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![]() by Allen Cone Washington DC (UPI) Apr 23, 2019
Lockheed Martin has been awarded a $20 million contract to provide engineering and technical services for the AN/BLQ-10 submarine electronic warfare system. The contract for the (TI)-20, TI-22 and TI-24 includes the design, development, testing, integration, technology insertion/refreshment and system support of new-construction and in-service submarines, Lockheed announced Monday. Work will be performed at the Electronic Warfare Center of Excellence in Syracuse, N.Y., and Manassas, Va. The AN/BLQ-10 is designed for the three current fast-track Ohio classes: Virginia, Los Angeles and Seawolf. The open architecture platform can accommodate current and future mission needs and technology upgrades, including future Columbia-class ballistic-missile submarines. "Lockheed Martin is honored to be selected to provide the next generation electronic warfare system for the U.S. Navy," Joe Ottaviano, electronic warfare program director, rotary and mission systems, said in a press release. "The AN/BLQ-10 system will continue to provide our warfighters with situational awareness and enhanced capabilities that outpace the threat." Since 2000, Lockheed Martin has provided the U.S. Navy with AN/BLQ-10 systems. In 2008, the system's first technology insertion added a subsystem to intercept some low-probability-of-intercept radar signals. Officials at the Naval Sea Systems Command in Washington, D.C., wanted Lockheed to modernize the AN/BLQ-10 system, Military & Aerospace reported last August. The AN/BLQ-10 processes radar signals through masts and periscopes to detect threats, including counter detection, collision and target locations. Then, crews can rapidly analyze and identify critical signals to determine hostile, neutral or friendly situations. "Right now, every part of the Navy's fleet has some ability to detect threats," Ottaviano said on Lockheed's website. "But it's often happening in real-time. They see us, we see them, and both sides are trying to figure out what to do. The Navy's goal is to get enough information so ships can detect a threat and respond before the other side even knows we're there."
![]() ![]() GenDyn awarded $269.2M for missile tubes for U.S., U.K. subs Washington (UPI) Apr 22, 2019 General Dynamics' Electric Board has been awarded a $269.2 million contract to provide 42 missile tubes and outfitting material for the U.S. Navy's new Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines and the British navy's Dreadnought-class subs. The United States and Britain jointly participate in the Common Missile Compartment program. Naval fiscal 2019 shipbuilding and conversion and foreign military funds from Britain in the amount of $49.5 will be obligated at time of award and will not ... read more
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