars, drilling features and an integral vacuum to simplify part manufacture.

More importantly, weve developed a bismaleimide composite working surface that is ideal for higher temperature (425 F or higher) operations, notes Bennett. This surface is more robust than the standard epoxy option and brings the HyVarC solution to production programs, as well as development ones.

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Advanced Materials Push the Envelope in Aerospace Assembly - Assembly Magazine

Krewson vetoes bill that said McKee NorthSide project making "satisfactory progress" – STLtoday.com

The Tucker Boulevard entrance to St. Louis City Hall.

ST. LOUIS Mayor Lyda Krewson wants a rewrite of a city report that listed developer Paul McKees massive north St. Louis redevelopment plan as among those making satisfactory progress.

She does not believe that accurately reflects the circumstances, the mayors chief of staff, Steve Conway, said. She just wants it accurately portrayed.

Krewson vetoed a measure passed last month by the Board of Aldermen that reported on 21 projects that over the years had gotten tax-increment financing, or TIF, incentives from the city.

Krewsons administration in 2018 sought to cancel the citys 2009 development agreement with NorthSide Regeneration, citing a lack of progress and the developers use of a now-lapsed state tax credit program.

The city move sparked lawsuits pitting McKees largest creditor a Washington, Missouri, bank against the city.

Asked whether the administration was concerned that approval of a satisfactory designation could be cited in the litigation, Conway responded: That would probably be something we would think about.

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Krewson vetoes bill that said McKee NorthSide project making "satisfactory progress" - STLtoday.com

The US military has made progress in ending racial discrimination. The rest of our country must as well. – Brookings Institution

The United States has a longstanding legacy of systematic racism that dates back centuries. This pervasive system has impacted our public policy, laws, and interactions with the communities around us. My time in the military has allowed me to see firsthand how the barrier of racial discrimination can be brought down within institutions. I hope to see the same change across the United States.

Brookings has taken powerful stances on race, equality, and civil rights, and will continue to do so in the present and the future. We are in the position to produce impactful scholarship that creates a difference in the issues of race and discrimination.

Brookings is a nonpartisan institution, but it is not values-neutral.

Like Trumans military desegregation order, leadership against racism starts at the top

A note from Brookings President John R. Allen on the release of our workforce demographic data

Not just a typographical change: Why Brookings is capitalizing Black

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The US military has made progress in ending racial discrimination. The rest of our country must as well. - Brookings Institution

Citizens hear update on progress of $1.2 billion Silver Line project – Community Impact Newspaper

Vice President of Capital Construction John Rhone spoke about the Silver Line project at the Feb. 6 meeting. (Makenzie Plusnick/Community Impact)

The 26-mile passenger rail will span from Shiloh Road in Plano to the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Construction of the line, which will run through seven cities, is expected to be complete by December 2022. In Richardson, the Silver Line will stop at a new station at UT Dallas and at the existing CityLine/Bush station.

In the first quarter of this year, crews are working to relocate wet and dry utilities and construct retainer walls, DART Public Relations and Communication Officer Marvin Jackson said.

It is industry practice to begin work on a project this size while design is still underway, according to DART spokesperson Gordon Shattles. The final design for the Silver Line is expected to be delivered during the third quarter of 2021.

Vice President of Capital Construction John Rhone spoke about the new self-propelled diesel multiple-unit vehicles that would be used on the Silver Line. The vehicles will be more environmentally and community friendly, he said.

We considered different types of diesel vehicles; we considered electric vehicles similar to light rail, and this is the vehicle that we chose, Rhone said.

The trains will have 230 seats as well as room for 250 standing passengers. They will also have automatic passenger counters and closed-circuit television systems, Rhone said.

DART police will be present on every train and strategically stationed at different stations along the line, Rhone said.

The transit agency is attempting to mitigate sound emitted by trains through the use of heating, ventilation and air conditioning closures, which Rhode said is one of the noisier components of existing DART vehicles. New wheel skirts should also reduce noise, he added.

Residential neighborhoods will be designated as quiet zones, or areas where trains will not activate their horns. However, Rhone said horns will be required during the testing phase.

A 26-mile hike-and-bike trail along the rail is at 10% design completion, Rhone said. DART is still in negotiations with Archer Western Herzog, the company contracted to design and build the trail, Rhone said. The project is funded through an interlocal agreement with the North Central Texas Council of Governments.

I really can't get into a lot of details outside of that because we are in negotiations as far as pricing, but know that we are working very hard to deliver this trail, Rhone said.

For dates of upcoming Silver Line community meetings, visit this link.

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Citizens hear update on progress of $1.2 billion Silver Line project - Community Impact Newspaper

Tree trimmers are making progress in ash borer battle – KELOLAND.com

SIOUX FALLS, SD (KELO) The buzz of chainsaws echoes through Sioux Falls neighborhoods this winter as crews try to keep ahead of the emerald ash borer. Tree service companies have been busy cutting down ash trees to prevent the spread of the troublesome bug.

Carving through ash trees in the biting cold.

It slows the hydraulics down a bit, but not too bad, Cody Pomerenke of Midwest Tree Service said.

The tall timber takes a tumble in this southwest Sioux Falls neighborhood.

Usually, we can just flop them right down onto the street and then we chunk them up, Pomerenke said

Tree trimmers are taking advantage of this seasonal window of opportunity to remove hundreds of ash trees in the city. The emerald ash borer is dormant at this time of year, so theres no risk of them moving from tree to tree once their winter home is cut down.

It will spread on its own, we dont want to give it any help, City of Sioux Falls Park Operation Manager Kelby Mieras said.

The spread of the emerald ash borer is being described as very slow. City officials credit that to prompt tree removal and homeowners treating their ash trees. The mild winter has helped, too.

While todays not stellar weather to be removing trees, its a whole lot better to work in and the crews and the contractors are making great progress, Mieras said.

Tree trimmers have until Memorial Day to finish their work for the year. After that, the ash borers become active again and the chainsaws will be idled through the summer.

The Citys goal is removing 2,100 trees before summer. Right now, theyre nearly a third of the way there, with some 600 trees cut down.

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Tree trimmers are making progress in ash borer battle - KELOLAND.com

Mason City Winnebago River work improves transit and safety, still in progress – Mason City Globe Gazette

OSAGE | Local anglers had an opportunity to hear about the mystery fish" -- also known more commonly as the muskie, from Levi Nettleton, recent naturalist intern with Mitchell County Conservation.

Nettleton, who will be a senior science education major at the University of Northern Iowa this fall, told attendees muskies are known as the mystery fish because of their unpredictability.

Muskies are very unpredictable, he said. You can find them in waters that are 6 inches to a 100 feet deep. They look like a pike, but they have six teeth instead of five teeth like northern, and northern are spotted.

Nettleton said a female Muskie can lay up to 265,000 eggs, but their survival rate is very low. They spawn best in water temps of 55 to 65 degrees, laying their eggs randomly in shallow waters where predators can consume the eggs.

Many fishermen believe the muskie is a major consumer of other game fish such as bass and walleye, but they are apt to eat softer fish like bullheads and minnows, Nettleton said, noting they also eat insects, crayfish, small mammals and waterfowl.

"Many believe they are aggressive, but that isnt true, unless they are feeding," he said. "They are complicated for naturalists to study.

Nettleton said Muskies habitats also vary, meaning they can be found in weeds like tobacco cabbage or 30 feet deep in open water.He said fisherman can find them in different places throughout the year.

Nettleton shared his enthusiasm for catching the large game fish, something he started four years ago.

Once you do it, it can become an addiction," he said. "There's a lot of skill in muskie fishing, and sometimes, muskies are called the fish of a 100,000 casts.

Nettletons study has rewarded him well, as he caught and released 36 muskies last year and 12 so far this year.

Fishermen seeking muskies typically use 7- to 10-foot rods, according to Nettleton. He uses a 300- to 400-foot reel with 22 pounds of drag, with 50-100 braid line and steel or fluorocarbon leaders.

He also carries needle-nosed pliers longer than 8 inches and a rubberized net, so he doesn't harm the Muskie.

He gave some additional pointers:

Leave the catch in the water and support and release it when the fish is calm.

Cut the hook if the fish has been deep-hooked.

Don't fish over 80 degrees.

If trolling, start at 2 mph, increasing to 4 mph.

Do figure-eights to attract muskies.

Nettleton, who whose biggest catch was 53 inches long, said there are Muskies in the Cedar, Iowa, Shell Rock, and Winnebago rivers, as well as in Clear Lake.

The largest populations of muskies are in Minnesota, according to Nettleton, where the largest caught was 56 inches long and weighed 54 pounds.

North Iowa anglers have landed some big fish over the years, reeling in massive walleyes, northern pike, catfish and muskies. This gallery con

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Mason City Winnebago River work improves transit and safety, still in progress - Mason City Globe Gazette

Twitter Still Has Its Issues but There Has Been Some Progress Lately – TheStreet

When you own a one-of-a-kind communications platform that politicians, celebrities, media outlets, brands and governments all use to connect with audiences, you only need to run yourself so well to be financially successful.

Thats arguably one takeaway from Twitter's(TWTR) - Get ReportQ4 report, which led its stock to rise 15% in Thursday trading. Three months after missing its consensus Q3 revenue estimate by $50 million, the company topped its Q4 revenue consensus by $15 million (EPS missed due to a pickup in spending).

Annual revenue growth accelerated to 11% from 9%, and ad revenue growth improved to 12% from 8%. International ad revenue rose a paltry 3% as Twitter continues addressing issues related to mobile app install ad sales in Asia, but U.S. ad sales rose 20% with the help of strong video ad growth.

Twitter also saw its monetizable daily active users (mDAUs - users who are logged into Twitter and able to see ads) rise 21% annually to 152 million, topping consensus by 4 million. mDAUs in the U.S., which still accounts for close to 60% of Twitters revenue, rose by 4 million to 31 million.

Relative to peers, a lot of Twitters numbers still dont look that impressive. Whereas Twitters revenue rose 11% in Q4 to $1.01 billion, Facebook(FB) - Get Reportsaw its revenue grow 25% to $21.08 billion. Mark Zuckerbergs firm also reported having 1.66 billion DAUs for Facebook proper and Messenger (up 9%), of which 190 million were in the U.S. and Canada.

Snaps(SNAP) - Get ReportQ4 revenue ($561 million) remained much lower than Twitters in spite of 44% growth. But the company did report its DAUs grew 17% in Q4 to 218 million. North American DAUs, which include Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, totaled 86 million.

Ive often been critical of Twitter over the years from a product standpoint, and a lot of the things that Ive criticized still dont by any means look fixed. These issues run the gamut from ugly user behavior (and the ways that Twitters mechanics can incentivize such behavior), to the challenges that users can face when it comes to finding accounts and content that might interest them, to the fact that regular Twitter users can feel ignored in a way that regular Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat users usually dont.

But Twitter has admittedly made some meaningful improvements over the last couple of years. Notable changes for the better include the 280-character limit, feed algorithm and notification improvements, a revamped private messaging experience and (though more work still needs to be done here) larger attempts to improve the quality of discourse on the platform.

And (in spite of recent stumbles) there have been meaningful improvements on the advertising side as well, with Twitter improving its targeting and measurement abilities and stepping up investments in video ad products and self-serve ad solutions.

When one combines such service and advertising improvements with the fact that Twitter still gives its users a unique ability to both see what high-profile public figures are saying and put their fingers on the pulse of whats happening in the world at a particular moment, you have a recipe for growing revenue and user bases that remain a small fraction of Facebook and Instagrams. Even if a lot of things could still be done better.

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Twitter Still Has Its Issues but There Has Been Some Progress Lately - TheStreet

Buttigieg Touts Progress Connecting With Black Fortune 500 Executives – The Onion

SOUTH BEND, INAddressing concerns over his campaigns marked lack of inclusion, Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg touted significant progress he made Friday connecting with black Fortune 500 executives. Ive heard your concerns, and over the past few weeks, Ive made great efforts to not just talk to but listen to prominent members of the African American consulting community, said the former South Bend mayor, emphasizing that he had hosted several round tables across the country where he had personal, one-on-one conversations with black VPs of weapons manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, and Silicon Valley tech giants. While I might not have lived the same experiences, I hope that my campaign will feel inclusive to all executives of color, in all management levels, regardless of whether they attended Harvard or Yale. As someone who worked at McKinsey myself, I know firsthand that we cant win the presidency without them. At press time, Buttigieg unveiled a new plan to diversify his campaign staff by hiring a single black finance executive to the Pete 2020 board.

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Buttigieg Touts Progress Connecting With Black Fortune 500 Executives - The Onion

Charging ahead on electric vehicles: 2020 EV100 Progress and Insights Report – The Climate Group

With transport now accounting for a quarter of global emissions, businesses are increasingly seizing the opportunity to lead on tackling the climate crisis by switching their vehicle fleets to electric.

Charging ahead on electric fleets: Will automakers keep pace with corporate demand? is the 2020 EV100 Progress and Insights Annual Report from The Climate Group, tracking the progress of more than 60 global companies as they transition to electric mobility.

It shows that corporate and leasing fleet commitments will see the roll-out of more than 2.5 million zero-emission vehicles by 2030 saving 42 million metric tons CO2e, the annual emissions of 11 coal power plants. Companies are making good progress toward their goals and have already rolled out more than 80,000 EVs and nearly 10,000 charge points for employees and customers.

However, the report also shows that a lack of EV supply is the biggest barrier to faster progress for 79% of EV100 members up by a third from last year.

As more and more companies join EV100 and commit to go electric by 2030, automakers must turbo charge EV supply to meet the growing demand and governments must deliver supportive policies.

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Charging ahead on electric vehicles: 2020 EV100 Progress and Insights Report - The Climate Group