28 juin 2021 | International, Aérospatial

Leonardo DRS Awarded Contract for 150+ P5 Combat Training Systems for F-35 - Seapower

ARLINGTON, Va. — Leonardo DRS Inc.’s Airborne & Intelligence Systems business division was awarded a contract from Cubic Mission and Performance Solutions (CMPS), a division of Cubic Corporation, to deliver additional P5 Combat Training Systems (P5CTS) for the F-35 Lightning II, Leonardo...

https://seapowermagazine.org/leonardo-drs-awarded-contract-for-150-p5-combat-training-systems-for-f-35/

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    4 octobre 2018 | International, Aérospatial

    Airbus teste le système de combat aérien du futur

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  • Safran fera le MCO des Arriel de la force aérienne danoise

    7 décembre 2018 | International, Aérospatial

    Safran fera le MCO des Arriel de la force aérienne danoise

    L'Armée de l'Air royale danoise confie le MCO des moteurs Arriel 1D1 de ses Airbus Helicopters AS550C2 Fennec à Safran Helicopter Engines. Manifestement satisfaite du travail des équipes de Safran Helicopter Engines, l'Armée de l'Air royale danoise vient de confier le MCO des moteurs Arriel 1D1 de 11 Airbus Helicopters AS550C2 Fennec à la filiale du groupe Safran dans le cadre du contrat de soutien "Global Support Package" jusqu'au retrait du service de ce parc d'Airbus Helicopters prévu pour la mi-2030. Le contrat de soutien s'engage à des garanties en matière de budget prévisionnel, de coûts fixes à l'heure de vol et "de partenariat technique avec le constructeur". Safran Helicopter Engines assure déjà depuis juillet 2016 le MCO des moteurs RTM322 des 14 hélicoptères Merlin de l'Armée de l'Air royale danoise. Plus de 75 moteurs bénéficient de ce contrat. La gestion du deuxième contrat est assurée par Safran Helicopter Engines Germany "qui gère le suivi de 280 opérateurs en Allemagne, en Scandinavie, en Europe centrale et de l'Est, en Russie et en Asie centrale. http://www.air-cosmos.com/safran-fera-le-mco-des-arriel-de-la-force-aerienne-danoise-117783

  • Missile Defense Agency to inject competition into homeland missile defense contract

    3 avril 2020 | International, Aérospatial

    Missile Defense Agency to inject competition into homeland missile defense contract

    By: Jen Judson WASHINGTON — The U.S. Missile Defense Agency plans to hold a competition that could split up the work among contractors to modernize and sustain America's missile defense system, which is designed to destroy intercontinental ballistic missile threats. Boeing has held the development and sustainment contract for the Ground-based Midcourse Defense systems in place at Fort Greely, Alaska, and Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. Boeing's contract is set to expire in 2023. The GMD system is made up of more than 44 Ground-Based Interceptors buried in silos in the ground along with ground control stations, detection and fire control systems, and other support infrastructure. Boeing received a sole-source $6.6 billion award in 2018 to build a new silo and 20 more GBIs, as well as to sustain the system. But Vice Adm. Jon Hill, the MDA's director, told an audience in March at an Association of the U.S. Army event that “we know that contract is not giving us everything that we need for the future, so we are going to compete that contract downstream.” The agency is working to develop a Next-Generation Interceptor that would replace the current GBIs with more capable interceptors. Its plan to upgrade the GBI's exoatmospheric kill vehicle with a redesigned version was canceled in 2019 due to technical problems. Rather than rework that program, the agency decided to design an entirely new interceptor and stop building new GBIs. A request for proposals for the NGI is due imminently. But along with a new NGI, “we are going to make sure that ground systems, sensors and fire control, all the rest of the system, we have the opportunity to inject that competition because I think that is very important,” Hill said. The MDA previously considered splitting up the contract several times, believing that would reduce cost and create efficiency in the program, but nothing materialized toward that goal. This time, the MDA has released two requests for information with the possibility of splitting up the contract. The most recent RFI was posted on Beta.Sam.Gov in March. “I will tell you that our lead system integrator does a great job today and the partnerships with industry within that construct do a great job, but we think that it's so large and complex we should be doing everybody a favor by being able to split that up without losing the integration among all those pieces,” Hill said, “so our intent is to move in that direction.” The agency “is exploring different approaches for fulfilling the GMD Program Element requirements. Acquisition approaches under consideration range from an award of multiple contracts to execute segments/missions of the program scope to a single contract to execute the entirety of the program scope,” the RFI states. “Essential to all of the acquisition approaches under consideration is the establishment of an enduring arrangement strategy for the execution of the [Weapon Systems Integration (WSI)] functions across the program lifecycle, either under a single prime contract, or as one of the multiple contracts.” The RFI lays out a possible plan to split up the contract into five pieces. One contractor would provide the NGI, which is being addressed through a separate request for proposals. Another would be responsible for legacy and future ground systems, and another for sustaining the existing GBIs. And a company would operate the weapon system along with military operators and would run fleet maintenance scheduling and deconfliction, site operations, test support, and depot and parts management, the RFI lays out. Lastly, a contractor would serve as the weapon systems integrator, making it responsible for overall GMD integration “including physical and logical integration of the GMD components, GMD system and MDA enterprise level integration, planning and execution of all necessary testing to verify and validate overall requirements compliance,” the RFI states. Responses to the RFI are due April 10. https://www.defensenews.com/pentagon/2020/04/02/missile-defense-agency-to-inject-competition-into-homeland-missile-defense-contract/

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