Boeing tapped for P-8A
upgrade as AAS and Harpoon move forward
13 JANUARY, 2016 BY: JAMES
DREW WASHINGTON DC
Boeing will
receive a work package from the US Navy to design and incorporate “Increment 3
Block 2” improvements into the P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft,
according to a contracting announcement released on 11 January.
The P-8A was declared operational
in 2013, and advanced communications, sensors and weapons capabilities are
bring rolled out in three phases, with increments one and two already under
way.
This third phase, which targets
initial operational capability in 2020, will broadly improve the P-8A’s ability
to detect and target submarines and surface vessels as well as its signals
intelligence and networking capabilities, the navy says.
The more
straightforward tasks are bring incorporated into Block I, and more intricate
modifications are being delivered in Block II. According to thenotice, Block II will be
sole-sourced to Boeing, with work commencing in the third quarter of fiscal
year 2016 for completion in mid-2018.
US Navy
Progress on Increment 3 comes as
the navy nears initial production and fielding of the Raytheon AN/APS-154
Advanced Airborne Sensor (AAS), an evolution of the APS-149 Littoral
Surveillance Radar System radar that provides a more sensitive, next-generation
system for identifying and targeting threats on land and at sea.
Naval Air Systems Command
disclosed on 30 December that flight trials of the sensor have proceeded
successfully since the maiden flight on the P-8A in May. “Successful testing of
AAS on the P-8A is a significant milestone, enabling production decisions and
leading up to the initial deployment of AAS,” the statement says.
An
F/A-18 carrying the new Harpoon Block II+ on 18 November
US Navy
The navy also announced that the
first successful end-to-end free flight of the network-enabled Boeing AGM-84N
Harpoon Block II+ over-the-horizon anti-ship missile has taken place, launched
from a Boeing F/A-18 at the Point Mugu sea range in California on 18 November.
Improvements to the Harpoon
introduce a common datalink and new GPS guidance system, and it is a candidate
weapon for the Poseidon as new networking capabilities are introduced.
The navy is buying 117 P-8As,
Flightglobal's Fleets Analyzer database shows. The aircraft is also operated by
India and Australia, while the UK has announced that it intends to acquire nine
of the 737-derived type.
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