Lockheed to upgrade F-22 fleet with infrared
threat-detection sensors
By Ryan Finnerty24 January 2025
Lockheed Martin’s vaunted F-22 air superiority fighter is set to
receive a new passive threat-detection system meant to increase survivability.
The military airframer received a $270 million contract from the US Air
Force on 22 January to upgrade the F-22 fleet with the company’s new Infrared
Defensive System (IRDS).
Based on Lockheed’s existing Tactical Infrared Search and Track
(TacIRST) system, the IRDS will use a distributed network of sensor heads,
embedded in F-22 fuselages, to passively identify and track airborne objects
via heat signature. Each sensor will be flush with the jet’s airframe,
maintaining the aircraft’s critical stealthy profile.
Source: US Air Force
The US Air Force
is the only F-22 operator in the world, with 178 in service. Upgrading the
hyper-manoeuvrable air superiority fighter has recently gained new importance,
with plans to develop a successor now in doubt due to cost concerns
This could be similar to the Distributed Aperture System carried by
Lockheed F-35s. That system includes a network of fuselage-mounted cameras that
allow pilots to virtually “see” through aircraft structures and view
surrounding environments. The system can also detect and track incoming
threats.
Notably, the infrared detection method used by the IRDS is not susceptible to jamming or disruption via electronic warfare, unlike active detection measures like radar.
“We understand the need for advanced and versatile infrared systems
like IRDS that will make pilots’ missions more survivable and lethal against
current and future adversaries,” says Hank Tucker, Lockheed’s vice-president of
missions systems.
Lockheed unveiled the TacIRST system on which the F-22’s IRDS is based
in 2022. The demonstrations saw two privately-operated Northrop F-5 fighters
owned by adversary air provider Tactical Air Support fitted with nose-mounted TacIRST systems,
rather than earlier podded sensors.
This configuration featured a fixed field of view, as opposed to the
distributed aperture system being fielded on the F-22, which presumably will
offer broader search angles.
Infrared detection capability has become increasingly important in
recent years, as the USA’s dominance in the production of stealth aircraft has
eroded. Geopolitical adversaries are producing and fielding low-observable
fighters, including China’s Chengdu J-20 and Russia’s Sukhoi Su-57.
China in December 2024 unveiled two new designs about which
little is known. Both appear to include low-observability features such
internal weapons bays and sleek, blended fuselages and no vertical stabilisers.
Infrared detection systems may be key to identifying such aircraft,
depending on the effectiveness of their stealth technology. Manufacturers are
also pitching the sensors as a means of detecting small cruise missiles, which
have featured prominently in the Russia-Ukraine war and recent hostilities near the Red Sea.
IRST systems have been available in podded form for several
years, including a Lockheed-made system carried by Boeing F/A-18E/F Super
Hornets, Boeing F-15Cs and Lockheed F-16s.
Adversary air
provider Top Aces in 2024 fielded a Leonardo-made
IRST sensor on its private fleet of F-16s – the only such fleet in the world.
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