ClancyJG International has expertise in Aerospace Engineering supporting the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). ClancyJG International staff support Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Research and Development including gaining insight into the technical approach, operational concepts, and hardware and software systems required for the UAS aircraft research program.
Staff participates in project requirements reviews, design reviews and test readiness reviews and witnesses, software, hardware and integration tests associated with the UAS aircraft research and development. Staff provides independent assessment of vehicle performance characteristics for the UAS Aircraft system. Engineering staff provide advice to Management and engineering staff any safety or mission success concerns for the UAS aircraft flight operations, participates in the system safety process, and participates in regular project meetings.
ClancyJG International provides Integration and Instrumentation Engineering expertise is provided to support the Systems Integration Branch for various NASA projects. This requires the design, documentation, environmental checkout, installation oversight, calibration, and operations of instrumentation systems. The work is highly technical in nature and requires application of scientific and engineering principals as well as the principals of systems engineering and integration. Staff provides services that include the development of electrical drawings to document new and existing systems, provide operations and troubleshooting support, and develop test procedures for the checkout to include operations and environmental test. Staff adhere to NASA processes in the development and support of the instrumentation systems.
Operational Engineering expertise is provided for the Orion Ascent Abort-2 (AA-2) final launch abort system test. The AA-2 test launched an Orion mock-up from Space Launch Complex 46 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. During the test, the spacecraft integrated with an ascent test booster – a first stage booster from a Peacekeeper missile modified by Orbital Sciences Corporation in Arizona.