Posted on 05/17/2006 4:09:41 PM PDT by SandRat
WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio, May 16, 2006 – The U.S. Air Force recently awarded a $180-million contract to the Boeing Company to upgrade the fire-control radar on the service's fleet of 67 B-1B long-range bomber aircraft. The nine-year Reliability and Maintainability Improvement Program, or RMIP, will replace two, high-failure rate line-replaceable units that make up the current AN/APQ-164 radar system in an effort to improve its R&M performance. According to U.S. Air Force Col. Paul Clark, commander of the B-1 Systems Group at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, the RMIP System Development and Demonstration is the first significant radar upgrade for the B-1 in more than 20 years. "The investment we are making with this upgrade will significantly improve the reliability of the B-1's radar system and reduce the time and manpower the Air Force is spending to maintain this critical capability," said Clark. "The upgrade is key to keeping the B-1 combat ready for our warfighters for years to come." Modification kits to replace the bombers' receiver and processor will be available beginning in 2011. The RMIP kit, built principally by subcontractor Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems in Baltimore, comprises a new radar transmitter/receiver, a radar processor computer and a reimplemented software package. |
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"The focus of the software portion of the upgrade is to successfully reimplement 19 legacy B-1 radar modes into a more sustainable software language," said Capt. Anthony Sidoti, deputy program manager for the upgrade program at the B-1 Systems Group. The reimplementation of six of 19 software modes is already in work under a risk-reduction effort ongoing at the Oklahoma City Air Logistics Center at Tinker Air Force Base, Okla., home to B-1 sustainment activities. In addition to these initial software modes, the risk-reduction contract also covered the development of the new hardware that will flow into the R&M improvement program. Northrop Grumman is the prime contractor on the risk-reduction effort, which is expected to be completed in the fall. "These initial six modes demonstrated under the risk-reduction along with the new hardware will be fully integrated and tested under RMIP," said Sidoti. "The success the risk-reduction effort has enjoyed is providing the program with a great starting point to begin work on the remaining modes and is key to a smooth integration of all of the new hardware and software on the aircraft," he noted. |
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Beefing Up the B-1!!!
more lipstick, same pig.
I was happy to see there are 67 B-1s. I thought it was 12 or something.
They delivered a pretty high percentage of the ordnance in OEF, IIRC. Lots faster than the B-52s, lots more payload than the F-15/16/18.
Mod kits to be available in 2011? Sheesh, are they reinventing the magnatron or something?
Not only is the B-1B Lancer faster than the B-52, it can carry up to twice the ordance, all internally.
Hey the B1-B along with the B2 and our B-52's make our stike packages very very lethal. They all can fire nuclear able air launched cruise missiles as well if that need ever arises.
stike=strike
bloody typos :/
It can go anywhere it wants to, when it wants to. It's mighty hard for anyone to shoot it down when it's doing Mach2 at 200ft above the surface.
At one time we had a little over 100 in service (102?) under Reagan...I suspect those airframes and engines are stored away someplace safe:)
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