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12 juillet 2013 5 12 /07 /juillet /2013 07:20
US Navy details X-47B navigation system malfunction on 3rd carrier landing attempt

July 11, 2013 by Zach Rosenberg – FG

 

Washington DC - The Northrop Grumman X-47B landed twice aboard the USS George H.W. Bush aircraft carrier, but a malfunction with one of its three navigation computers prevented a third landing. The aircraft subsequently diverted to Wallops Field, Virginia, as programmed, for a safe recovery.

 

"There are three redundant navigation computers on the X-47," says Capt Jaime Engdahl, the US Navy's programme manager for unmanned systems. "We saw an issue on one of those computers and decided we had done enough for the day, flew the aircraft back and landed it."

 

The aircraft makes its approaches autonomously, without human interference. The computers onboard the aircraft noted the anomaly affecting one of the three precision GPS computers, and though capable of landing using only one, the aircraft is coded to abort landing under those circumstances. After the automatic abort, the human controller elected to divert the aircraft instead of continuing.

 

"They're working through the data right now," says Carl Johnson, Northrop Grumman's programme manager. "In terms of a malfunction it's probably a minor issue, that when we reset the computers everything will be up and running and we'll have a fully functional aircraft."

 

Two X-47Bs are flying. The aircraft used for the test has the tail number 502. An identical aircraft, tail number 501, will likely be used for the next aircraft carrier test series on 15 July. If all goes well in the second series, the X-47B's tests will be completed and the aircraft retired. A manned Learjet using X-47B's software will conduct autonomous air-to-air refueling trials in 2014.

 

The lessons learned from the X-47B demonstrations will be used to address the Unmanned Carrier-Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) programme, meant to essentially create an operational production UAV for aircraft carriers. Four companies - Northrop, Lockheed Martin, Boeing and General Atomics Aeronautical Systems - have been selected to perform design work.

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11 juillet 2013 4 11 /07 /juillet /2013 07:20
X-47B Completes First-Ever Carrier-Based Arrested Landing USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77)– photo US Navy

X-47B Completes First-Ever Carrier-Based Arrested Landing USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77)– photo US Navy

A BORD DE L'USS HW BUSH (Etats-Unis), 10 juil 2013 marine-oceans.com  (AFP)

 

Le X-47B, un prototype de drone furtif, a apponté sur le porte-avions américain USS George HW Bush mercredi, une première ouvrant un nouveau chapitre dans l'histoire de l'aéronavale, a annoncé l'US Navy.

 

L'appareil, contrôlé à distance mais plus autonome que les drones actuels comme le Reaper ou le Predator, avait décollé quelques dizaines de minutes auparavant de la base aéronavale de Patuxent River, dans le Maryland (est), pour rejoindre le porte-avions croisant au large des côtes de Virginie (est).

 

Le X-47B "opère de façon autonome lors de son vol et lors de l'approche du navire mais l'officier d'appontage a un contrôle numérique direct grâce à un bouton" d'interruption en cas de problème, a expliqué le capitaine de vaisseau Jaime Engdahl, responsable du programme.

 

Le démonstrateur, destiné à développer les technologies pour les futurs drones de l'US Navy, avait déjà été catapulté du pont du George Bush le 14 mai.

 

Le X-47B, qui n'a pas d'empennage arrière, est doté d'un moteur à réaction, et a une forme dite en "aile de chauve-souris" pour accroître ses capacités furtives. Il a été conçu depuis 2007 par la firme américaine Northrop Grumman, qui construit également le drone d'observation Global Hawk.

 

L'appareil a une envergure de 19 mètres pour une longueur de 12 mètres. Ce n'est à ce stade qu'un démonstrateur et il faudra de nombreuses années de mise au point avant l'entrée en service opérationnelle de drones dans l'US Navy.

 

Sa portée de 2.100 miles nautiques (3.900 kilomètres) en fait un potentiel bombardier à long rayon d'action.

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11 juillet 2013 4 11 /07 /juillet /2013 07:20
X-47B lands aboard USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) July 10 (U.S. Navy photo)

X-47B lands aboard USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) July 10 (U.S. Navy photo)

10.07.2013 Helen Chachaty - journal-aviation.com

 

C'est une nouvelle étape capitale qui a été franchie : Le démonstrateur de drone de combat X-47B de Northrop Grumman a effectué avec succès son premier appontage ce 10 juillet. Le drone a décollé de la BAN de Patuxent River, effectuant sa manœuvre d’appontage à bord du plus récent porte-avions de la classe Nimitz, l'USS George H.W. Bush de l’US Navy (CVN-77).

 

C’est un nouveau succès pour le programme UCAS-D de l’US Navy, qui cherche ainsi à étudier et à tester les capacités d’un drone à partir d’une plateforme maritime. Les deux démonstrateurs technologiques X-47B qui sont actuellement utilisés pour les essais n’ont pas vocation à être produits en série et déployés en opérations, mais ils sont néanmoins cruciaux pour les études de R&D et de R&T dans le domaine des appareils non pilotés.

 

Le programme « opérationnel » de l’US Navy est quant à lui nommé UCLASS (Unmanned carrier-launched airborne surveillance and strike system). Une RFI (request for information) a été dévoilée il y a trois ans, l’appel d’offre devrait lui être annoncé prochainement. Il s’agit pour l’US Navy de se doter de capacités ISR ainsi que de capacités de frappe pour équiper ses porte-avions à l’horizon 2018. Lockheed Martin, Boeing, General Atomics et bien sûr Northrop Grumman sont les quatre industriels attendus sur ce créneau.

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10 juillet 2013 3 10 /07 /juillet /2013 23:58

10 juil. 2013 U.S. Navy

The X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System (UCAS) demonstrator completed its first and second carrier-based arrested landing on board USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) off the coast of Virginia July 10.

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10 juillet 2013 3 10 /07 /juillet /2013 16:20
Northrop Grumman Supports Propulsion System Rocket Engine Test

Jul 10, 2013 (SPX)

 

Herndon VA - Northrop Grumman recently supported the successful test of the Minuteman III Propulsion System Rocket Engine (PSRE) at NASA's White Sands Testing Facility in Las Cruces, N.M.

 

The PSRE is the liquid post-boost upper stage of the Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). This was a designated product quality assurance (PQA) test, which is a full mission duty ground static test conducted in NASA's altitude test cell.

 

The PQA test is performed to verify the quality of the PSRE after it is refurbished by the PSRE life-extension program (LEP).

 

This test represents the last of seven PQA static tests for the PSRE LEP program.

 

"The entire ICBM team, including our Aerojet and Boeing teammates and the Air Force, celebrate the success of this program as it comes to an end with this final accomplishment," said Tony Spehar, Northrop Grumman vice president and program manager for the ICBM Prime Integration Contract.

 

"These PSRE tests have ensured the reliability of the nation's deployed Minuteman fleet."

 

The PSRE LEP program, initiated in 2000, is managed under a joint partnership between Northrop Grumman and the U.S. Air Force.

 

The program is responsible for refurbishing the entire Minuteman III fleet of PSREs and extending its service life through 2030. Upon completion of the program last month, 558 PSREs will have been delivered to the Air Force.

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9 juillet 2013 2 09 /07 /juillet /2013 16:20
NGC Moves New B-2 Satellite Communications Concept to the High Ground

Jul 8, 2013 ASDNews Source : Northrop Grumman

 

    Company Proves New Antenna Can Communicate, Operate With On-Orbit Satellite

 

Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE:NOC) has taken another significant step to reduce the risks and costs associated with producing an extremely high frequency (EHF) satellite communications system for the U.S. Air Force's B-2 stealth bomber.

 

In a demonstration conducted May 23, Northrop Grumman proved that a new active electronically scanned array (AESA) antenna it has developed for the B-2 can establish and maintain communications services with an on-orbit Air Force Advanced EHF (AEHF) communications satellite. The demo included the antenna, a Navy Multi-band Terminal and the satellite.

 

Northrop Grumman is the Air Force's prime contractor for the B-2, the flagship of the nation's long range strike arsenal, and one of the world's most survivable aircraft. An EHF satellite communications system would allow the B-2 to send and receive battlefield information significantly faster than its current satellite communications system.

 

"Our demo marks the first time that AESA antenna technology has been used to communicate with the AEHF network," said Byron Chong, Northrop Grumman's B-2 deputy program manager. "We showed that our antenna will consistently produce and maintain the high-gain beam needed to communicate with AEHF satellites."

 

During the test, he added, Northrop Grumman successfully demonstrated extended data rate (XDR) communications between the AESA antenna and the AEHF satellite at EHF frequencies. XDR communications take advantage of the AEHF satellites' most advanced, most secure signaling protocols and communication waveforms.

 

The new antenna is designed to support both tactical and strategic missions. Its innovative "no radome" design allows it to bring new communications capabilities to the B-2 while maintaining the aircraft's major operational characteristics.

 

Earlier this year, Northrop Grumman validated the performance of the new antenna on instrumented test ranges. The tests verified the antenna's performance over its entire transmit and receive frequency band, and over its required range of scan angles.

 

The B-2 is the only long-range, large-payload U.S. aircraft that can penetrate deeply into access-denied airspace, and the only combat-proven stealth platform in the current U.S. inventory. In concert with the Air Force's air superiority fleet, which provides airspace control, and the Air Force's tanker fleet, which enables global mobility, the B-2 can help protect U.S. interests anywhere in the world. It can fly more than 6,000 nautical miles unrefueled and more than 10,000 nautical miles with just one aerial refueling, giving it the ability to reach any point on the globe within hours.

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9 juillet 2013 2 09 /07 /juillet /2013 14:20
X-47B UCAS - Aviation History Under Way - Video

9 juil. 2013 Northrop Grumman

A musical revue of the historic first catapult of a U.S. Navy unmanned aircraft system from a carrier, May 2013.

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14 juin 2013 5 14 /06 /juin /2013 07:30
LONGBOW Receives $90 M Contract for Saudi Arabia Apache Radar Systems

Jun 13, 2013 ASDNews Source : Lockheed Martin

 

The LONGBOW Limited Liability Company, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] and Northrop Grumman Corporation [NYSE: NOC], received a $90.6 million contract to provide Saudi Arabia with LONGBOW Fire Control Radars (FCRs) for the AH-64 Apache Attack Helicopter.

 

The contract award includes AH-64E LONGBOW FCRs, spares and support for the Royal Saudi Land Forces Aviation Command. The contract also includes LONGBOW FCRs for the Saudi Arabia National Guard and LONGBOW Mast Mounted Assemblies for the U.S. Army.

 

“Saudi Arabia is emerging as one of the largest international users of the LONGBOW systems,” said Mike Taylor, LONGBOW LLC president and director of LONGBOW programs at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control. “The AH-64E LONGBOW FCR's new Radar Electronics Unit provides greater processing power and provision for significant growth while reducing weight and maintenance costs.”

 

“The LONGBOW FCR team values our ability to provide Saudi Arabia with a product that will promote greater regional security while providing warfighters with the highest level of protection,” said Mike Galletti, director of the Tactical Sensor Solutions-Aviation business unit for Northrop Grumman’s Land and Self Protection Systems Division.

 

Since 1998, the LONGBOW FCR has provided Apache aircrews with target detection, location, classification and prioritization. In all weather, over multiple terrains and through any battlefield obscurant, the radar allows automatic and rapid multi-target engagement.

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14 juin 2013 5 14 /06 /juin /2013 07:20
Advanced EHF Payloads

Advanced EHF Payloads

June 13, 2013. David Pugliese  - Defence Watch

 

News release from Northrop Grumman. This dovetails with the COM DEV news release from earlier today:

 

Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE:NOC) has delivered the second of two payloads that will be hosted on government-owned satellites to bring next-generation protected, Extremely High Frequency (EHF) communications to users in the north polar region (above 65a-| North).

 

Developed for the U.S. Air Force’s Enhanced Polar System (EPS), the payload efficiently leverages hardware and software designs Northrop Grumman originally developed for Advanced EHF (AEHF) protected military communication satellites.

 

“Reuse of existing hardware and software resulted in a highly successful EPS payload development, providing a significant value for Americans,” said Stuart Linsky, vice president, Communication Programs, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems. “As we did with the AEHF payloads, both EPS payloads were delivered ahead of the government need.

 

“Like the first EPS payload, the second successfully used flight-proven components, dramatically lowering development risk, cost and schedule of the highly advanced anti-jam payloads,” Linsky said. “As a result, we kept nonrecurring engineering costs and other expenses associated with first article satellites to an absolute minimum.”

 

The EPS network will replace the current Interim Polar System and serve as a polar adjunct to the Advanced EHF system.

 

Both EPS payloads feature an onboard processing unit similar to those on AEHF satellites but scaled down to meet reduced mission capacity requirements. The payloads integrate functions of the Configurable On-board Router, Demodulator and Resource Control Computer/Security Equipment Computer on AEHF payloads into a single eXtended Data Rate Processing Unit on EPS.

 

EPS payload development began in 2008. The Air Force plans final operational capability for EPS for calendar year 2018. EPS consists of two EHF payloads hosted on government satellites, a Gateway Segment to connect modified Navy Multiband Terminals to other communication systems, a User Terminal Segment and a Control and Planning Segment (CAPS). Northrop Grumman was recently selected to develop the EPS CAPS to operate the EPS payloads.

 

Northrop Grumman’s foundational payload control and planning capability leverages proven technologies from various heritage programs and the Common Network Planning Software system the company developed for the Wideband Global Satellite program to provide an affordable, scalable ground control capability for future protected satellite communications (SatCom) growth.

 

The MILSATCOM directorate at the Air Force’s Space and Missile Systems Center at Los Angeles Air Force Base, Calif., is acquiring the Control and Planning and Gateway Segments.

 

“The successful scaling of AEHF components demonstrated by EPS provides a low risk basis for affordable protected SatCom with AEHF levels of protection at the cost of vulnerable unprotected SatCom,” said Tim Frei, vice president, Communication Systems for Northrop Grumman.

 

“EPS proves that we can transition Technology Readiness Level 9, anti-jam, low probability of intercept communications into new platforms at low cost and risk, providing real protected SatCom at no more cost than unprotected SatCom,” Frei said. “This will be a game changer for the government. This is part of Northrop Grumman’s broad affordability initiative, which seeks to combine the best commercial technologies with TRL 9-level government technologies. These components include Low Cost Terminals, lower cost satellites, payloads, launch and ground control.”

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13 juin 2013 4 13 /06 /juin /2013 11:20
Northrop Grumman to Support U.S. Navy on Minehunting Integration

ANNAPOLIS, Md. – June 10, 2013 – Northrop Grumman

 

Northrop Grumman Corporation has been awarded a contract to support the U.S. Navy's integration onto an unmanned surface vehicle (USV) of the Northrop Grumman-built AQS-24A Side Look Sonar System to look for bottom and volume mines remotely.

 

The repackaging of the sonar for USV use will build upon the proven capabilities of the AQS-24A. The AQS-24A and its predecessors, the AQS-24 and the AQS-14, all built by Northrop Grumman, are airborne minehunting search systems used by the Navy for the past 28 years. The AQS-24A is a high-speed minehunting system that is primarily towed from the MH-53E helicopter, but has been tested from USVs since 2002 by Northrop Grumman. With a track record of reliability and performance across the globe, the system's high-resolution side-scan sonar detects, localizes and classifies both bottom and moored mines in real time at high area coverage rates.

 

"This is a great step forward for those who have been involved in USVs and minehunting for as many years as the Naval Undersea Warfare Center and Northrop Grumman," said Tom Jones, vice president of Northrop Grumman's Undersea Systems business unit. "The results of this effort could apply to future USV programs, both in the U.S. Navy as well as the navies of potential coalition partners such as Australia."

 

In cooperation with the Navy and industry partners, Northrop Grumman has operated USVs in various tests and fleet exercises that range from remote control to autonomous operations. The Naval Undersea Warfare Center in Newport, R.I., Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) in Panama City, Fla., NSWC Carderock Division in West Bethesda, Md., NSWC Combatant Craft Division in Norfolk, Va., and Northrop Grumman jointly developed an 11-meter USV that launched, recovered and towed the AQS-24A.

 

Northrop Grumman is a leading global security company providing innovative systems, products and solutions in unmanned systems, cyber, C4ISR, and logistics and modernization to government and commercial customers worldwide. Please visit www.northropgrumman.com for more information.

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12 juin 2013 3 12 /06 /juin /2013 11:20
Sonar integration contract for Northrop

ANNAPOLIS, Md., June 11 (UPI)

 

The U.S. Navy has contracted Northrop Grumman to support integration of its AQS-24A Side Look Sonar System onto an unmanned surface vessel.

 

The AQS-24A Side Look Sonar System is normally towed by a helicopter to detect mines. ON the USV it will search for bottom mines as well as surface mines.

 

"This is a great step forward for those who have been involved in USVs and mine hunting for as many years as the Naval Undersea Warfare Center and Northrop Grumman," said Tom Jones, vice president of Northrop Grumman's Undersea Systems business unit. "The results of this effort could apply to future USV programs, both in the U.S. Navy as well as the navies of potential coalition partners such as Australia."

 

Northrop said it has been testing the system, as well as its predecessors, on unmanned surface vessels since 2002.

 

The value of the contract and other terms, such as length, were not disclosed.

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12 juin 2013 3 12 /06 /juin /2013 07:20
An artist's rendering of Northrop Grumman's MQ-8C Fire Scout UAV, which is based on the Bell 407 Jet Ranger airframe. The C version is larger than the MQ-8B Fire Scout already in the fleet. (Northrop Grumman)

An artist's rendering of Northrop Grumman's MQ-8C Fire Scout UAV, which is based on the Bell 407 Jet Ranger airframe. The C version is larger than the MQ-8B Fire Scout already in the fleet. (Northrop Grumman)

Jun. 11, 2013 - By CHRISTOPHER P. CAVAS  - Defense news

 

Airframe Based on Bell Jet Ranger

 

WASHINGTON — There’s a new Fire Scout in the pipeline — bigger, faster, longer legs, more muscle. It’s still being assembled and won’t fly until later this year, but it’s headed for the fleet as soon as late 2014. And it could fundamentally change some of the parameters expected of the US Navy’s seagoing unmanned helicopter program.

 

The MQ-8 Fire Scout program has been under development for about a decade. A key factor for the aircraft was its small size, making it exceptionally handy to store and operate aboard ship.

 

The Navy often presents the diminutive Northrop Grumman aircraft as taking up about half the space of the H-60 Seahawk helos routinely deployed on surface combatants. And frigates are deploying with four MQ-8B Fire Scouts. Littoral combat ships are intended to routinely deploy with one or two Fire Scouts in addition to an H-60.

 

But something more was needed, and in 2011, US Africa Command and Special Operations Command (SOCOM) submitted an urgent needs request for an aircraft with more range and payload for their maritime-based ISR.

 

Northrop Grumman, before selecting the Schweizer 333 helicopter as the basis for its original Fire Scout bid, had evaluated the larger Bell 407 Jet Ranger, an aircraft familiar to Navy rotary flight school trainees as the TH-57 Sea Ranger.

 

To meet the new need for the larger UAV, the company proposed switching to the larger bird, but keeping the systems, electronics and ground control stations developed for the smaller helo. A demonstrator, dubbed Fire-X, was developed at company expense to show off the concept.

 

The Pentagon was impressed, and in the spring of 2012, Northrop received a contract for the first batch of up to 30 MQ-8C Fire Scouts using the basic Jet Ranger air frame.

 

“The new system kept the sensors, communications and software of the smaller Fire Scout, with about 80 to 90 percent commonality with the B,” said Capt. Chris Corgnati, head of unmanned aircraft systems under the deputy chief of naval operations for information dominance (N2/N6). “But there was a different air frame, engine and rotor head.”

 

The new Fire Scout C is bigger — 10 feet longer than the B’s 31.7 feet, a foot higher, and with an operational ceiling 3,000 feet lower than the smaller helo’s 20,000 feet. But the C can fly at 140 knots over the B’s 110; has an internal payload of 1,000 pounds over the B’s 600 pounds; has a gross takeoff weight of 6,000 pounds compared with the B’s 3,150 pounds; and can stay aloft 11 to 14 hours versus the smaller vehicle’s endurance of four to five hours.

 

“The C will have approximately twice the capability of the B — time on station, payloads — and provides for additional growth, including radar,” said Capt. Patrick Smith, Fire Scout program manager at the Naval Air Systems Command. “And because of more endurance, it should have less impact on the crew, who can launch, then recover, the aircraft eight hours later.”

 

With the change, the Navy has ended procurement of the B model at 30 aircraft, with the last two to be delivered this year. While the Bs will continue to operate, Smith said, there are no further plans to buy the smaller aircraft.

 

Instead, the Navy intends to order a total of 30 Cs — two test aircraft plus 28 operational aircraft — under an “endurance upgrade.” The first test helicopter is still at Bell’s facility in Ozark, Ala., Smith said, and is expected to be shipped in mid-June to begin tests at the naval air warfare center at Point Mugu, Calif. The first flight of the type is planned for September, with the program aiming to reach initial operating capability in late 2014.

 

The first at-sea deployment of the C is planned for a destroyer in support of SOCOM, Smith and Corgnati said, and operations from frigates and “all air-capable ships,” including joint high speed vessels, will be studied. But the overall focus continues to be on the LCS.

 

“The future and main driver for the entire Fire Scout program is LCS,” Corgnati said. “That we can support special operations forces in the interim is [a] bonus.”

 

But will the larger helo fit on the Navy’s other surface combatants?

 

“We can store two aircraft on a frigate, a destroyer or an LCS, on one side of the hangar,” said George Vardoulakis, Northrop’s vice president for tactical unmanned systems. “That’s essentially what we’re doing with the Bs as well.

 

“We’ve modeled it, we’re very confident that we will be hangaring two 8Cs in the space of a 60,” he said. “Operational, not broken down. Absolutely.”

 

Corgnati admitted there are space challenges, but he also noted that the increased capabilities of the C could mean fewer aircraft would need to be carried.

 

“Nominally [with the B] you have four-hour aircraft doing 24/7 operations, and you’re launching and recovering every three hours,” he said. “You back that off with an eight-hour platform doing similar coverage.”

 

He already envisions frigate deployments with three Cs rather than the now-standard 4 Bs.

 

Neither the Navy nor Northrop Grumman would comment on a revised cost-per-aircraft for the C, since the price depends on how many are bought. The airframe represents about 15 percent of each aircraft’s cost, Vardoulakis said, and he expects the unit price to rise roughly by about $1 million for the larger C. The more aircraft that are bought, the lesser the cost, particularly in later years, he said.

 

Earlier cost figures had been based on the Navy requirement for 168 Bs.

 

“We’re certainly worried those lower quantities will impact our costs significantly,” he said.

 

Northrop is excited, however, about the possibilities with the larger aircraft.

 

“We’re marketing this aircraft for Marine Corps and Army missions,” Vardoulakis said. “Those offerings have a significantly smaller fuel tank in the center of the aircraft and volume available for storage or medevac.

 

“There are no active proposals for the Marines and Army,” he said. “We just see a great opportunity for synergy within [the Defense Department] for an aircraft in this class.”

 

For the Navy, a decision point is coming on whether to continue buying Cs or begin a competition for another aircraft.

 

“We have a desire to move to a single model,” Corgnati said. “We fully intend to use the Bs for their full service life. The initial LCS deployments will be with the B, then you’re going to see a mix over the next number of years of Bs and Cs deployed on platforms. As you go through natural attrition, the Bs will atrophy to the C or another follow-on.”

 

A decision on the way ahead is at least “several months” off, Corgnati said.

 

“Could be we go back out and do a new-start competition?” he said. Pending evaluation of the new aircraft, “everything’s on the table; there’s nothing decided at this point.”

MQ-8B Fire Scout aboard USS Simpson (FFG 56)

MQ-8B Fire Scout aboard USS Simpson (FFG 56)

Smaller Fire Scout Getting Bigger Punch

 

Improvements continue to be made to the smaller MQ-8B version of the Navy’s Fire Scout unmanned aerial vehicle, including a new effort to arm the diminutive helicopter.

 

“We’re doing another rapid deployment capability in response to an urgent-needs request from 5th Fleet [in the Middle East],” said Capt. Patrick Smith, Fire Scout program manager with Naval Air Systems Command. “We’re integrating the Advanced Precision Kill Weapons System on to the B.”

 

The weapon system uses precision guidance to shoot 2.75-inch folding-fin Hydra-70 rockets with laser-guided pinpoint accuracy. It would give the Fire Scout — hitherto used largely for intelligence, surveillance and reconaissance missions — an impressive, if limited, attack capability.

 

The $40 million rapid-response program, begun in late 2011, includes development and testing along with six aircraft modification kits, Smith said. Each kit includes pylon arms and launchers to be fitted externally, and an internal wiring kit.

 

Aircraft are not intended to be permanently modified, but the system would be installed in theater or prior to deployment, he said.

 

The Navy tested similarly-sized rockets on an early RQ-8A Fire Scout in 2005, but those tests were with unguided weapons. The APKWS uses a newer laser-guided 70mm rocket that’s been in production since 2010.

 

“There was only one launch pylon” on the earlier tests, Smith said. The APKWS uses two three-tube launchers, he said.

 

Current plans are to install the system on only the B model of the UAV and not the larger MQ-8C version.

 

“We’ve done initial analysis with the C to transfer that capability from the B,” Smith said. “But that’s not now a capability that’s going to be delivered on the C.”

NAVAIR-personnel-w APKWS MQ-8 Photo Kelly Schindler

NAVAIR-personnel-w APKWS MQ-8 Photo Kelly Schindler

Live-fire tests with the APKWS and the MQ-8B began in May in California, Smith said, and the service intends to complete the testing in June and then determine “deployment windows,” he said.

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10 juin 2013 1 10 /06 /juin /2013 16:20
F-35 Composite Component by Elbit Systems-Cyclone

F-35 Composite Component by Elbit Systems-Cyclone

Jun 10, 2013 ASDNews Source : Northrop Grumman Corporation

 

Northrop Grumman Corporation's (NYSE:NOC) supplier in Israel – Elbit Systems-Cyclone – delivered its first advanced composite component for the F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter center fuselage produced by Northrop Grumman. This delivery is a significant milestone for the F-35 program, as it is the first composite part manufactured by a country committed to purchasing future F-35s under the U.S. foreign military sales agreement.

 

The composite component delivered is one of 16 unique parts to be manufactured by Elbit Systems-Cyclone under a seven-year F-35 agreement with Northrop Grumman, which was signed in December 2011.

 

"We're anticipating receiving more than 50 component deliveries from Cyclone this year, so this is a great start and shows Cyclone's commitment to the program," said Michelle Scarpella, vice president of the F-35 program for Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems. "With the first delivery under its belt, Cyclone has demonstrated that it is equipped and qualified to manufacture and deliver quality composite parts for the joint strike fighter aircraft, 19 of which Israel has committed to purchasing."

 

As a principal member of the Lockheed Martin-led F-35 industry team, Northrop Grumman performs a significant share of the work required to develop and produce the aircraft. In addition to manufacturing the F-35 center fuselage, Northrop Grumman designed and produces the aircraft's radar and other key avionics including electro-optical and communications, navigation and identification subsystems. Northrop Grumman also develops mission systems and mission-planning software, leads the team's development of pilot and maintenance training system courseware, and manages the team's use, support and maintenance of low-observable technologies. In 2012, the company delivered 32 center fuselages and is on track to exceed 2012 delivery quantities in 2013.

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6 juin 2013 4 06 /06 /juin /2013 07:50
Euro Hawk décollage de la BA De de Manching 11.01.2013 photo EADS - Cassidian

Euro Hawk décollage de la BA De de Manching 11.01.2013 photo EADS - Cassidian

June 5, 2013 defense-unmanned.com

(Source: Deutsche Welle German radio; issued June 4, 2013)

 

The Euro Hawk Scandal: A Chronicle

 

Development of the Euro Hawk drone cost hundreds of millions of euros. Despite early indications of problems, Defense Minister Thomas de Maizière held on to the project. DW chronicles the Euro Hawk's short life.

 

 

The government coalition of Social Democrats and Greens laid the foundation for the development of a surveillance drone as early as 2001. Five defense ministers came and went during the planning and trial process of the Euro Hawk unmanned aircraft. Warnings of flight permit problems came early. Here's what happened between the project's start in 2001 and its sudden end in 2013.

 

2001

As a member of the SPD/Greens coalition government, Defense Minister Rudolf Scharping (SPD) planned the commission of a surveillance drone that would fly at a height of 20 kilometers (12 miles) and registers radio and radar signals with the help of modern technology. US defense technology company Northrop Grumman was to be tasked with production, while European aviation firm EADS was to develop the surveillance technology. That was as far as plans went.

 

2003

During Peter Struck's (SPD) term as defense minister, America's Global Hawk performed its first test flights in German air space. That drone served as the prototype for the "Euro Hawk." The six successful flights laid the foundation for cooperation between the companies involved and the German defense ministry that followed.

 

2004

The Bundeswehr asked EADS and Northrop Grumman to present an offer for the development, production and delivery of a Euro Hawk.

 

Then came the first words of caution. An EADS employee warned that an anti-collision system was necessary, particularly during departure and landing. On other occasions, similar warnings came from air traffic controllers, the private sector and the German military itself.

 

2005

In November, EADS and Northrop Grumman founded the 'Euro Hawk GmbH' corporation. In December, they presented their bid. Public announcements about the project appear not to have been made.

 

Looking back, Franz Josef Jung (CDU), the defense minister at that time, recently told the German weekly "Bild am Sonntag" that the contract included an automatic anti-collision system and a "recourse clause."

 

2007

The budget committee in Germany's lower house of parliament approved the program in late January 2007. The defense ministry signed a 430-million-euro ($560-million) contract with the Euro Hawk GmbH corporation for the drone project.

 

2009

According to current reports in "Spiegel" magazine, German military inspectors pointed out potential flight permit issues in summer 2009. They criticized the manufacturer for not providing any approved construction documents that would have facilitated the obtaining of those permits. It also remains unclear whether members of the German army were even authorized to issue flight permits for the drone.

 

But under pressure from the defense ministry, with Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg (CSU) as minister, a military inspector eventually carried out the necessary tests allowing for a temporary permission of flight.

 

2010

In June, the Euro Hawk took off for the first time. It flew from the Northrop Grumman plant in Palmdale, California to the Edwards Air Force Base in the same state. The flight lasted two hours.

 

2011

On July 20, the aircraft embarked on its way to Germany and landed on Manching air field near Ingolstadt after 22 hours in the air.

 

Officially, this was seen as a success and hailed as the beginning of a new era of surveillance. At the time, the drone had a temporary traffic permit and could only take off and land in restricted air space.

 

There were reports that contact was temporarily lost with the drone during the flight and that it had deviated from its programmed route. US security authorities had denied overflight permission for the Euro Hawk within the United States.

 

Toward the end of 2011, the German defense ministry under current minister Thomas de Maizière (CDU) discovered that flight permits would cost an additional 500 to 600 million euros.

 

2012

In early 2013, the drone flew for six hours over Germany, marking another test flight that was viewed as a success.

 

But Defense Minister de Maizière stopped the drone project in May because of massive problems in obtaining flight permits for European airspace. Construction documents were missing for some 120 Euro Hawk components. Amid growing criticism, de Maizière also announced his ministry's decision to deliver sensitive Euro Hawk documents uncensored to Germany's Federal Court of Auditors.

 

A short while later, Northrop Grumman and EADS issued a joint statement contradicting the defense ministry. "Media reports that indicate there are challenges with the aircraft's flight control system, as well as excessive costs associated with completing airworthiness certification, are inaccurate," they said.

 

The full Euro Hawk system, the companies added, performed flawlessly and safely throughout the entire flight test program.

 

The defense ministry grounded its decision to suddenly the Euro Hawk program on the expected additional costs of up to 600 million euros.

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6 juin 2013 4 06 /06 /juin /2013 06:50
Des drones inutilisables vont-ils faire sauter le ministre allemand de la défense?

05/06/2013 Thomas Schnee – L’Expansion

 

Le ministère allemand de la défense a mis 6 ans pour réaliser que des drones achetés aux Etats-Unis n'auraient pas le droit de voler en Europe. Un scandale à 550 million d'euros. Thomas de Maizière, le ministre préféré d'Angela Merkel, essaye de sauver sa tête.

 

Achèteriez-vous une voiture si on vous explique qu'elle ne pourra être homologuée pour circuler sur les routes? Certainement pas. C'est pourtant ce qu'a fait le ministère allemand de la Défense en signant, en 2007, un contrat avec le constructeur américain Northrop Grumman. Dans ce contrat d'un montant évalué à 1,3 milliard d'euros, Northrop s'est engagé à livrer 5 drones de type Global Hawk, le plus gros de tous les drones de surveillance jamais construit.

 

Une perte sèche de 550 millions d'euros

Le premier appareil-test, rebaptisé Euro Hawk, a atterri en Allemagne l'été dernier pour y subir diverses modifications, comme sa mise aux normes européennes ou l'installation d'un système de surveillance mis au point par EADS. A cette date, l'Allemagne a déjà déboursé plusieurs centaines de millions d'euros pour ce programme d'armement. Mais quelques mois plus tard, c'est le coup de théâtre: le ministre fait savoir que les coûts de certification étant trop élevés (600 millions d'euros), l'Allemagne se désengage du programme. Pour le budget de la défense, la perte sèche est de 550 millions d'euros ! Une somme qui permettrait de créer près de 50 000 places de crèches, fait ironiquement remarquer le magazine Der Spiegel.

Pour la chancelière Angela Merkel, l'affaire tombe mal. Elle implique directement le ministre de la Défense Thomas de Maizière, son plus fidèle collaborateur et successeur potentiel. Elle éclate aussi 4 mois avant les élections législatives, alors même que la Chancelière est en pleine campagne électorale et fait tout pour convaincre les Allemands qu'avec elle, leur argent est bien gardé. Depuis l'annonce du ministre, le 14 mai dernier, le "scandale Euro Hawk" occupe en effet plus la une des journaux allemands. Outre-Rhin, tout le monde se demande évidemment pourquoi le bataillon d'experts de la Luftwaffe et du ministère n'a pas prévu ce scénario, ce qui aurait permis d'arrêter les frais beaucoup plutôt.

 

Le ministre charge ses secrétaires d'Etat

C'est donc pour répondre à cette question et justifier tant l'attitude de ses services que la sienne que Thomas de Maizière a promis de tout dire en ce mercredi 5 juin. Et c'est un ministre fatigué mais décidé qui est apparu devant la presse à la mi-journée, entre deux auditions parlementaires. La ligne de défense qu'il a adoptée se résume brièvement : il ne savait rien. Il est donc responsable mais pas coupable ! M. de Maizière a ainsi expliqué que ses deux secrétaires d'Etat Rüdiger Wolf et Stéphane Beemelmans ne l'avaient jamais informé de la gravité des problèmes du dossier Euro Hawk. Et ce n'est qu'en mai 2013 qu'il aurait découvert le pot aux roses.

Ce choix tactique, qui implique que l'un ou l'autre secrétaire d'Etat pourrait bientôt jouer le rôle de fusible, montre que M. de Maizière n'a pas abandonné l'espoir de conserver son maroquin ministériel. Mais le rapport que la Cour fédérale des comptes a également décidé de publier aujourd'hui enfonce le clou. A la décharge du ministre, les contrôleurs fédéraux rappelle qu'il est entré en fonction en mars 2011. Il n'est donc ni l'auteur, ni le seul responsable de cette gabegie. Pourtant, à cette date, les graves problèmes liés à la certification ont déjà été signalés à maintes reprises par les experts de la Luftwaffe.

Malgré cela, les services ministériels ont continué à " pousser " le dossier comme si de rien n'était, explique le rapport qui considère qu'une intervention plus précoce aurait pu avoir lieu. Surtout, la Cour fédérale des comptes dépeint les lenteurs, pesanteurs et aberrations du fonctionnement d'une administration ministérielle et militaire qui a pourtant récemment fait l'objet d'une grande réforme, cette fois-ci sous l'entière responsabilité de ... Thomas de Maizière qui va avoir bien du mal à sortir indemne du scandale Euro Hawk.

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3 juin 2013 1 03 /06 /juin /2013 18:50
Euro Hawk décollage de la BA De de Manching 11.01.2013 photo EADS - Cassidian

Euro Hawk décollage de la BA De de Manching 11.01.2013 photo EADS - Cassidian

Jun. 3, 2013 – By DEBORAH COLE (AFP) - Defense News

 

BERLIN — A simmering election-year scandal around German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s defense minister over a botched drone deal threatens to boil over this week when he testifies before lawmakers.

 

The minister, Thomas de Maiziere, is a close confidant of Merkel’s from her conservative Christian Democratic Union and had often been mentioned as a possible successor to the 58-year-old leader.

 

But with less than four months to go until a September general election, De Maiziere, 59, has become entangled in allegations he mismanaged a now-scrapped unmanned surveillance aircraft project with costly consequences.

 

The Euro Hawk program had already swallowed more than €500 million (US $651 million) before the defense ministry said on May 14 it would pull the plug.

 

Officials feared aviation authorities would not certify the Euro Hawk — a version of US-based Northrop Grumman’s Global Hawk customized by Europe’s EADS — because it lacks an anti-collision system.

 

The ministry deemed the cost of adding such a system prohibitive.

 

De Maiziere, who has been attacked for failing to act far earlier, is due on Wednesday to present a report to parliament’s defense committee on what the media have dubbed the “drone debacle.”

 

He has been at Merkel’s side since she took power in 2005, serving during her first term as her chief of staff before taking over the defense brief after her re-election in 2009.

 

Long viewed as a safe pair of hands with a particular talent for organization and administration, De Maiziere had figured on the short list of possible candidates to eventually take over the reins from Merkel.

 

Commentators said that speculation now looks to be quashed.

 

“De Maiziere could have become chancellor one day but since the drones crisis, no one is talking about that possibility anymore,” the center-left daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung wrote Monday.

 

“The question is simply how De Maiziere will handle his mistakes and whether he can keep his job.”

 

The wasted funds come at a time in which Merkel has been preaching fiscal discipline throughout the eurozone as a means to check the spiralling debt crisis.

 

De Maiziere will face deputies just days after news weekly Der Spiegel reported that senior defense ministry officials were aware as early as February 2012 about the concerns that led to the program’s cancellation last month.

 

Opposition leaders, who have been struggling to score points during the election campaign against the popular Merkel, leapt on the report.

 

The head of the Social Democrats, Sigmar Gabriel, called De Maiziere’s long silence on the affair “unworthy” of his office, while Greens’ parliamentary group chief Juergen Trittin threatened a formal probe.

 

Last month, Merkel’s spokesman insisted that De Maiziere had her “full confidence.”

 

But in an interview with Der Spiegel published Saturday, Merkel appeared reticent on his crisis management.

 

“The defense minister said he would present a comprehensive report this week about the project from its beginnings more than 10 years ago,” she said when asked about his future in the cabinet.

 

“I do not wish to preempt that.”

 

De Maiziere had already run into trouble in February when he criticized German soldiers in Afghanistan who complained about a lack of public acknowledgement for their service, saying they appeared to be “addicted” to praise.

 

After a massive uproar, he said he regretted if his remarks had caused offense.

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1 juin 2013 6 01 /06 /juin /2013 07:20
RQ-4 Global Hawk photo USAF

RQ-4 Global Hawk photo USAF

SAN DIEGO, May 31 (UPI)

 

NASA will continue using Northrop Grumman Global Hawk unmanned aircraft for science missions and flight demonstrations.

 

Northrop Grumman, maker of the unmanned aerial system, said the renewed agreement with NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center for joint use and shared costs of the Global Hawks utilized is extended until 2018.

 

"In the last five years, the Global Hawk has flown over the eye of hurricanes, examined the effects of greenhouse gases and conducted cutting-edge autonomous aerial refueling trials," said George Guerra, vice president of the Global Hawk program for Northrop Grumman's Aerospace Systems sector.

 

"We are thrilled to continue our partnership with NASA and look forward to more scientific and technological breakthroughs in the next five years."

 

The initial Space Act Agreement between NASA and Northrop in 2008 returned two pre-production Global Hawk aircraft to flight status and a permanent ground control station was built at Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.

 

Northrop Grumman says the UAS, with its high-altitude and long-endurance capabilities, is ideal for use in scientific research.

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30 mai 2013 4 30 /05 /mai /2013 11:20
The Northrop Grumman-built Triton unmanned aircraft system completed its first flight May 22 from the company's manufacturing facility in Palmdale, Calif. The flight, which was about 1.5 hours, successfully demonstrated control systems that allow Triton to operate autonomously. Triton is specially designed to fly surveillance missions up to 24 hours at altitudes of more than 10 miles, allowing coverage out to 2,000 nautical miles. The system's advanced suite of sensors can detect and automatically classify different types of ships. (Northrop Grumman photo by Bob Brown)

The Northrop Grumman-built Triton unmanned aircraft system completed its first flight May 22 from the company's manufacturing facility in Palmdale, Calif. The flight, which was about 1.5 hours, successfully demonstrated control systems that allow Triton to operate autonomously. Triton is specially designed to fly surveillance missions up to 24 hours at altitudes of more than 10 miles, allowing coverage out to 2,000 nautical miles. The system's advanced suite of sensors can detect and automatically classify different types of ships. (Northrop Grumman photo by Bob Brown)

30.05.2013 Info-Aviation

 

Le drone de surveillance maritime MQ-4C Triton a effectué son premier vol avec succès le 22 mai depuis l’usine de fabrication de Northrop Grumman à Palmdale en Californie.

 

Le Triton est un drone HALE (Haute Altitude Longue Endurance), dérivé du Global Hawk, spécialement conçu pour effectuer des missions de surveillance maritime et côtière jusqu’à 24 heures à des altitudes de plus de 10 miles (16 km). Il peut surveiller une zone océanique de 2.000 miles nautiques (3700 km) grâce à un système de capteurs permettant de détecter et classifier automatiquement les différents types de navires.

 

Le vol a débuté à 7h10 de Palmdale (Floride) et a duré 1 heure et demi, mené conjointement par une équipe d’essais de l’US Navy et de Northrop Grumman

 

Des essais en vol supplémentaires auront lieu à la base de Palmdale avant de faire de transférer le Triton à la base aéronavale de Patuxent River (Maryland) plus tard dans l’année.

 

Le programme Triton a démarré en 2008 chez Northrop Grumman en vu de construire deux avions et de les tester pour des missions opérationnelles. L’US Navy souhaite acquérir 68 Triton dans le cadre du programme Broad Area Maritime Surveillance.

 

Le Triton comporte une variété de charges utiles comme des capteurs ISR permettant de recueillir des images à haute résolution, un radar pour détecter des cibles, des communications aériennes et des capacités de partage de l’information à des unités militaires sur de longues distances.

 

Avec près de 40 mètres d’envergure, le Triton affiche une taille supérieure à celle d’un Boeing 737. Il peut voler jusqu’à 11,500 miles sans ravitaillement (18 000 km) avec une endurance de 36 heures.

 

Source: Northrop Grumman

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28 mai 2013 2 28 /05 /mai /2013 16:20
X-47B Carrier Suitability Testing Spring 2013 - video

Northrop Grumman's X-47B completing carrier suitability testing at NAS Patuxent River in Spring, 2013.

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27 mai 2013 1 27 /05 /mai /2013 20:50
EADS continuera de coopérer avec l'Allemagne sur un drone

27/05 LesEchos.fr (reuters)

 

EADS et son partenaire américain Northrop Grumman ont annoncé lundi qu'ils poursuivraient leur coopération avec le gouvernement allemand sur un projet de drone dont Berlin avait pourtant annoncé l'abandon il y a quelques jours.

 

Les autorités allemandes avaient annoncé il y a deux semaines renoncer à l'idée d'acheter et de modifier des drones de reconnaissance Euro Hawk en raison du coût jugé trop élevé de leur adaptation aux normes européennes à respecter pour obtenir l'autorisation de vol.

 

L'affaire a suscité de vives critiques sur le gaspillage de l'argent du contribuable allemand, un débat malvenu à quatre mois des élections pour la chancelière Angela Merkel et son ministre de la Défense, Thomas de Maiziere.

 

Dans un communiqué commun, EADS et Northrop Grumman assurent qu'ils poursuivent les travaux avec l'Allemagne dans le but de résoudre tous les problèmes.

 

"L'équipe présentera un projet bon marché et réalisable pour mener à bien les tests de vol de l'appareil initial et la production éventuelle du système complet de quatre appareils supplémentaires", explique le communiqué.

 

Ils ont qualifié d'"inexactes" les informations selon lesquelles le système de contrôle en vol du drone serait défectueux et son coût de certification excessif.

 

Des estimations réalisées par le gouvernement estiment entre 500 et 600 millions d'euros les dépenses à engager pour obtenir la certification du drone en Europe, sans garantie que ce feu vert soit obtenu.

 

Le ministère allemand de la Défense s'est refusé à tout commentaire sur le communiqué d'EADS et Northrop.

 

Berlin avait prévu un budget de 1,2 milliard d'euros pour l'achat et le développement de ces drones.

 

L'Allemagne n'est pas le seul pays d'Europe dans lequel les drones posent problème: en France, le ministre de la Défense, Jean-Yves Le Drian, a annoncé la semaine dernière avoir engagé des discussions avec les Etats-Unis et Israël pour l'achat de drones de surveillance, jugeant que "la France a raté le rendez-vous des drones".

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27 mai 2013 1 27 /05 /mai /2013 18:50
EuroHawk GmbH, Northrop Grumman and EADS Statement on the Euro Hawk Program

FALLS CHURCH, Va. – May 27, 2013 GLOBE NEWSWIRE

 

EuroHawk GmbH, Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE:NOC) and EADS have released the following statement on the Euro Hawk program:

 

    "EuroHawk GmbH, Northrop Grumman and EADS remain fully committed to the Euro Hawk program of record, and the critical capabilities the system will provide the German armed forces and its allies.

 

    "The full Euro Hawk system, including the mission control system and the sensor, has performed flawlessly and safely throughout the entire flight test program.

 

    "Media reports that indicate there are challenges with the aircraft's flight control system, as well as excessive costs associated with completing airworthiness certification, are inaccurate.

 

    "EuroHawk GmbH will continue to work with the customer to address any concerns they may have with the system; and the team will provide an affordable and achievable plan to complete flight testing of the initial asset and the eventual production and fielding of the full system of four additional aircraft."

 

Northrop Grumman is a leading global security company providing innovative systems, products and solutions in unmanned systems, cyber, C4ISR, and logistics and modernization to government and commercial customers worldwide. Please visit www.northropgrumman.com for more information.

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27 mai 2013 1 27 /05 /mai /2013 11:35
Northrop adds Australian suppliers

CANBERRA, Australia, May 24 (UPI)

 

Three Australian companies have joined Northrop Grumman's global supply chain network, gaining $7.4 million in contracts.

 

The U.S. company said the companies selected under the Australian Defense and Materiel Organization's Global Supply Chain Program are Electro Optic Systems, CEA Technologies and Insitec.

 

Those companies, with expertise in aerospace hardware and software, will supply a variety of products and services for Northrop programs.

 

"Northrop Grumman's commitment to Australia is underscored by genuine and direct investment in the Australian economy," said David Perry, vice president and chief global business development officer, Northrop Grumman.

 

"EOS, CEA Technologies and Insitec represent Australia's vibrant defense industry and are key additions to our Australian industry team.

 

"Each of these relationships strengthens our ability to deliver products and services critical to maintaining the national security of the United States, Australia and our allies.

 

"We look forward to further expanding our global supply chain and to future investment in Australia's defense, aerospace and space sector," he said.

 

Northrop Grumman and the Australian Department of Defense in 2011 agreed to cooperate to identify opportunities in which Australian industry could work with the company.

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24 mai 2013 5 24 /05 /mai /2013 19:50
Crédits Northrop Grumman

Crédits Northrop Grumman

24/05/2013 Fabrice Gliszczynski – LaTribune.fr

 

Les deux Airbus ACJ319 (version jet d'affaires des A319) utilisés par la chancelière Angela Merkel sur les vols court-courriers seront équipés d'un système de protection contre les attaques de missiles. Les appareils disposeront d'un système de « contre-mesures » conçu par Northrop Grumman.

 

Les deux Airbus ACJ319 (version jet d'affaires des A319) utilisés par la chancelière Angela Merkel pour des vols court et moyen-courriers (elle dispose d'autres appareils notamment un A340 pour les long-couriers) seront équipés d'un système de protection contre les attaques de missiles. Les appareils disposeront d'un système de « contre-mesures » conçu par Northrop Grumman, a indiqué le département de la Défense américain, cité par Bloomberg. « Lorsqu'un missile est tiré, il est autoguidé par le rayonnement infrarouge de l'avion. Si ce dernier tourne, le missile le suit. Un système de contre-mesures est un système électronique qui perturbe le rayonnement infrarouge de l'avion que le missile ne comprend pas », explique un expert interrogé par La Tribune.

 

Un contrat à 26 millions de dollars

 

L'installation sur les avions allemands sera finalisée d'ici au 31 mars 2016. Le contrat s'élève à 26 millions de dollars. L'A330 du chef de l'Etat français dispose lui aussi de systèmes de contre-mesures. Interrogé, Airbus n'a pas fait de commentaires. Northrop Grumman a déjà signé des contrats similaires pour équiper les appareils des chefs d'Etat omanais et qatarien. L'Arabie saoudite ou le Maroc ont également un tel équipement. Ce système peut déjouer tout type de missiles, selon le groupe industriel.

 

En 2002, deux missiles tirés depuis le sol avaient visé un Boeing B757 de la compagnie charter israélienne Arkia Israeli Airlines lors de son décollage de Mombasa, au Kénya. Le tir avait manqué sa cible et l'avion avait poursuivi sa route. En 2003, un Airbus A300 de DHL avait été touché par un missile sol-air alors qu'il se trouvait à moins de 3000 mètres d'altitude, et avait dû se poser en urgence à Bagdad

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24 mai 2013 5 24 /05 /mai /2013 16:20
MQ-4C Triton UAV photo Northrop Grumman

MQ-4C Triton UAV photo Northrop Grumman

 

 

23/05/2013 by Paul Fiddian - Armed Forces International's Lead Reporter

 

First unveiled in mid-2012, Northrop Grumman's MQ-4C Triton UAV has now made its first flight. Carried out on 22 May 2013, the first Triton UAV flight lasted approximately 90 minutes and serve to validate the drone's autonomous flight control systems.

 

Triton is a specialised surveillance UAV with a 24 hour endurance and a 2,000 nautical mile field of coverage. Equipped with an array of state-of-the-art sensors, it can spot and identify ships whilst loitering ten miles above the surface of the Earth.

 

Triton has a 130 foot wingspan, making it wider than some commercial airliners. Thanks to its high-performance engine technology, supplemented by other aerodynamic elements, Triton can undertake 11,500 mile sorties without the need to refuel.

 

Triton First Flight

 

"Triton is the most advanced intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance unmanned aircraft system ever designed for use across vast ocean areas and coastal regions", deputy Triton programme director at Northrop Grumman, Mike Mackey, explained in a company press release on the UAV's first flight. "Through a cooperative effort with the Navy and our industry partners, we successfully demonstrated the flight control systems that allow Triton to operate autonomously. We couldn't be prouder of the entire team for this achievement."

 

"First flight represents a critical step in maturing Triton's systems before operationally supporting the Navy's maritime surveillance mission around the world", added Naval Air Systems Command's Triton programme manager, Captain James Hoke. "Replacing our aging surveillance aircraft with a system like Triton will allow us to monitor ocean areas significantly larger with greater persistence."

 

MQ-4C Triton Naval UAV

 

Further MQ-4C Triton naval UAV test flights will now be undertaken in coming weeks before the prototype is delivered to NAS Patuxent River in late 2013 to begin a new series of trials.

 

Just last week, Australia emerged as a potential Triton purchaser, with the country's Defence Minister Stephen Smith announcing a desire to acquire "unmanned aircraft capable of undertaking broad-area maritime surveillance and fleet overwatch."

 

In Royal Australian Air Force service, the Triton would partner up with the Boeing P-8A Poseidon to create a double-edged maritime patrol capability.

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24 mai 2013 5 24 /05 /mai /2013 16:20
Triton's First Flight

5/22/2013 Strategy Page

 

PALMDALE, Calif. (May 22, 2013) The Northrop Grumman-built Triton unmanned aircraft system completed its first flight from the company's manufacturing facility in Palmdale, Calif. The one an a half hour flight successfully demonstrated control systems that allow Triton to operate autonomously. Triton is specially designed to fly surveillance missions up to 24 hours at altitudes of more than 10 miles, allowing coverage out to 2,000 nautical miles. The system's advanced suite of sensors can detect and automatically classify different types of ships. U.S. Navy photo courtesy of Northrop Grumman by Bob Brown

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