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Raytheon Awarded Navy Contract to Increase SHARP System Capability

File photo: An F-18 aircraft equiped with the SHARP system.
by Staff Writers
Indianapolis IN (SPX) Oct 05, 2006
Raytheon Technical Services has been awarded a $5.6 million contract by the U.S. Navy to conduct the Shared Reconnaissance Pod (SHARP) Target Cuing System (TCS) program. The enhanced capability provided through this effort will significantly increase the mission effectiveness of the SHARP system and reduce the workload of image analysts.

SHARP provides U.S. Navy carrier-based air wings with high-resolution, digital tactical air reconnaissance that features advanced day/night and all-weather capability. With the TCS upgrade, the system's tactical imaging sensor will deliver more refined information to the image analyst. By reducing the amount of manual labor required of the analyst to make identifications, specific targets can be more quickly located and action taken.

Under the contract, RTSC will manage all aspects of the TCS program, including selection and acquisition of the sensors, design integration, manufacture of an upgraded pod design, and coordination of flight testing for the system on an F/A-18E/F aircraft. The principal work will be performed at RTSC's Indianapolis facility, with support from the Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division, China Lake, and the Space Dynamics Laboratory in Logan, Utah. The Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River, Md., is the contracting activity.

"Over the life of the SHARP program, Raytheon's responsibilities have evolved to becoming the sole-source producer of the SHARP pod and the integrator of the SHARP system," said John Balaguer, RTSC vice president and general manager of RTSC's Indianapolis-based business unit. "Increasing that role to include the management of the TCS program enables Raytheon to further focus on ensuring F/A-18E/F mission success through the enhanced capabilities that will result from this SHARP upgrade. We will continue to work with the Navy and the SHARP team to proactively provide additional capability and advanced solutions that will ensure the system is prepared to meet the challenges of the future."

SHARP replaces the current Carrier Air Wing tactical reconnaissance capability provided by the film-based F-14 TARPS (Tactical Air Reconnaissance Pod System). Fleet introduction of the SHARP system on the F/A-18F Super Hornet began with early operational capability on the USS Nimitz (CVN 68) in 2003. Recently, the pod has been successfully flown as part of a rapid-deployment initiative in support of fielded operations.

The RTSC-designed pod incorporates a rotating mid-section to optimize coverage, to protect the window by allowing stowage under the strongback, and to reduce the size and life-cycle expense of large fixed windows. The pod's design also provides mobility -- it mounts on a bomb rack like a smart weapon -- allowing for more flexibility in reconnaissance mission planning. Although the initial systems employ electro-optical/infrared sensors for use on the F/A-18E/F aircraft, the pod design is readily adaptable to many sensor payloads on a wide range of aircraft.

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Raytheon Delivers First Excalibur Production Rounds To The US Army
Tucson AZ (SPX) Oct 10, 2006
The Raytheon Missile Systems and BAE Systems Bofors' Excalibur team delivered the first production Excalibur global positioning system-guided 155 mm artillery rounds to the U.S. Army Sept. 19, paving the way for the next series of testing required to field the weapon in theater early next year. Final assembly of the projectiles occurred at the McAlester Army Ammunition Plant in McAlester, Okla.







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