United States Military Aviation

We had discussed this technology on another forum and I had stated that even India is developing such a radar as India has the largest number of cell towers in the world. USA has just about 30k compared to over 250k for India. The transmissions from these towers bounce off in all directions and they appear as anoise signal for the passive radar which by proper filteration can track the target causing this interference. But the catch word is that you can track them only in an airspace where you have such signals.
 
They tend not to like stealth aircraft flying in stealth configuration during peacetime because it makes air traffic control a nightmare.
 
THE ULTIMATE A-10!

Just five years ago, the US Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II fleet looked to be dead and buried. The then chief of the service Gen Mark Welsh — himself a former ‘Warthog’ driver — said the USAF had to retire the A-10C completely in order to make substantial budget cuts.

Yet in Iraq and Syria a new war was erupting — tackling so-called Islamic State (IS) — a mission for which the A-10 was perfectly suited. Eventually, the USAF capitulated and deployed a squadron of ‘Warthogs’, which went on to make an indelible mark on the campaign. It added fuel to the fire as lawmakers in Washington blocked the USAF from divesting itself of the A-10.

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The 422nd Test and Evaluation Squadron had all but halted any new A-10 work for the active-duty force, but in 2016 it got back to business. Jamie Hunter

The A-10 retirement plan had already started a knock-on effect and both the program office and operational testing had been shuttered as part of the drawdown. By the summer of 2016 this was all being spun back up, including a renewed impetus in the development of new ‘kit’ for the A-10. Now, the A-10 Common Fleet Initiative will keep the aircraft alive and pushing through the 2030s, designed to bring about the ultimate incarnation of the ‘Warthog’ — able to meet the challenges of future conflict.

Adding the Boeing GBU-39 Small Diameter Bomb (SDB) started this summer, which gives the A-10 a new standoff capability. With a multi-target engagement capability the ‘Warthog’ will theoretically be able to target 18 weapons individually, making it a unique aircraft that fits well into the fourth/fifth-generation mix. Another plan is to pull out the central ‘six-pack’ of analogue flight instruments in the cockpit and replace this with a single large electronic primary flight display, which will work in conjunction with the two older multi-function color displays.
 
Air Force’s Problem-Plagued New Tanker Likely Won’t Deploy for 3 Years or More

It doesn't look as if the problems plaguing the U.S. Air Force's KC-46 Pegasus tanker will be over anytime soon.​
Because of previously reported problems -- and some unforeseen new ones -- Gen. Maryanne Miller, head of Air Mobility Command, confirmed the Air Force's newest tanker aircraft, made by Boeing Co., won't be likely to deploy to a combat zone for at least three years. Additionally, AMC may ask the Air Force to slow the retirement of older KC-10 Extender and KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft, Miller said Wednesday.​
"I'd love to slow down the retirement because I have to keep [refueling] booms in the air, but we'll see how this requirement plays out," Miller told reporters during a roundtable discussion here at the annual Air, Space and Cyber conference.​
The deployment pause and potential retirement delay is due to unsolved technical deficiencies in the KC-46 including a glitch with the software inside the Remote Vision System. The RVS permits the in-flight operator to view the refueling system below the tanker.​
"It's my hope that Boeing recognizes and shares my level of concern and urgency in this matter," Miller said.
The KC-46 has had many issues, including problems with how the boom connects and disconnects from specific aircraft, as well as a new "Category 1" deficiency, defined as a critical flaw that impacts the development, schedule and potentially safety of the aircraft. Defense News recently reported the Pegasus has been prohibited from carrying cargo or additional personnel for the time being because cargo locks -- which secure equipment into place within the aircraft -- recently unlocked during a flight.​
Miller said the Air Force and Boeing will work through the latest problem, but added she's "most concerned" over the RVS, which for the time being doesn't allow an airman to look at a clear, aligned visual of the boom connecting to another aircraft. The first tankers were delivered despite that problem.​
"Eight months have passed since our first delivery, and Boeing has not made any progress in addressing those [Category 1] deficiencies," she said.​
"Boeing has not presented a solution that has met all the parameters," she said of the RVS, but added there is now "hard science" to diagnose the problem. "In a couple months ... what I'm looking for [is] a pass-fail grade for Boeing on this," she said.​
While Miller didn't describe the characteristics behind each box the aerospace company has to check, she said the Air Force had nine total requirements.​
The general said she chose not to send the KC-46 to the latest AMC-led Mobility Guardian airlift exercise in Washington in order for airmen to get more acquainted with the few aircraft they have.​
The Air Force has only accepted 19 KC-46 aircraft since January. The planes have been delivered toMcConnell Air Force Base, Kansas, and Altus Air Force Base, Oklahoma.​
KC-46 deliveries have also been halted or delayed a number of times this year over the discovery of foreign object debris -- trash, tools, nuts and bolts, and other miscellaneous items -- scattered inside the aircraft. Loose objects are dangerous because they can cause damage over time.​
Miller said Boeing now has procedures in place to avoid FOD.​
"We will work through these," she said of overall technical problems. "The pressure is on to get [the KC-46] into the fight. Out teams will work together to get to the solutions to get this into the fight."​

What a piece of shit aircraft. Shoddily designed, shoddily built. Between that and the 737MAX's MCAS disaster, Boeing really lost the plot.
 
Here are some of the upgrades coming to the US Air Force’s oldest bomber

Here are some of the upgrades coming to the US Air Force’s oldest bomber
By: Valerie Insinna   September 15

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Crew chiefs from the 11th Aircraft Maintenance Unit run final checks on a B-52 Stratofortress prior to takeoff from Barksdale Air Force Base, La., on Aug. 21, 2019. (Master Sgt. Ted Daigle/U.S. Air Force)
BARKSDALE AIR FORCE BASE, La., and WASHINGTON — The B-52 is getting new engines, but that’s not the only modification coming soon to the U.S. Air Force’s oldest bomber.

The Boeing-built B-52 — colloquially known as the Big Ugly Fat Fellow, or BUFF — is one of the Air Force’s oldest airframes, but that isn’t stopping the service from constantly deploying its fleet, most recently in September to RAF Fairford in England. The legendary bomber will continue operations into the 2050s, Air Force leaders said.

“The aircraft was built in 1960. If you walk in the cockpit it looks like a 1960 cockpit. It flies like a 1960 airplane,” said Col. Robert Burgess, 307th Operations Group commander. Burgess spoke with journalist and Defense News contributor Jeff Bolton during a visit to Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana. “However, the avionics, the software, the weapon systems have to upgrade to meet the demands of the world.”

Click here for more from the special report on the U.S. nuclear enterprise.

The Air Force is considering re-designating the BUFF as the B-52J after modifications. Here are some of the major changes coming to the bomber over the next few years:

A new radar

In July, Boeing announced it selected Raytheon to produce a new radar to replace its current Northrop Grumman AN/APQ-166 system, beating Northrop’s pitch for the AN/APG-83 scalable agile beam radar.

The new active electronically scanned array radar, which will be based on Raytheon’s APG-79 and APG-82, will increase the range at which the B-52 can detect targets, and it’ll increase the number of targets the bomber can locate, according to Raytheon.

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“When we have ancient technology downstairs, it makes our life a little bit more difficult — especially with the weapon systems that require us to use a radar,” said Lt. Rebecca Halla, a B-52 weapons system operator at Barksdale. “Getting that upgrade not only is going to allow us to be better at that, but it gives us new capabilities with new weapons.”

As part of the contract, Raytheon will work with prime contractor Boeing to replace the radar and radome, as well as putting in new displays, said Michael Riggs, Boeing’s B-52 radar modernization program manager. The initial contract funds the program through its critical design review, which will wrap up in 2021. The first ground and flight tests could occur as early as 2023.

New computers and communications

Full-color LCD displays, updated computers and several new communications links are also on the way through the Combat Network Communication Technology, or CONECT, program. The upgrade will allow the B-52 to stream a real-time feed that provides intelligence and updates to the mission plan.

So far, 60 of the 76 aircraft have received modifications, said Alan Williams, deputy B-52 program element monitor at Air Force Global Strike Command.

The Air Force is also adding Link 16 to the B-52, which is one of the last of the service’s aircraft to get that NATO-standard communications link, said Scot Oathout, Boeing’s bombers program director. The company is currently designing that modification, with flight tests scheduled for mid-2020. Adding a data link for the Navy’s Mobile User Objective System will follow.

Capt. Eric Nelson, a B-52 instructor pilot and weapons officer, pointed to the communications upgrades as especially important to the B-52’s ability to connect to other platforms.

“No fight is a self-contained fight,” he said. “The B-52 interoperates with many aircraft across the platform; and even in the nuclear mission, it still [does] not go it alone. You have requirements, and the new upgrades are going to allow us to better communicate in a digital world where before we were heavily relying upon line-of-sight analog communication.”



These are the five areas where the Air Force wants to see an explosion of technology
The Air Force released its new science and technology strategy on April 17.

By: Valerie Insinna

New weapons

The B-52 can be armed with an array of nuclear and conventional weaponry, and it’s set to take on some of the Air Force’s most advanced munitions.

This June, the service disclosed that the B-52 had carried a hypersonic missile on flight tests. The weapon, known as the AGM-183A Air Launched Rapid Response Weapon, or ARRW, did not contain explosives and was not launched. Instead, the service used the flight to gather data about its impact on the B-52’s flight envelope.

The B-52 is also slated to get the Long Range Standoff Missile currently in development. LRSO will replace the AGM-86B air-launched cruise missile, which can be outfitted with either a nuclear or conventional warhead.

Along with new weapons, the B-52 is getting upgrades to its conventional rotary launcher that will double the number of weapons the aircraft can launch from its internal bay. The Air Force began testing modifications to the launcher earlier this year, according to information released by the service in February.

“The Conventional Rotary Launcher has a high power draw, so an aircrew could only power up four munitions at a time without risking blowing circuit breakers in mid-flight,” Maj. Jason McCargar, a 49th Test and Evaluation Squadron unit project officer, said in a news release. “With this upgrade, it can now have eight ready at once.”

And maybe more …

The Air Force is brainstorming how it should modernize the BUFF’s defensive systems, particularly its electronic warfare system. The service is in the process of a “form, fit, function replacement” for its current ALQ-172 electronic countermeasures system, or ECM, which will help solve problems with obsolescence and increase reliability without providing a capability upgrade, said Williams.

“That will allow us to then sustain the existing capability with modern computers, modern backplanes, modern computer boards inside the box,” he said. “That leaves us with some empty space that if, at some future time, Global Strike Command wishes to upgrade the ECM capability of the B-52, they would have space to do it in.”

The Air Force is on contract for the first two of about 10 boxes that comprise the electronic countermeasures system, and another two boxes will likely go under contract in September, he said.

Although the Air Force has discussed a full-scale replacement for the ALQ-172, Williams said the cost could amount to billions of dollars and may not be worth it, depending on how the aircraft will operate in the future.

“The B-52 is considered to be a standoff platform,” he said. “Current thinking is it would not go into a high-density threat area, and therefore the need for upgrading the electronic warfare system is not as demanding as some of the other demands to upgrade the B-52.”
 
https://www.secretprojects.co.uk/at...-2015-rw-briefing-final-col-smith-pdf.596389/

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Source: Air Force Research Laboratory

The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) held a classified “industry day” at Eglin AFB in Florida on June 19 for an “upcoming Miniature Self-Defense Munition (MSDM) competitive effort,” according to a May 23 meeting notice.

- Industry day this June continues MSDM development
- Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon are on contract

The Strategic Planning and Integration Division of the AFRL’s Munitions Directorate used the half-day meeting to brief about 120 industry representatives on the scope of work for “continued development of the MSDM,” an acronym pronounced as “Miz-dem.”

The closed-door event suggests the air-launched, defensive interceptor program is moving closer to reality. In 2015, the last time U.S. Air Force officials talked about the program openly, the AFRL forecast the MSDM would enter service in fiscal 2023.

The current schedule for the program has not been disclosed, but a series of active contract awards with four companies suggests it continues to make progress.

The AFRL first awarded concept studies for the MSDM in 2015, then followed up a year later with multiple concept refinement contracts. Lockheed Martin and Raytheon are under contract for missile development work that includes the MSDM through early 2021. Northrop Grumman also has a contract award that extends through late 2020 for seeker and technology maturation of the MSDM.
 

The way it is now, it's not very useful, just does more of the same as its predecessor, but with first class hardware.

In simpler terms, for those operating the F-35 or Rafale, this just gets in the way. But for those operating aircraft like the Su-35, MKI, SH, F-16, F-15 etc, it's very useful.

Against adversaries equipped with something like the Meteor or better, the Growler will get shot down long before it becomes a threat. There isn't a more perfect target than the Growler for the Meteor.
 
The way it is now, it's not very useful, just does more of the same as its predecessor, but with first class hardware.

In simpler terms, for those operating the F-35 or Rafale, this just gets in the way. But for those operating aircraft like the Su-35, MKI, SH, F-16, F-15 etc, it's very useful.

Against adversaries equipped with something like the Meteor or better, the Growler will get shot down long before it becomes a threat. There isn't a more perfect target than the Growler for the Meteor.

SPECTRA Vs GROWLER would be an awesome battle
 
Some horrible assumptions here. A Growler would make a Rafale think it has already crashed, or perhaps got lost in the Bermuda Triangle.