MEADS intercept test
http://youtu.be/Gqk72h1tUco
http://youtu.be/Gqk72h1tUco
totoro said:what kinds of other missiles are planned be integrated into meads, besides the enhanced pac-3?
jsport said:Yet another needed system which instead is emblematic the current dyfunction..
sferrin said:Don't need MEADS. The US Army is already getting the missile and integrating it into the Patriot system.
Lockheed Martin Corp. said Tuesday that a breakthrough missile-defense agreement with Germany opened a potential market of more than 30 countries looking to upgrade or introduce sophisticated air-defense systems.
Germany selected a trans-Atlantic consortium including Lockheed to replace the Patriot system made by Raytheon Co. in a potential deal valued by analysts at around €4 billion.
The country becomes the first customer for the Medium Extended Air Defense System, or MEADS, produced by Lockheed and MBDA Missile Systems, a consortium of three European defense companies. It beat out a rival bid from Raytheon Co., which offered an upgraded version of the Patriot.
Missile-defense systems are one of the fastest-growing areas for military spending, spurred by tensions surrounding Ukraine and in the Middle East. Poland announced plans in April to buy the Patriot rather than MEADS, and Raytheon has secured almost $7 billion in deals for the system over the past 18 months, notably from a number of Gulf nations, South Korea and the U.S. Army.
MEADS, like Patriot, uses truck-based missiles and sophisticated radar to intercept and shoot down aircraft, cruise and ballistic missiles and drones.
Lockheed said it would start talks with Germany on the required number of MEADS systems, and expected to sign a contract by the fall of 2016 ahead of deployment in 2020.
“We believe they’ll be the first and there will be multiple NATO allies that take Germany’s lead,” said Marty Coyne, director of business development at Lockheed’s missiles unit.
Mr. Coyne said as many as 32 countries are expected to buy whole or partial missile-defense systems over the next 15 years, including existing Patriot users, which is deployed in 13 nations. Lockheed also provides PAC-3 missiles for the Patriot.
The Patriot remains the most widely deployed missile-defense system, and Raytheon continues to upgrade it, expressing confidence in future demand, notably from countries in Asia and the Middle East.
Raytheon said it hadn’t received a formal notification of MEADS’ selection from the German Defense Ministry, and would continue supporting its bid ahead of a final contract award.
The future of MEADS had been thrown into doubt after the U.S., which developed the system in partnership with Germany and Italy, opted to stop additional funding because of delays and cost overruns. Germany followed suit before reversing its decision following successful test launches.
MBDA is a joint venture between Airbus Group SE, BAE Systems PLC and Finmeccanica SpA.
Separately, the U.S. State Department said Tuesday it had approved the potential $1.9 billion sale of three Aegis missile defense systems to South Korea. The country is already upgrading its Patriot system and would use the Aegis on destroyers to deter potential missile attacks from North Korea. Lockheed, Raytheon and General Dynamics Corp. would share the proposed contract.
Moose said:MEADS with the PAC-3 isn't losing any performance to the Patriot with PAC-3, the IRIS is a supplement.
Grey Havoc said:http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-meads-exclusive-idUSKBN12H248?il=0
Raytheon doing a bit of story planting?
The Medium Extended Air Defense System demonstrated interoperability with the Army's Integrated Battle Command System in testing conducted late last year, according to a Lockheed Martin official.
Lockheed spearheads a tri-national effort between the United States, Germany and Italy to develop MEADS.
Directly following a major test of the MEADS system in November at White Sands Missile Range, NM, where the system took out two simultaneous targets from opposite directions, Lockheed then tested MEADS' ability to integrate with IBCS, Marty Coyne, Lockheed's air and missile defense business development director, toldInside the Army in an April 2 interview. The company conducted the test with Northrop Grumman, the developer of IBCS.
The IBCS is at the heart of the Army's planned Integrated Air and Missile Defense system and is designed to enable a modular "plug-and-fight" capability for commandeering sensors and interceptors.
Plugging MEADS into IBCS showed "that this is very doable, having modern 360-degree radars and launchers on an Army network is real," Coyne noted. The demonstration also proved that the Army can "leverage the investment in the MEADS radars and launcher . . . and get this network capability quicker than maybe they think they can."
In about three months, Coyne said, Lockheed was able to modify its software module that allowed it to get onto the IAMD network through IBCS, though the process can normally take years.
The accomplishment, he added, "will keep the debate open" on the future of MEADS technology.
MEADS was intended to replace the Patriot missile defense system, but the Pentagon announced in 2011 that it no longer had plans to buy it. Yet, as part of a tri-national agreement between Italy, Germany and the United States, the program was allowed to continue through an $800 million, two-year proof-of-concept phase. By completing the phase, the three countries will be allowed to harvest the technology developed under the program. While Germany and Italy plan to engage in follow-on programs to continue developing the MEADS system, the United States has said it plans to harvest certain technologies developed through the program and incorporate them into future systems, but details on how and when are vague.
Lockheed has been pushing behind the scenes for continued review of the Army's missile defense modernization plan in order to ensure that the technology harvested from MEADS is seriously considered for incorporation into the service's future missile defense architecture.
The Army set up a harvesting team to evaluate which technologies should be taken from the MEADS program and used in the service's air and missile defense network. Three front-runner items for harvesting are two radars -- one for acquisition and another for tracking -- that have 360-degree detection and plug-and-fight capabilities and the MEADS launcher, which is lightweight and also has a 360-degree capability. The harvest team has yet to issue a final report, Coyne said.
Guess we should make a thread for SAMP/T? There's the SAMP/T NG development ongoing as well. Or we could just as well make a thread about European IAMD. What do you think?
Yes, I'm fine with that?Guess we should make a thread for SAMP/T? There's the SAMP/T NG development ongoing as well. Or we could just as well make a thread about European IAMD. What do you think?
Oh wait, there's already an ASTER thread. Haven't even realized because it's so under-used...Yes, I'm fine with that?Guess we should make a thread for SAMP/T? There's the SAMP/T NG development ongoing as well. Or we could just as well make a thread about European IAMD. What do you think?