NASA Selects Prime Contractor for Ares I Rocket Avionics

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Dec. 12, 2007

Melissa Mathews/Stephanie Schierholz
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1272/4997
melissa.mathews-1@xxxxxxxx, stephanie.schierholz@xxxxxxxx

Kim Newton
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034 
kimberly.d.newton@xxxxxxxx

CONTRACT RELEASE: C07-060

NASA SELECTS PRIME CONTRACTOR FOR ARES I ROCKET AVIONICS

WASHINGTON - NASA has selected The Boeing Company of Huntsville, Ala., 
as the prime contractor to produce, deliver and install avionics 
systems for the Ares I rocket that will launch the Orion crew 
exploration vehicle into orbit. The selection is the final major 
contract award for Ares I. The award resulted from a full and open 
competition.

The Ares I launch vehicle is a key component of the Constellation 
Program, which will send humans to the moon by 2020 to set up a lunar 
outpost. Boeing will support the NASA design team leading the 
development of the Ares I avionics components. The company also will 
develop and acquire avionics hardware for the rocket and assemble, 
inspect and integrate the avionics system components on the upper 
stage. Components will be manufactured by the prime contractor's 
suppliers across the country. Final integration and checkout will 
take place at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in Louisiana. 

The avionics are the "brains" of the Ares I and will provide guidance, 
navigation and control for the rocket until it reaches orbit. The 
avionics system is responsible for managing vehicle health and 
reporting it to flight controllers based on a sequence of timed 
events, such as engine shutdown and first stage separation. 

The instrument unit that contains the bulk of the avionics will be 
situated between the two-stage Ares I rocket and the adapter that 
joins Ares I to the Orion spacecraft. The system consists of onboard 
computers, flight controls, communications equipment and other 
instruments and software for monitoring and adjusting the rocket's 
speed and position during flight.

Boeing will provide one instrument unit avionics ground test article, 
three flight test units and six production flight units to support 
integrated flight tests and missions through 2016. The contract type 
is cost-plus-award-fee and the period of performance is Dec. 17, 
2007, through Dec. 16, 2016. The estimated value for support to the 
NASA-led design team and production of test and flight units is 
$265,489,783. Additional tasks not included in the initial scope of 
the contract may be acquired up to a maximum value of $420 million. 
Additional flight units may be obtained at an estimated cost of 
$114,045,292 for as many as 12 additional units. The total estimated 
contract value is $799,535,079. 

The Ares I first stage will be a five-segment solid rocket booster. 
The upper, second stage of the rocket will consist of a J-2X 
liquid-oxygen, liquid-hydrogen main engine, a new upper stage fuel 
tank, and the instrument unit avionics.

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the 
Ares Project for NASA's Constellation Program, based at NASA's 
Johnson Space Center in Houston. 

For information about NASA's Constellation Program, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation

	
-end-



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