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Apr 13, 2010

Boeing estima que la US Navy pedirá 30 EA-18G mas/Boeing predicts up to 30 new orders for EA-18G



Boeing espera que la US Navy compre de 26 a 30 EA-18G mas de los 88 presupuestados, debido a un hueco sin cubrir desde hace 12 años. Durante años el Northrop Grumman EA-6B Prowler ha cumplido en la US Navy la doble misión de radar primario del grupo de combate e interferidor de comunicaciones, misión que cumplía el EF-111 de la USAF, retirado en 1997. Desde entonces algunos Prowlers han sido basados en tierra para cumplir esta misión.
Con la baja prevista en 2012 de los EA-6B de la US Navy, el Pentágono afronta un problema, ya que la USAF aun no tiene sustituto para el EF-111. La US Navy necesita los 88 EA-18G para reemplazar a los Prowler basados en portaaviones, y no está previstos sustituir a los EA-6B desplegados en tierra. Es por esto que Boeing piensa que EA-18G adicionales podrían cubrir este vacío.
Por otra parte, Boeing ha comunicado que esta versión tiene un mercado de exportación de unos 50 aviones.
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A Boeing executive today predicted the US Navy could buy 26 to 30 EA-18Gs more than the 88 already in the budget, potentially addresssing a shortfall created by the US Air Force 12 years ago.
For several years, the US Navy's Northrop Grumman EA-6B Prowlers have been pulling double-duty. The EA-6B serves primarily as the carrier battle group's radar and communications jammer. The USAF retired the General Dynamics EF-111 Raven in 1997. Ever since, some Prowlers have also been assigned to a primarily land-based mission, escorting strike packages of fighters and bombers into combat zones.
With the USN EA-6Bs scheduled to phase out in Fiscal 2012, the Pentagon faces a problem. The USAF still has not funded a replacement for the EF-111. The USN needs all 88 EA-18Gs to replace Prowlers serving only the carrier-based mission. In an age when electronic threats are growing, US forces will lose ground if the land-based EA-6Bs are not replaced. According to Rick Martin, Boeing's EA-18G program manager, the USN could fill this gap by boosting the currently planned EA-18G fleet by about one-third. The move could also extend Boeing's common production line for F/A-18E/F Super Hornets and Growlers by up to two years at current production rates.
Gen James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told senators at his confirmation hearing in early July that the US Air Force's prized Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor was canceled partly to pay for additional EA-18Gs that are highly in demand. The EA-18G integrates the same suite of sensors and jammers, including ALQ-218 receiver and analog ALQ-99 jamming pods, found on the EA-6B. The Growler also adds the Raytheon APG-79 active electronically scanned array (AESA).
Last week, the USN announced that the EA-18 has cleared its operational evaluation. In September, Boeing must verify that it has resolved undisclosed software anomalies found during the evaluation. The EA-18G remains on track to reach initial operational capability later this year. Boeing is also expecting to receive a full-rate production deal covering the next 54 EA-18Gs, with 34 already on contract and 12 delivered.
In addition to the potential domestic order boost, Boeing continues to pursue export orders, a market one executive previously estimated could stretch to 50 aircraft. So far, Australia has agreed to pre-wire the last 12 of 24 F/A-18Fs on order for possible conversion to the EA-18G configuration. Boeing has also proposed the idea of a "Growler Lite" suite, which would include only the sensors and exclude the jammers.

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