US awards Lockheed Martin $35bn contract for missile interceptors
The United States has awarded Lockheed Martin with a $35 billion contract for the accelerated production of missile interceptors. ...
US approves US$250m training package to support Australia’s Super Hornet, Growler fleets
The United States has approved a potential foreign military sale to Australia valued at approximately US$250 million ($362.3 milli...
PODCAST: Defence export ambitions, drone technology and defence manufacturing hubs
Questions remain around how Australia can grow sovereign capability while responding to evolving strategic challenges. ...
Defence Delivery Agency will bring significant reform not past mistakes, pledges Conroy
Australian defence industry minister Pat Conroy has pledged that the upcoming Defence Delivery Agency will promote significant ref...

Northrop Grumman downselected for F-16 program

Air
|
By: Reporter
Northrop Grumman downselected for F-16 program

The prime has been tasked with supporting the development of electronic warfare capability for the US Air Force’s F-16 fleet.

The prime has been tasked with supporting the development of electronic warfare capability for the US Air Force’s F-16 fleet.

Northrop Grumman has signed an agreement with the US Air Force to complete the final project efforts to supply the electronic warfare suite for its F-16 fighter (Viper) aircraft fleet.

The project is designed to protect pilots from the threat of radio frequency-guided weapons by detecting, identifying and defeating advanced threat systems.

 
 

According to Northrop, the electronic warfare system provides full-spectrum radar warning, threat identification and advanced countermeasure capabilities, and has proven pulse-to-pulse operability with the F-16’s newly acquired AN/APG-83 Scalable Agile Beam Radar (SABR).

The e-suite leverages an open-systems, ultra-wideband architecture, designed to provide greater instantaneous bandwidth needed to defeat modern threats.

“The electronic warfare suite will significantly increase protection to F-16 operators as they execute their missions in increasingly contested environments,” Ryan Tintner, Northrop Grumman’s vice president, navigation, targeting and survivability, said.

“This system draws on the best of our experience from multiple programs to create an effective and affordable solution to keep the Viper relevant throughout its service life.”

[Related: Northrop Grumman completes Global Hawk modernisation]

Want to see more stories from trusted news sources?
Make Defence Connect a preferred news source on Google.
Click here to add Defence Connect as a preferred news source.

Tags: