PICTURES: Saab reveals
Global ambition with updated Swordfish
11 MAY, 2017 - SOURCE:
FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM - BY: CRAIG HOYLE - STOCKHOLM
Saab has dramatically enhanced its
Swordfish maritime patrol aircraft, adding increased capability for the
anti-submarine warfare and maritime-strike roles.
Revealing the company's updated
Swordfish design on 10 May, head of marketing and sales for airborne ISR
Emilien Saindon said the heavily adapted business jet – using Bombardier's
Global 6000 airframe – would have greater weapons carrying ability than the
design announced in February 2016.
Four under-wing pylons will each
carry a maximum load of 770kg (1,700lb), he says, enabling the platform to
deploy stores including Eurotorp MU90 torpedoes and Saab RBS15 Mk3 anti-ship
missiles. By using a twin-round pylon on the inboard station, the aircraft will
be able to carry six torpedoes, with no need for an internal weapons bay.
Referring to the increased
offensive load, Saab's director, marketing and sales for the product, Gary
Shand, says it is "no longer the Achilles heel of this aircraft". The
updates have been made following discussion with potential customers for the
system, the company says.
For anti-submarine warfare
operations, the Global 6000 also gains a magnetic anomaly detection boom and an
increased sonobuoy carriage and dispenser fit.
Saindon points to high demand
for maritime patrol aircraft capability in the Asia-Pacific region as holding
particular interest for the company, and confirms that it is focusing its
promotional activities on the Global 6000. It has previously also proposed the
Swordfish system for potential integration with the Bombardier Q400 and Saab
2000 twin-turboprops.
Saab says it could deliver an
operational aircraft within about three years of signing a deal with a
customer. The Swordfish offering benefits from 70% commonality with the
company's Global Eye airborne early warning, land and maritime surveillance
system, which is in development for the United Arab Emirates and also uses the
Global 6000 airframe.
Saindon says Saab has seen
"a huge amount of interest in the product", and is in discussions
with a number of potential customers. The company refers to a 12h flight
endurance at up to 37,000ft, with the Swordfish able to remain on station for
7.5h at 5,000ft while 1,000nm (1,850km) away from its operating base without
carrying external stores.
Saab claims that its design will
cost 70% of a Boeing 737-based P-8, but offers a 50% saving in lifecycle costs.
"We see this aircraft as the smart alternative to the P-8," says
Shand.
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