Boeing B-52H gets new
radar under $500M modernisation plan
18 FEBRUARY, 2016 - BY: JAMES
DREW - WASHINGTON DC
The US Air Force wants to spend more
than $500 million replacing the outdated Northrop Grumman AN/APQ-166
mechanically scanned array radar on its 53-year-old Boeing B-52H fleet.
The old battlewagon, which
ceased production in 1962, will not retire anytime soon, but needs a
replacement radar if it is to continue supporting nuclear and conventional
missions, says USAF deputy chief of staff for strategic plans and requirements
Lt Gen Mike Holmes.
“It provides missions for us
that are hard to replicate, primarily the range and payload,” Holmes said at an
Air Force Association forum in Washington DC on 18 February. “The radar
currently flying on the B-52 is limited by its mean time between failure.
“It’s an old radar. It doesn’t
have the reliability we’d like to have, and if you’re flying long-duration
missions and you get to a two-digit mean time between failure, it means you’re
flying around with a broken radar a lot.”
US Air Force
The proposed B-52 Radar
Modernisation Programme (RMP) receives $491 million across the air force’s
latest five-year spending plan, unveiled 9 February, and even more money is
needed beyond 2021.
It accounts for 71% of proposed
B-52H modernisation spending through fiscal year 2021, which totals $691
million.
Holmes says the air force is still working through its radar acquisition strategy, but will most likely modify existing radar technologies and components to suit the B-52H instead of developing something new.
Holmes says the air force is still working through its radar acquisition strategy, but will most likely modify existing radar technologies and components to suit the B-52H instead of developing something new.
The air force has already
replaced the legacy Northrop APQ-164 radar on the Boeing/Rockwell B-1B and has
long considered doing the same for the APQ-166 on the B-52. A re-engining
programme is also being considered to replace the B-52’s eight Pratt & Whitney TF33s (JT3Ds) turbofan engines,
but that effort has not been funded.
US Air Force
According to the current radar
plan, an analysis of alternatives will be completed in 2017 ahead of technology
maturation and prototyping in preparation for a competition in 2019, according
to budget documents.
If
approved by Congress, 76 of the strategic bombers will receive new radars. Last
week, Holmes
expressed concern that the air force's wide-ranging nuclear modernisation
plans, which includes development of the Northrop "B-3" or Long-Range
Strike Bomber, become unmanageable in 2022 and beyond and will need to be
considered by the next US government administration.
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