Raytheon’s SPY-6 Aces Most Complex Test Yet

Production, progress continues for US Navy's newest radar

Date:

 

TEWKSBURY, Mass. Raytheon Company’s AN/SPY-6(V)1 air and missile defense radar completed its latest test, exceeding all performance requirements. In the most stressing test to date, the radar searched for, detected, and maintained track on the target as predicted.

ads

SPY-6 integrated air and missile defense radar installed at the US Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility in Kauai, Hawaii.

“Now in production, AN/SPY-6(V)1 continues to stack up test successes and milestones, proving the maturity of its design and its exceptional capabilities,” said US Navy Captain Seiko Okano, Major Program Manager for Above Water Sensors, Program Executive Office Integrated Warfare Systems. “The radar is on track to deliver game-changing integrated air and missile defense technology to the surface fleet through its ability to simultaneously address air and missile defense targets. This will provide an unprecedented level of comprehensive protection to naval forces and assets.”

“The radar is on track to deliver game-changing integrated air and missile defense technology to the surface fleet through its ability to simultaneously address air and missile defense targets. This will provide an unprecedented level of comprehensive protection to naval forces and assets”

Since its inception in January 2014, the program has met 20 of 20 milestones, ahead of or on schedule. The radar has progressed well through the U.S. Navy’s dedicated AN/SPY-6(V)1 testing program. Currently in production, the radar is on schedule for delivery to the Navy’s first modernized DDG 51 Flight III, the future USS Jack H Lucas (DDG 125), in 2020.

Throughout testing at the Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility, Kauai, Hawaii, AN/SPY-6(V)1 has consistently proved its multi-mission capability to extend the battlespace and safeguard the fleet from multiple, simultaneous threats. The radar has now demonstrated its performance against an array of singular and multiple targets of increasing complexity. This includes integrated air and missile defense targets, as well as targets of opportunity, satellites and aircraft.

big bang

AN/SPY-6(V)1 provides greater range, increased accuracy, greater resistance to environmental and man-made electronic clutter, higher reliability and sustainability than currently deployed radars. The radar’s demonstrated sensitivity – significantly more than current radars in the Navy – provides greater coverage for early and accurate detection.

More like this

Ukraine-Russia Peace Deal: Pushed by Trump, Yet far From Reality

Post the Alaska summit between the US and the...

JSW Sarbloh Motors and TOMCAR Form Strategic Joint Venture to Manufacture All-Terrain Vehicles in India

New Delhi /Phoenix (Arizona):  JSW Sarbloh Motors, a subsidiary of...

SkyDrive and Whitesky Forge Strategic Alliance to Launch eVTOL Operations in Indonesia

TOYOTA, Japan. SkyDrive Inc. (“SkyDrive”), a leading electric vertical takeoff...

India’s Defence and Internal Security Posture Has Undergone Profound Transformation

New Delhi: In what is a mid-year appraisal of...

Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile Agni-5 Successfully Test-Fired

New Delhi: In a major boost to India's defence...

TI Semiconductors Enable Advanced Earth-Observation Capabilities of ISRO’s First-of-its-Kind NISAR Mission

New Delhi: Texas Instruments (TI) semiconductors are enabling the radar...

Donbas at Breaking Point: Will it Reshape Europe?

As the war in Ukraine grinds through yet another...
Indian Navy Special EditionLatest Issue