Du har sett mange ganger Ares på flightradar24. Den jobber jevnt og trutt over Baltikum ned til Svartehavet. HADES er beregnet for større avstander, altså større dekningsområde.
På flightradar24 akkurat nå kl 1125, , kan du se bildet under:
(Red.)
Bombardier wins US Army contract for new spy plane
prototype
By Jen Judson
Jan 3, 07:05 PM
The U.S. Army has awarded a contract to Bombardier for its Global 6500 business aircraft to serve as the airframe for its HADES spy plane prototype. (Courtesy of Bombardier Defense)
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Army awarded a contract to
Bombardier Defense to provide at least one Global 6500 aircraft to serve as a
prototype airframe for a new spy plane program, the service announced
Wednesday.
The firm-fixed-price contract, awarded Dec. 12,
includes an option to purchase two additional aircraft over a three-year
period. The first aircraft’s delivery date is set for Oct. 1, the statement
noted.
The High Accuracy Detection and Exploitation
System, or HADES, will be the first intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance aircraft in the Army that uses a large-cabin business jet with
advanced deep-sensing capabilities, according to the service.
The new aircraft will bring “increased range,
speed, endurance and aerial [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance]
depth,” Col. Joe Minor, the Army’s project manager for fixed-wing aircraft,
said in the statement.
“HADES will operate at higher altitudes than
legacy turboprop platforms. Higher altitudes equate to an ability to sense
farther and more persistently into areas of interest,” he added. “Deep sensing
is the Army’s number-one operational imperative for the Army of 2030.”
The Army is revamping its
aerial reconnaissance and electronic warfare arsenals as it moves away from its
aging Guardrail turboprop planes to better prepare for potential large-scale
conflict with Russia and China. The service wants a plane with much greater
duration, speed and payload capacity that can see, detect and target threats
from farther distances.
Leading up to the HADES program of record, the
Army has built and extensively flown technology demonstrators. Those spy planes
have logged nearly
1,000 sorties in the European and Indo-Pacific theaters.
Two more demonstrator aircraft are expected to deploy in 2024.
The service built and deployed two aerial ISR
demonstrators beginning in 2020 known as Artemis and Ares. Artemis has flown more
than 600 sorties in support of U.S. European Command’s
operations; Ares has flown 300 sorties in the Indo-Pacific.
The Pentagon has expressed a need to be able to
engage China at a distance. That requires a certain type of asset that can
perform the mission at a long range.
Artemis — or Aerial Reconnaissance and Targeting
Exploitation Multi-Mission Intelligence System — uses a Bombardier Challenger
650 aircraft. The Army in 2019 awarded a contract to HII, and the company
subsequently awarded a subcontract to Leidos to build the aircraft.
Ares — or Airborne Reconnaissance and Electronic
Warfare System – uses a Bombardier Global Express 6500 aircraft. Alion Science
and Technology, now owned by HII, won a contract to build the aircraft in 2020
and then awarded a subcontract to L3Harris Technologies to execute the work.
The Bombardier Global Express 6500 is bigger than
the Challenger 650. The larger platform provides the Army with longer ranges
and higher altitudes, both of which are considered key capabilities in the
Pacific region.
Two additional Athena aircraft — a radar variant
and a signals intelligence version — will join the force and deploy in 2024
ahead of HADES. MAG Aerospace
and L3Harris are teaming up to outfit a Bombardier Global
6500 with ISR sensors for the radar variant; Sierra Nevada
will provide the signals intellience aircraft with its RAPCON-X sensor
package.
“When you think of long-range fires, the
additional word is precision. Precision implies that you need a target. If
you’re going to have a target, you need to be able to surveil the area and to
identify a target of interest,” Steve Patrick, Bombardier Defense’s vice
president, told Defense News in an interview last month.
“The way that we view the problem set is not to
have a single solution for a single problem,” he added, “but have a solution
that can satisfy multiple problems, that is redeployable across the globe very
quickly, that can be pivoted to where the current crisis is.”
The Army said last year that the first phase of
the HADES program will include two different aircraft with different sensor
packages.
Program Executive Office Aviation is taking the
contract lead for the HADES program, while PEO Intelligence, Electronic Warfare
and Sensors will work to acquire payloads for platforms chosen for the program.
In September 2022, the Army awarded
L3Harris and Raytheon’s Applied Signal Technology contracts to develop sensors
for HADES. At least one team has formed ahead of the HADES program competition:
L3Harris, Leidos and MAG Aerospace announced in October they were teaming up
for the effort.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.