Boeing delivered the fourth and final 737 Airborne Early Warning and Control aircraft to the South Korean air force under the Peace Eye program, announced the company on Oct. 31. The aircraft arrived at Gimhae Air Base, the main operating location for the Peace Eye fleet, on Oct. 24, according to the company’s release. This delivery came roughly 13 months after Boeing supplied the first 737 AEW&C aircraft in September 2011. Rick Heerdt, Boeing’s vice president of airborne surveillance, command, and control, credited the close partnership with the company’s South Korean industrial teammates for making the final aircraft’s delivery possible “five weeks ahead of schedule.” While Boeing converted the first Peace Eye 737 airframe to the AEW&C configuration in the United States, its industrial partner Korea Aerospace Industries modified the three other aircraft at its facility in Sacheon, according to the release.
The Space Force is switching up rockets for its next GPS mission—and trying to go faster than ever in preparing the satellite for launch. The goal is to take the satellite bus from storage to orbit in around three months, well ahead of the 24 months it can sometimes take the…