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View Full Version : Boeing awarded $9.5 B Contract



He219
12-30-2003, 03:49 PM
http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/images/2002/10/18/image526173x.jpg

The EA-18G will be capable of self-protection, freeing up dedicated escort aircraft for strikes and other missions. It will be able to rapidly locate and destroy surface-to-air missiles.


Boeing Wins $9.5 B Navy Contract (http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/12/30/national/main590763.shtml)

(AP) The Navy awarded Boeing Co. a roughly $9.6 billion contract to supply 210 additional F/A-18 Super Hornets jet fighters and to design the EA-18G airborne electronic attack aircraft.

Under the contract, announced Monday by Boeing's St. Louis-based defense division, the Navy will buy 42 aircraft in each of the fiscal years 2005 through 2009. The deal gives the Navy the flexibility to increase the number by as many as six per year.

The five-year design-and-development program for the EA-18G runs from fiscal year 2004 until early fiscal year 2009.

This is the second multiyear contract for the Super Hornet program, which already has produced 170 of the aircraft for the Navy. The first contract calls for the production of up to 222 Super Hornets and ends next year.

The EA-18G will be capable of self-protection, freeing up dedicated escort aircraft for strikes and other missions. It will be able to rapidly locate and destroy surface-to-air missiles.

The deal with the Navy comes even as Boeing is being investigated by the Pentagon over its recruitment of an Air Force official while she was overseeing the company's contracts.

The Pentagon has postponed plans to lease 20 air refueling tankers from Boeing and buy an additional 80 while its internal auditors examine that deal. Boeing last month fired the former Air Force official, Darleen Druyun, and the chief financial officer, Michael Sears, who had approached Druyun about working for Boeing. The scandal has also led to the resignation of Boeing's chairman and chief executive, Phil Condit.

Go Growlers (http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/aircraft/f-18g.htm).....
p-)

DE_Six
12-30-2003, 03:58 PM
Thanks for posting :)

With the multiplication of SA threats, a combined EW/SEAD capability will see a lot of use.

Enters the "Growler"!

He219
12-30-2003, 04:04 PM
Prowler Pilots must be happy right now....

:D

Midav
12-30-2003, 05:00 PM
Cool!

Is the air force still going to rely on the navy, or eventually get their own EW aircraft (again)?

Any thoughts to an EF-15 maybe? Or possibly even on the frame of the F/A-22 some years down the road?

Falco
12-30-2003, 07:00 PM
Cool!

Is the air force still going to rely on the navy, or eventually get their own EW aircraft (again)?

Any thoughts to an EF-15 maybe? Or possibly even on the frame of the F/A-22 some years down the road?Isn't that requirement already fulfilled by the F16CJ "Wildweasel"

DE_Six
12-30-2003, 07:11 PM
The F-16CJ is purely SEAD-oriented. Its ASQ-123 pod is slaved to the HARM missiles. It doesn't carry EW pods other than the self-defense ALQ- series pods.
The Growler will be both SEAD and EW capable, which means it will be equipped with jammers. The AF has no proprietary jamming capacity since the retirement of the EF-111 Raven in the mid-90s. Since then, they have relied on the Navy and Marines' EA-6 Prowlers.

usa320
12-30-2003, 07:47 PM
Indeed.

I think the AIr Force Should convert some F-16D or F-15D/E models to the EW role.

IMHO they never shoulda retired the raven, and i dont think the navy shoulda retired the intruder either.

Falco
12-30-2003, 08:17 PM
Dont you think that if the air force was so badly in need of an EW aircraft that they would have it? In the last major air operations, USAF aircrafts and carrierborne aircraft were operating together.

He219
12-31-2003, 12:06 AM
http://image2.sina.com.cn/jc/2003-12-26/U31P27T1D173727F3DT20031226133945.jpg

The tests used an F/A-18F Super Hornet to carry ALQ-99 jamming pods and fuel tanks while measuring noise and vibration data and assessing aircraft flying qualities. Boeing teammate, Northrop Grumman, instrumented the ALQ-99 jamming pods to gather the noise and vibration information.


The EA-18 will perform full-spectrum electronic surveillance and electronic attack of enemy threat radars and communications nets. A derivative of the two-seat F/A-18F Super Hornet - a platform which is in production today - the EA-18 leverages the U.S. Navy's investment in the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet platform and Northrop Grumman's Improved Capability III radar receiver system, which represents a significantly reduced risk approach over other unproven platforms and systems.

The EA-18 is 99 percent common with the Super Hornet and is expected to significantly reduce support and training costs for the U.S. Navy.

http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2001/q4/nr_011115n.htm
http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/q2/nr_020408m.htm
http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/q3/nr_020826m.html

28.8 Video (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea_18_1a_288.ram)
56 Video (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea_18_1a_56.ram)
200 Video (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea_18_1a_200.ram)
4.5 MB Quicktime Video (http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/fa18ef/video/ea_18_1a.mov)
10 MB mpeg Video (http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/fa18ef/video/ea_18_1a.mpg)



http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/photorelease/q2/c22-656-6.gif
Hi-Res (http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/photorelease/q2/pr_020408m.htm)

28.8 Video 1 (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea_18_3_288.ram)
56 Video 1 (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea_18_3_56.ram)
200 Video 1 (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea_18_3_200.ram)
4.5 MB Quicktime Video 1 (http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/video/ea_18_3.mov)
10 MB mpeg Video 1 (http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/video/ea_18_3.mpg)

http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/photorelease/q3/c22-658-8.gif
Hi-Res (http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2002/photorelease/q3/pr_020826m.html)

28.8 Video 2 (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea18_004_288.ram)
56 Video 2 (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea18_004_56.ram)
200 Video 2 (http://video.boeing.com:8080/ram/events/ea18_004_200.ram)
4.5 MB Quicktime Video 2 (http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/fa18ef/video/ea18_004.mov)
10 MB mpeg Video 2 (http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/military/fa18ef/video/ea18_004.mpg)



The EA-18G will provide the warfighter with an abundance of operational flexibility. It can carry up to five ALQ-99 jamming pods and will typically add one to two AIM-120 self-defense missiles and one to two AGM-88 High Speed Anti-Radiation missiles. The EA-18G has a high degree of commonality with the F/A-18F Super Hornet and is expected to significantly reduce support and training costs for the U.S. Navy’s carrier electronic attack community. Combining two proven systems, the F/A-18F and the Improved Capability III upgrade, enables the U.S. Navy to leverage ongoing investments and allows an initial operational capability in 2009.
http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/0/15F289A90B6926B385256E060044F737?opendocument