Super Hornet News

Assuntos em discussão: Força Aérea Brasileira, forças aéreas estrangeiras e aviação militar.

Moderadores: Glauber Prestes, Conselho de Moderação

Mensagem
Autor
Flávio Rocha Vieira
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 1663
Registrado em: Dom Dez 30, 2007 5:49 pm
Localização: Araruama-RJ
Agradeceram: 2 vezes

Re: Super Hornet News

#3796 Mensagem por Flávio Rocha Vieira » Dom Ago 23, 2009 1:56 am

Carlos Mathias escreveu:
E acho que nosso governo está sabendo conduzir a questão, está sabendo reagir sob pressão
Quem está pressionando?
Reagir sob pressão ou deveríamos chutar quem ousa nos pressionar numa questão soberana?

Ainda não chegamos lá meu caro, ainda não. :wink:
As pressões, agradáveis ou não (se é que existem pressões agradáveis), fazem parte de qualquer negociação. Cada um usa as armas que tem, ou acha que tem, para atingir o objetivo. Cabe, da nossa parte, soberanamente, dizer sim ou não e ponto. E o mais importante é saber fazer isso sem chutar o pau da barraca. Li uma vez uma frase de um conhecido empresário (que de certa forma vai transmitir minha opinião) que dizia mais ou menos assim: "Homens de negócio não ficam chateados, ficar chateado é para casal de namorados."
Temos que ser soberanos e profissionais, se não o mundo nos engole, mais cedo ou mais tarde.

Um fraternal abraço,




.'.
"... E, obviamente, esses meios de comunicação estão fazendo de fato a posição oposicionista deste país, já que a oposição está profundamente fragilizada. ... "

Maria Judith Brito, Presidente da ANJ (Associação Nacional de Jornais).
Carlos Mathias

Re: Super Hornet News

#3797 Mensagem por Carlos Mathias » Dom Ago 23, 2009 2:04 am

"Homens de negócio não ficam chateados, ficar chateado é para casal de namorados."
Essa é a raiz de toda a avaliação equivocada (sob minha ótica) da situação atual, pensar que são "negócios" quando se trata de política, diplomacia, geoestratégia, tudo menos negócios; e quando se negocia sobre estas bases, fica-se muito, mas muito chateado mesmo, e as vezes por pouca coisa, que dirá por pressões indevidas!




Flávio Rocha Vieira
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 1663
Registrado em: Dom Dez 30, 2007 5:49 pm
Localização: Araruama-RJ
Agradeceram: 2 vezes

Re: Super Hornet News

#3798 Mensagem por Flávio Rocha Vieira » Dom Ago 23, 2009 2:17 am

Carlos Mathias escreveu:
"Homens de negócio não ficam chateados, ficar chateado é para casal de namorados."
Essa é a raiz de toda a avaliação equivocada (sob minha ótica) da situação atual, pensar que são "negócios" quando se trata de política, diplomacia, geoestratégia, tudo menos negócios; e quando se negocia sobre estas bases, fica-se muito, mas muito chateado mesmo, e as vezes por pouca coisa, que dirá por pressões indevidas!
Te entendo CM, mas pretendi usar a palavra "negócios" aqui em uma conotação ampla, cabendo política, diplomacia, geoestratégia, etc. :wink:

Em tempo: Mudando de pau pra cacete o user Koslova estava a poucos minutos On Line no fórum. Pena que não mais esteja postando.

Um fraternal abraço,




.'.
"... E, obviamente, esses meios de comunicação estão fazendo de fato a posição oposicionista deste país, já que a oposição está profundamente fragilizada. ... "

Maria Judith Brito, Presidente da ANJ (Associação Nacional de Jornais).
Carlos Mathias

Re: Super Hornet News

#3799 Mensagem por Carlos Mathias » Dom Ago 23, 2009 2:18 am

Pois é, podia contribuir e muito pro fórum, mas enfim, cada cabeça uma sentença, né?
Se ela quer assim, que assim seja. :)




Flávio Rocha Vieira
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 1663
Registrado em: Dom Dez 30, 2007 5:49 pm
Localização: Araruama-RJ
Agradeceram: 2 vezes

Re: Super Hornet News

#3800 Mensagem por Flávio Rocha Vieira » Dom Ago 23, 2009 2:22 am

É isso aí parceiro. Meu amigo, vou dormir um pouco. Valeu pelo bom debate. Fique com Deus CM e até amanhã.

Um fraternal abraço,




.'.
"... E, obviamente, esses meios de comunicação estão fazendo de fato a posição oposicionista deste país, já que a oposição está profundamente fragilizada. ... "

Maria Judith Brito, Presidente da ANJ (Associação Nacional de Jornais).
Carlos Mathias

Re: Super Hornet News

#3801 Mensagem por Carlos Mathias » Dom Ago 23, 2009 2:28 am

Bom descanso! :)




Avatar do usuário
Túlio
Site Admin
Site Admin
Mensagens: 62285
Registrado em: Sáb Jul 02, 2005 9:23 pm
Localização: Tramandaí, RS, Brasil
Agradeceu: 6526 vezes
Agradeceram: 6898 vezes
Contato:

Re: Super Hornet News

#3802 Mensagem por Túlio » Dom Ago 23, 2009 9:38 am

Prestem mais atenção, a Koslova está quase todos os dias dando suas espiadinhas por aí, um dia perde a timidez e retorna ao nosso convívio... :wink:




“Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.”

P. Sullivan (Margin Call, 2011)
Carlos Mathias

Re: Super Hornet News

#3803 Mensagem por Carlos Mathias » Dom Ago 23, 2009 8:10 pm

Um dia ela sai do armário e se revela completamente prá nós. :mrgreen:




Avatar do usuário
Penguin
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 18983
Registrado em: Seg Mai 19, 2003 10:07 pm
Agradeceu: 5 vezes
Agradeceram: 374 vezes

Re: Super Hornet News

#3804 Mensagem por Penguin » Seg Ago 24, 2009 8:56 pm

Raytheon’s active electronically scanned array for the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet–planned for delivery beginning in 2005–is expected to support active and passive EW, as well as traditional X-band radar functions. The F/A-18E/F AESA will have much broader bandwidth than traditional mechanically scanned radars, says Paul Summers, Boeing’s director of F/A-18 derivative programs. The F/A-18E/F AESA includes an embedded interferometry array, which will allow target azimuth and elevation data to be collected passively.
http://www.aviationtoday.com/av/categor ... 12689.html




Sempre e inevitavelmente, cada um de nós subestima o número de indivíduos estúpidos que circulam pelo mundo.
Carlo M. Cipolla
Avatar do usuário
GDA_Fear
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 2088
Registrado em: Dom Out 26, 2008 6:55 pm
Localização: Florianópolis, SC
Agradeceram: 1 vez

Re: Super Hornet News

#3805 Mensagem por GDA_Fear » Seg Ago 24, 2009 9:52 pm

8-] 8-]




Avatar do usuário
Antunes
Intermediário
Intermediário
Mensagens: 234
Registrado em: Sex Jul 31, 2009 5:48 pm

Re: Super Hornet News

#3806 Mensagem por Antunes » Seg Ago 24, 2009 9:57 pm

Santiago escreveu:
Raytheon’s active electronically scanned array for the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet–planned for delivery beginning in 2005–is expected to support active and passive EW, as well as traditional X-band radar functions. The F/A-18E/F AESA will have much broader bandwidth than traditional mechanically scanned radars, says Paul Summers, Boeing’s director of F/A-18 derivative programs. The F/A-18E/F AESA includes an embedded interferometry array, which will allow target azimuth and elevation data to be collected passively.
http://www.aviationtoday.com/av/categor ... 12689.html
Boa noite Santiago! As informações serão coletadas passivamente se o alvo estiver emitindo ondas de radar é isso?

Abraço




"Sorte ocorre quando preparação encontra oportunidade."
Avatar do usuário
Penguin
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 18983
Registrado em: Seg Mai 19, 2003 10:07 pm
Agradeceu: 5 vezes
Agradeceram: 374 vezes

Re: Super Hornet News

#3807 Mensagem por Penguin » Ter Ago 25, 2009 1:48 pm

Antunes escreveu:
Boa noite Santiago! As informações serão coletadas passivamente se o alvo estiver emitindo ondas de radar é isso?

Abraço
Prezado Antunes,

Não há muita informação disponível sobre os modos e capacidades do APG-79.

Sabe-se que o IDECM, o AN/ALR-63(v)3 (que tb utiliza interferometria), AN/ALE-50/55, DIRCM funcionam integrados (em uma rede de fibra ótica) entre si e ao APG-79 que por sua vez pode desempenhar tarefas como ataque eletrônico, transmissão de dados e provavelmente outras.

Esse conceito de ampliar o uso do radar esteve em estudos pela Ericsson no programa NORA (not only a radar), o radar AESA do Gripen que não vingou.

Em 2007 foi publicado um artigo sobre algumas novas capacidade do APG-79. Naqueles dias muitas dessas coisas eram vistas com ceticismo. Hoje fazem sentido, ainda que envoltas em confidencialidades.

[]s

Navy Details New Super Hornet Capabilities[/b]
Aviation Week and Space Technology
http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/search/a ... 2607p2.xml


Feb 25, 2007

By David A. Fulghum

The U.S. Navy's "Advanced Super Hornet" will tie together an electronic attack system with a powerful new radar that would allow the aircraft to find, deceive and, perhaps, disable sophisticated, radar-guided air-to-air, surface-to-air and cruise missiles. Moreover, it could do so at ranges greater than that of new U.S. air-to-air and air-to-ground weapons.

Silence about these key features of the Super Hornet's advanced radar and integrated sensor package is being broken by U.S. Navy and aerospace industry officials just as the President's budget faces scrutiny by Congress. Supporters of the design say it will give the Block II Boeing-built Navy aircraft a fifth-generation capability similar to that of the F-22 Raptor and F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The Hornet's electronic attack capability could become even more sophisticated with additional modifications, says Capt. Donald Gaddis, F/A-18E/F Super Hornet program manager.

Radar-guided, air-to-air missiles that worry U.S. planners are the Chinese PL-12, which is on the brink of entering service; the Russian R-77 (AA-12 Adder); the R-27R/ER (AA-10 Alamo) family, and possibly the AA-10's R-27P/EP passive receiver variants. In the world of antiship cruise missiles, the Russians have developed RF-seeker-based antiship systems that include the Novator 3M-54 (SS-N-27) family and NPO Mashinostroenia 3M-55 (SS-NX-26), which is also the basis of the Russo-Indian Brahmos. The YJ-63 is a Chinese antiship cruise missile; Iran has the RAAD, and North Korea has a system in development known as KN-01 in U.S. intelligence circles.

Many Navy and industry planners hope that the merits of the F/A-18E/F's advanced systems, which can detect, identify and attack new classes of very small targets, will help it survive any congressional predilection to trim upgrades that are crucial to the program. Moreover, the Super Hornet equipped with a fifth-generation radar and integrated sensor suite is expected to be a tough competitor for international fighter sales. The advanced package has already resulted in a likely sale of 24 aircraft to Australia and is being pitched for large fighter buys planned by Japan and India.

The newest version of the Boeing Super Hornet, equipped with an advanced, Raytheon-built APG-79 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, can spot small targets--even stealthy cruise missiles--at ranges great enough to allow an effective defense. Navy officials are loath to talk with any detail about the metrics of electronic attacks and admit only to "extremely significant tactical ranges" for EA effects against air-to-air and surface-to-air radars, Gaddis says. However, other Pentagon and aerospace industry officials say that while air-to-air missiles are struggling to reach the 60-100-mi.-range mark, some sophisticated electronic attack effects can reach well beyond that.

"That's at least 100 mi.," says a long-time Pentagon radar specialist. "There are different forms of electronic attack, and they include putting false targets or altered ranges, speeds and positions of real targets into the enemy's radars. Those are effects that require less power than jamming and therefore are effective at longer ranges."

An industry official with insight into AESA development says that the ability to affect a foe is limited by the enemy radar's range because the signal has to be captured, manipulated and returned. Therefore, long-range ground-based radars and even AWACS radars could be electronically attacked at ranges well over 100 mi. For air-to-air and surface-to-air missiles, the techniques would be the same but the effective ranges would be shorter.

The U.S. Navy's first AESA-equipped squadron has been developing combat procedures as the unit works up to its first deployment. VFA-213, flying all two-seat F/A-18F models, already has been through training cycles at NAS Fallon, Calif.'s "Strike U."

The Navy's concept of operations is to use combinations of EA-18 Growler electronic attack and the advanced Block 2 F/A-18E/F strike aircraft to offer self-protection, almost instantaneous location and identification of targets, and a variety of forms of electronic and conventional missile attack. That entity will be part of the advanced air wing in the Carrier Strike Group of 2024.

The U.S. Air Force is considering a similar approach--subtle effects versus brute power--in its next attempt at fielding a long-range, standoff jammer to protect its stealth aircraft fleet (AW&ST Jan. 22, p. 47) It's expected that advanced electronic warfare operations, including communications and network invasion and exploitation, may eventually be part of the Air Force's and Navy's capability. However, that's some years off and subject to budget realities.

Critics from within the electronic warfare community are concerned that jamming capabilities in fighter-size AESA radars have been over-sold on two counts. First, they contend that the radar's frequency band is small, so the target it affects would be limited. Second, concerns have been voiced that liquid cooling of the arrays isn't sufficient for creating a sustained, high-power jamming signal for more than a second without damaging the radar.

"The F-22's radar is already up against its duty cycle [sustained emission] limits with just finding targets," says a senior Air Force official. However, industry officials with knowledge of the Northrop Grumman radar say overheating problems with early versions of the sensor have been overcome with redesign of transmitter/receiver modules.

Critical for development of the "next generation," or Block II, Super Hornet and the ability to keep it militarily relevant as a "first day of the war" warplane beyond 2024 are a number of items in the President's budget now before the U.S. Congress, Gaddis says.

Three years of warfighting analyses by the Navy have produced a system of updates called "The Flight Plan," he says. Segments include upgrading the aircraft with a distributed targeting processor, integrating the sensors, and improving communication links for network-centric operations.

Once the AESA radar's operational evaluation is officially ended, the only other system needing op eval will be the ALE-55 fiber-optic towed decoy. Other systems are completed and in full-rate production, including the ALQ-214 jammer, ALE-47 chaff/flare dispenser and the advanced crew station in the cockpit's decoupled back seat. The weapon systems officer has the mission of maintaining situational awareness in the battlespace with user-friendly controls for the aircraft's advanced displays and sensors. The next step for the Super Hornet program is to integrate those systems and make the collected sensor information available to those in the battlespace through a common operational tactical picture.

"For example, our ALR-67(v)3 radar warning receiver is going to be delivered with a digitally cued receiver," Gaddis says. "We'll be able to pick up some different waveforms that we've not been able to capture before." Industry specialists say that means finding combinations of frequencies and pulse structures that allow identification of specific radar and aircraft threats.

"More importantly, we're going to marry the digitally cued receiver to single-ship geolocation algorithms [for precision location] and specific emitter ID algorithms with the AESA radar," says Gaddis. Also, the radar warning receiver and ALQ-214 jammers will be integrated to produce "high-gain electronic attack and high-gain electronic surveillance measures," he adds. "We would use them as a survivability upgrade against advanced air-to-air and a certain spectrum of the surface-to-air threat.

"We're going to create a high-speed data bus so that [electronic attack] techniques generated by the ALQ-214 will be sent through the AESA radar with much more power and effect," Gaddis says. "Rather than wait for a threat to develop some electronic countermeasure, we plan to attack him [at long range] through the radar."

The associated long-range, high-resolution electronic surveillance capability of the Super Hornet is making it popular with the intelligence community. The real-time data make the aircraft important for updating the electronic order of battle--what's emitting and from where.

"It's going to duplicate what the radars on the F-22 and F-35 can do in integrating and analyzing what's happening in the battlespace," Gaddis says. "It's all tied to advanced architectures and mission computers, open architecture principles, high-order software languages and the way you integrate all these sensors that give you a fifth-generation capability."

Cruise missile defense with conventional weapons is a primary task of the Block II Super Hornet. "That is one of our assigned mission areas, and AESA does that very well," Gaddis says.

Part of the secret of the radar's ability to spot small targets and track them is a combination of power (for range and discrimination) and processing speeds that permit better ways of using radar information[/b]. Early radar designs could use a variety of waveforms with high, medium and low pulse-repetition frequencies. High PRF offers unambiguous, nose-on speed resolution and clutter rejection; medium PRF gives good low-speed resolution but low detection range, and low PRF provides unambiguous target ranges but poor clutter rejection.

"If you're looking for cruise missiles, often you have to pick them out of clutter, at low altitude and often at high speed," says an Air Force pilot with AESA radar experience. "With mechanically scanned radars, you would have to take six sweeps looking in high PRF, six in medium and six in low to cover different target sets. With an AESA radar, you can assign different parts of the radar to do each function so you don't have any gaps in your surveillance. If PRFs are suitably chosen, targets within a span of interest can be kept continuously in the clear."

Changing PRF radically affects both the radar's signal processing requirement and its performance. But a high-speed processor can simultaneously extract the best information from each category of PRF observations.

Operators of each aircraft type (F-22, F-35, F-15C, F/A-18E/F and EA-18G) with AESA radars are so far independently developing their tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs) for how to fight cruise missiles.

"I would describe that as still in its nascent stages," Gaddis says. "If you ask about interoperability between those platforms, I think that's under development and will be driven by the combatant commanders. There's an acute realization that [joint interoperability TTPs] are absolutely required."

There's also a lag in developing new missile variants and warheads to cope with both subsonic and supersonic cruise and sea-skimming missiles.

"We have a very powerful radar that can detect cruise missiles," Gaddis says. "Now we need a missile to kill them. There are programs in the Amraam portfolio for taking out that target set."

Air Force researchers at Eglin AFB, Fla., and Raytheon engineers are working on the AIM-120C-6, which has a warhead specialized for head-on attack of small, slow-flying targets; the AIM-120C-7 that adds the ability to anticipate a cruise missile's flight path for a more efficient intercept, and the AIM-120D with longer range and the ability to maneuver vigorously at the end of its flight (AW&ST Feb. 12, p. 24).

Gaddis, who flew F-14s carrying the Phoenix long-range, air-to-air missile, helped develop tactics for shooting down air-to-surface cruise missiles.

"Some flew very high and very fast," he says. "If [your aircraft's nose] wasn't within 10 degrees of the [cruise] missile, Phoenix wasn't going to catch up. Now we have a different target set--Mach 3--but the principle is the same. You've got to be right on the [cruise missile's] nose if you're going to shoot down something like that."

Significant reductions can be made in the time it takes to locate and strike a target. Navy officials plan to install a precision targeting-like workstation on the F/A-18E/F called the distributed targeting processor. It will take an AESA-generated synthetic aperture radar map, compare it with an onboard SAR map that has every pixel geo-registered, then match the two images to generate a mensurated target coordinate and transfer it to a GPS-guided weapon, an anti-radiation missile or to direct an electronic attack.[/quote]

With Douglas Barrie in London.




Sempre e inevitavelmente, cada um de nós subestima o número de indivíduos estúpidos que circulam pelo mundo.
Carlo M. Cipolla
Avatar do usuário
gaitero
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 4237
Registrado em: Sáb Out 25, 2008 7:54 pm

Re: Super Hornet News

#3808 Mensagem por gaitero » Ter Ago 25, 2009 2:05 pm

O Radar do Super Hornet é sem dívida um dos mais avançados da atualidade.




Aonde estão as Ogivas Nucleares do Brasil???
Avatar do usuário
Penguin
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 18983
Registrado em: Seg Mai 19, 2003 10:07 pm
Agradeceu: 5 vezes
Agradeceram: 374 vezes

Re: Super Hornet News

#3809 Mensagem por Penguin » Ter Ago 25, 2009 2:23 pm

Outro artigo interesante ( de 2007) sobre os sistemas do SH Block II+ (Lot 30 em diante):
DATE:13/03/07
SOURCE:Flight International
Ultra Hornet

Imagem

By Graham Warwick


Boeing and the US Navy are poised to expand and exploit the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet's capability for precision engagement and battle management now the upgraded platform is matched to the latest avionics

While debate rages over the hallmarks and advantages of fifth-generation fighters, Boeing is preparing to deliver the next generation of its long-running F/A-18. The F/A-18E/F Block II+ Super Hornet is the culmination of a fundamental upgrade of the multi-role fighter and the foundation for future capability expansion.

Next-generation Super Hornet deliveries to the US Navy will begin later this year when the first aircraft from production Lot 30 rolls off the St Louis, Missouri assembly line. "Lot 30 is the launch point for Block II+," says Kory Mathews, director of F/A-18 programme integration.

Today's F/A-18E/F Super Hornet was developed from the original F/A-18 Hornet in two stages: first an airframe and engine upgrade that scaled the fighter up by 25% to increase range, payload and growth capacity then a multi-phase avionics update that introduced advanced sensors.

Lot 30 is the first time the structural upgrade that produced the F/A-18E/F comes together with the full suite of advanced avionics, and is the jumping-off point for the Capability Flightplan - a roadmap of enhancements planned to be developed and fielded over the next decade.

Robust roadmap


"We have a robust, well-defined capability roadmap in four main areas: distributed targeting, net-centric operations/battlespace management, sensor integration and advanced weapons," says Mathews. The Flightplan covers fiscal years 2008-2014, and will be updated annually. "It is a living document," he says. "We can add, accelerate or eliminate capabilities."

The launching point for the Capability Flightplan is the avionics architecture implemented incrementally since deliveries of the Block II Super Hornet began in 2005 with production Lot 26, and fully realised beginning with Lot 30.

The architecture backbone is a fibre-optic data network and advanced mission computer (AMC). Block II+ uses the latest Type 3 AMC, produced by General Dynamics Information Systems, with two times the throughput and memory of the Type 2 computer in Block II Super Hornets.

Plugged into this architecture are the new APG-79 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar AAS-46 advanced tactical forward-looking infrared (ATFLIR) pod digital sold-state recorder (DSSR) accurate navigation (ANAV) system and Link 16 multifunctional information distribution system (MIDS).

"Beginning with Lot 30, every aircraft will have AESA," says Mathews. Until then, some F/A-18E/Fs are being delivered with the earlier mechanically scanned APG-73 radar. The US Navy plans to retrofit 135 APG-73-equipped Block II Super Hornets with APG-79, for an eventual total of 415 AESA-equipped aircraft.

The Raytheon AESA brings the capability for simultaneous air-to-air and air-to-ground operation and, starting with Lot 30, two-seat F/A-18Fs will have the advanced crew station, which decouples the front and rear cockpits. "The front-seater can sanitise the airspace while the rear-seater conducts an air-to-ground campaign," says Mathews. Both crew members will have the joint helmet-mounted cueing system.

Lot 30 also introduces the ANAV box, which replaces the F/A-18's CAINS inertial navigator and MAGR GPS receiver with a tightly integrated system that addresses obsolescence and provides "unprecedented air-to-ground accuracy", says Mathews.

Another step in expanding the Super Hornet's precision attack capability has already been taken with fielding of the digital sold-state recorder. Replacing an analogue cockpit video recorder, the DSSR brings the capability to grab and store sensor images, and send them over existing communications links - either Link 16 or the ARC-210 digital radio.

"On ingress, the crew can see ATFLIR streaming video in the cockpit, frame-grab a still image of the target and datalink it to the forward air controller, who looks at the image, annotates it with Blue Force positions and datalinks it back," Mathews says, cutting the time needed to "talk" the aircraft to the target to "low-digit minutes".

With the Lot 30 aircraft as a starting point, the Flightplan lays out a roadmap for expanding the F/A-18E/F's precision-engagement and battle-management capabilities. Much of the focus is on air-to-ground operations, but the Super Hornet is to get an infrared search and track (IRST) sensor to increase air-to-air capability.

Development of the IRST is funded beginning in FY2008, leading to fielding in 2012-13, says Mathews. A targeting, not imaging sensor, the IRST will be integrated with the radar to provide spectral diversity and the ability to engage passively air-to-air. Although it could be mounted internally, a podded sensor is more likely, he says.

Under the Flightplan, the distributed targeting area involves the addition of an image exploitation processor and mass storage unit to allow sensor information such as synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) imagery to be manipulated rapidly. The first increment will build on the AESA and ATFLIR targeting capability by georegistering imagery to an onboard database to generate precise target co-ordinates.

"This will bring precision targeting for weapons on board the aircraft and provide nearly range-independent, pixel-level accuracy in the cockpit," says Mathews. The next step will extend the capability to multiple and moving targets. A mode will be added to the AESA enabling interleaved SAR and ground moving-target indication, allowing the system to georegister moving targets and update their positions.

"Combine that with a weapon datalink and you will be able to release a weapon on the initial co-ordinates and update it in flight as the target moves. We will be able to engage multiple movers, stand off, in all weathers," Mathews says, adding that the final part of the distributed targeting roadmap will add features such as automatic target cueing and aided target recognition to reduce crew workload.

The net-centric operations area of the Flightplan focuses on augmenting the communications links on the aircraft. "More and more they will use the aircraft for non-traditional ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] because of its state-of-the-art sensors, and it needs to communicate with anyone inside or outside the theatre," says Mathews.

Wideband links

Two new links are to be added to the aircraft. A wideband IP (internet protocol) link will provide a "bigger pipe" for streaming video and voice-over-IP using ad hoc networks, compared with the narrowband, pre-established Link 16 networks. The second link will be beyond-line-of-sight satellite communications.

Development of the wideband IP link is scheduled to begin in FY2010, followed in FY2012 by the satcom system. The EA-18G Growler electronic-attack variant of the Super Hornet has receive-only satcom, but the new system will transmit and receive voice and data, says Mathews.

The third area of the Flightplan, multi-sensor integration, will exploit capabilities inherent in the Block II+ Super Hornet by rolling out software upgrades that tie onboard sensors more tightly together and with offboard sensors. As well as the AESA and ATFLIR, onboard systems include the ALR-67(V)3 radar warning receiver, also made by Raytheon, and the BAE Systems ALQ-214 integrated defensive electronic countermeasures system (IDECM).

The ALR-67(V) is a digital cued receiver, and under the Flightplan its capability will be enhanced to allow single-ship geolocation of emitters with enough accuracy to cue the radar for targeting, says Mathews. The capability for multi-ship geolocation using three F/A-18E/Fs, accurate enough for passive targeting, will also be introduced.

Some of most powerful sensor-integration capabilities planned involve the AESA and exploit its ability to act as more than a radar. The first of these is planned to be electronic attack, which will involve using the nose-mounted array of solid-state transmit/receive modules as both a highly sensitive passive emitter locator and enormously powerful directional jammer.

Mathews cautions that the AESA is limited to in-band electronic attack, and in its field of view and field of regard as both a receiver and jammer, but the system promises to be a powerful weapon against other X-band radars in aircraft and missiles. Multi-sensor integration will tie the AESA together with the ALR-67(V) receiver for cueing and the IDECM for jamming techniques generation.

The final area of the Capability Flightplan covers expansion of the weapon types cleared for carriage on the Super Hornet. This begins in FY2008 with Boeing's SLAM-ER stand-off land-attack and Harpoon Block III anti-ship missiles. A later spiral will add the Small Diameter Bomb - probably the seeker-equipped Increment II version designed to attack moving targets, says Mathews.

Although the capabilities outlined in the Flightplan will be developed and fielded over a decade or so, the US Navy plans to upgrade all of its Block II Super Hornets to the Block II+ standard. Block I aircraft will also receive upgrades, but will not be retrofitted to the same standard because they lack the new forward fuselage introduced with Block II and cannot accommodate the APG-79 AESA.

The US Navy, meanwhile, is looking at increasing procurement of F/A-18E/Fs beyond its planned 460 aircraft to offset the delay in Joint Strike Fighter initial operational capability to 2015. The Flightplan is designed to ensure, whatever its generation, that the Super Hornet stays at the leading edge of operational capability.




Editado pela última vez por Penguin em Ter Ago 25, 2009 2:35 pm, em um total de 1 vez.
Sempre e inevitavelmente, cada um de nós subestima o número de indivíduos estúpidos que circulam pelo mundo.
Carlo M. Cipolla
Avatar do usuário
GDA_Fear
Sênior
Sênior
Mensagens: 2088
Registrado em: Dom Out 26, 2008 6:55 pm
Localização: Florianópolis, SC
Agradeceram: 1 vez

Re: Super Hornet News

#3810 Mensagem por GDA_Fear » Ter Ago 25, 2009 2:31 pm

Muito bom os posts Santiago, o que me chamou a atenção foi aquele infrared search and Track FLIR ? ou um tipo de OSF ?




Responder