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Naval
Defense Industry News - USA |
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Raytheon completes key Air & Missile Defense Radar (AMDR) reviews |
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Raytheon Company
completed two critical program reviews for the new Air and Missile
Defense Radar (AMDR), the U.S. Navy's next generation integrated air
and ballistic missile defense radar. Successful completion of the
hardware Preliminary Design Review and the Integrated Baseline Review
are both key milestones of the Navy's acquisition plan & highlight
the maturity of the design, validity of the plan for execution, and
keep the program on track to deliver a much needed capability to the
fleet.
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AMDR’s
radar suite consists of an S-band radar, an X-band radar, and a radar
suite controller.
(Picture: Raytheon)
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Customer, program and technical stakeholders from
a host of Navy program offices and the Missile Defense Agency participated
in both reviews, assessing the maturity of the AMDR design, its alignment
to requirements, and the master plan for program execution. With many
features in the advanced stages of development and a disciplined and
proven process for design execution, the reviews demonstrated that AMDR's
design is low risk and the program is on schedule for seamless integration
onboard the DDG 51 Flight III destroyer.
"The maturity of our technologies, processes and infrastructure
serves as a solid foundation for our ongoing development," said
Raytheon's Kevin Peppe, vice president of Integrated Defense Systems'
Seapower Capability Systems business area. "With the technology
risks retired in the earlier Technology Development (TD) phase and cost
reduction initiatives already implemented, we're now fully focused on
the fabrication of the AMDR system and completion of the Engineering
& Manufacturing Development (EMD) phase."
Throughout the multiple phases of the program to date, Raytheon has
successfully demonstrated the capabilities of the system, the maturity
of the technology, and the inherent innovation and flexibility of the
design - which will pay dividends in its adaptability, affordability
and ability to meet emerging threats for years to come.
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Raytheon
photo: Partially-populated, full-sized Air and Missile Defense Radar
array
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About AMDR
For the Technology Development phase of the competition, Raytheon built
a partially populated, full-sized array (see photo), including the signal
and data processing back-end. Completed in 14 months, the AMDR array
demonstrated the design, capability and scalability of the radar and
served as the foundation for ongoing risk reduction and affordability
initiatives. A 14 foot, full-size array structure was fabricated to
demonstrate fit within a DDG 51 Flight III deck house, including mechanical
interface, cabling, piping and maintenance elements. The array was partially
populated with a small group of Radar Modular Assemblies (RMAs) containing
more than 1,000 GaN transmit-receive modules, meeting TD phase requirements
and representing a configuration for a smaller radar aperture. The scaled
radar integrated all critical technology elements in the far-field range
and rigorously exercised and tested all technologies in a relevant environment.
Concurrently, Raytheon ran a series of design for manufacturing and
assembly (DFMA) and cost-reduction initiatives on all the array electronics
to address affordability early. With the completion of TD phase, technology
risks were retired, ship fit was addressed, and affordability was designed
in from the onset.
Raytheon's AMDR is the U.S. Navy's first truly scalable radar. AMDR
is built with radar building blocks (RMAs) that can be grouped to form
any size radar aperture, either smaller or significantly larger than
today's SPY-1D(V). All cooling, power, command logic and software are
inherently scalable. This innate scalability allows for new instantiations,
as well as back-fits, without significant development costs. Leveraging
Gallium Nitride (GaN) technology to optimize power in a smaller size,
taking up less space onboard, with lower power and cooling demands,
AMDR provides the DDG 51 Flight III with service life allowances to
support growth for adding capabilities or adapting for future threats.
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