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Collier Trophy 2012 Nominees

The Collier Trophy honors the outstanding achievement in aerospace during the previous year, and 2012, as you’ll see from these nominees, was a year of innovation for the ages. Also, a look at Collier awards for achievements that didn’t work out as planned.

Lockheed Martin Cargo Unmanned Aerial Systems
Lockheed Martin Cargo Unmanned Aerial Systems: Lockheed Martin won a nomination for its Cargo Unmanned Aerial Systems, the first time (at least that we’re aware of) that the NAA has nominated an atmospheric unmanned craft for the award. It’s a worthy nomination, if only to give a nod to the rapidly expanding role of UAS in nearly every sector. Lockheed Martin produces every conceivable kind of unmanned system, from “optionally piloted” helicopters to models no bigger than large model airplanes. Click here to vote for the Lockheed Martin Cargo Unmanned Aerial System.
Dawn Asteroid Probe
Dawn Asteroid Probe: NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratories were nominated for their joint Dawn Project, in which a sophisticated probe, the Dawn Spacecraft, explores asteroids. The resultant images and heat maps have been nothing short of eye-opening. Click here to vote for the NASA/JPL Dawn Project Team.
The USAF MC-12 Project Liberty Team
The USAF MC-12 Project Liberty Team: Drones have changed the game in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but in order to attack, there needs to be good intelligence. The answer was the MC-12 Liberty, specially outfitted Hawker Beechcraft King Air 350 and King Air 350 ER aircraft designed to gather intelligence and report it back to controllers. Click here to vote for the United States Air Force MC-12 Project Liberty Team.
Mars Curiosity Rover
Mars Curiosity Rover: The team from NASA and JPL got another nod when they were nominated for their Mars Curiosity rover and their shared Mars laboratory. The rover continues to explore the Martian surface. Click here to vote for the NASA/JPL Mars Science Laboratory/Curiosity Project Team.
The NASA/JPL Voyager Interstellar Mission Project Team
The NASA/JPL Voyager Interstellar Mission Project Team: Space programs were solidly represented in this year’s Collier’s nominees, and again NASA and JPL were honored with a third finalist recognition for their Voyager spacecraft. Recognition might seem late in coming — the Voyagers 1 and 2 were launched in 1977. The year Voyager 1 crossed over into a new part of the solar system, the most distant part, and is now approximately 11 billion miles from the Sun, making it the most distant man-made object in the universe. Click here to vote for the NASA/JPL Voyager Interstellar Mission Project Team.
The Gulfstream G650
The Gulfstream G650: Gulfstream’s category-busting ultra-long-range bizjet goes beyond the “intercontinental” category with its ability to skip one or two big land masses altogether and land on a third. With unprecedented range and speed in a purpose-built bizjet, the high-subsonic G650 sets a whole new standard in personal and business travel. Click here to vote for the Gulfstream G650.
Felix Baumgartner and the Red Bull Stratos Team
Felix Baumgartner and the Red Bull Stratos Team: A year ago who knew this guy’s name? After watching him do his thing on live TV, jumping from the edge of space and going supersonic in the process, who doesn’t. These days the worst kept secret in the world is that Baumgartner didn’t do it himself, and the NAA appropriately recognizes his entire Red Bull support team. Click here to vote for Felix Baumgartner and the Red Bull Stratos Team.
Collier Trophy
Vote for your favorite! Click here to vote for the Lockheed Martin Cargo Unmanned Aerial System. Click here to vote for the NASA/JPL Dawn Project Team. Click here to vote for the United States Air Force MC-12 Project Liberty Team. Click here to vote for the NASA/JPL Mars Science Laboratory/Curiosity Project Team. Click here to vote for the NASA/JPL Voyager Interstellar Mission Project Team. Click here to vote for the Gulfstream G650. Click here to vote for Felix Baumgartner and the Red Bull Stratos Team.
Epic Collier Trophy Fails
The history of the Collier committee in picking the best and brightest achievements is remarkable, but over the years there have been some noteworthy missteps, some of them a bit embarrassing in retrospect. While some of the Collier fails have been cases of picks made too soon for a program in disarray, in other cases, the award went to a program or technology that wound up going nowhere. Here’s our list of epic Collier Trophy fails.
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** THE BOEING COMPANY (2011): For designing, building, certifying, delivering, and supporting the Boeing 787; demonstrating significant advances in the use of materials, technologies, and systems to enhance safety, performance, comfort, and value in commercial aircraft. _Boeing’s revolutionary design was years late, billions over budget and the worldwide fleet currently sits idle as investigators try to figure out the cause of mysterious battery fires. Here’s one program we all hope rises again to great heights. _
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** THE AUTOMATIC DEPENDENT SURVEILLANCE-BROADCAST (ADS-B) TEAM OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTOR GROUPS (2007): For conceptualizing, developing, and initially implementing the next generation performance-based air-ground, ground-air, and air-air surveillance system. By 2007 ADS-B was a mess, and the industry-wide team recognized for the Collier was still working to figure out a basic architecture for the system, a quest that five years later is still ongoing to some degree, with numerous questions left unanswered about how ADS-B works (including the U.S.’s odd dual pipe system) and why it works that way. The good news: ADS-B has opened up free near-real-time weather in the cockpit.
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION, THE BOEING COMPANY, PRATT & WHITNEY, NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION, RAYTHEON CORPORATION, BAE SYSTEMS AND THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE (2006): For designing, testing, and operating the revolutionary F-22 Raptor, providing total air dominance for America’s future. _The Raptor, while capable of doing things that no other front line fighter can, has been a prodigiously expensive project at at time when the very need for next-gen air surpemecy fighters is debatable. The year the Raptor won the Collier, the very fate of the program was in the balance. In the end, the F-22’s production continued, but the overall order was cut by a third. The program was halted in 2011 after fewer than 200 very expensive airplanes had been produced. Since its inception, eight of the fighters have been lost, numerous pilots have lost consciousness while flying it, and rain can erode the radar evading aircraft coating. _
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** ECLIPSE AVIATION (2005): For innovation in the advancement of general aviation through the design, development and manufacture of the Eclipse 500, the World’s first very light jet. _While the Collier is supposedly awarded for actual achievement, the Eclipse 500 by 2005 was the very essence of pie in the sky technology. The story of the lightest production jet, its delays, cost overruns and the company’s eventual bankruptcy is well known. The eventual full certification and reestablishment of the airplane, as the Eclipse 550, shows that sometimes even epic fails can have happy endings. _
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** PRATT & WHITNEY, ROLLS-ROYCE, LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION, NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION, BAE SYSTEMS AND THE JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER PROGRAM OFFICE (2001): For designing, developing, and demonstrating the Integrated LiftFan Propulsion System, the next generation in aviation propulsion performance, efficiency and safety. _The Joint Strike Fighter, a trillion dollar program, has seen numerous (too numerous to cite) equipment failures, cost overruns, political miscalculations and performance downgrades since it won the Collier just over a decade ago. The cost of the airplane has increased, from less than $90 million per copy to more than $200 million each (or more, depending on how you do the math). Still, the F-35 will be the future of American fighter power, and pilots are now beginning to train on the airplane. Initial overseas deployment, however, is still five years away. _
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** NASA LEWIS RESEARCH CENTER AND THE NASA/INDUSTRY ADVANCED TURBOPROP TEAM (1987): For the development of advanced turboprop propulsion concepts for single rotation, gearless counter rotation, and geared counter rotation inducted fan systems. _The award for this ducted turboprop research was all very well and good. The only problem is, it has led nowhere, as conventional turboprops and turbofan engines continue to dominate the marketplace and improve upon the state of the art very nicely indeed. _
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** THE OFFICERS AND MEN OF THE 7th AIR FORCE AND 8TH AIR FORCE OF THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE AND TASK FORCE 77 OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY (1972): For successfully carrying out Operation Linebacker II, the air campaign against North Vietnam in December, 1972 which through precise, accurate, and determined attacks on key military targets in the face of unprecedented defenses, brought about a cease fire under terms which attained United States objectives in Southeast Asia. _One of the most controversial awards in Collier history, the trophy was presented to the personnel behind Operation Linebacker, the air campaign against targets in North Vietnam. While no one disputes the skill and bravery of the personnel who waged the campaign, the outcome wasn’t as the Collier committee predicted. While the NAA optimistically stated that the operation had been a success in determining the outcome of the war, history would soon tell a different tale. _
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY (1931)****: For development of the diesel aircraft engine. _The NAA might have gotten this one right… aero diesels are finally coming into their own, just 70 years or so after Packard accepted the Collier hardware. _
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EPIC COLLIER TROPHY FAILS **
** HAROLD F. PITCAIRN AND HIS ASSOCIATES (1930): For development and application of the autogiro. Today autogiros are everywhere we look. Okay, not so much. But they were all the rage in 1930, so the Collier committee saw fit to award its top prize to the technology. Truth is, sometimes things don’t work out the way you thought they would.

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