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Boeing receives $1.7 Billion for 7 more US Navy P-8A Poseidon Maritime Patrol Aircraft
Boeing receives $1.7 Billion for 7 more US Navy P-8A Poseidon Maritime Patrol Aircraft
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Navy Force News - USA
Boeing
receives $1.7 Billion for 7 more US Navy P-8A Poseidon Maritime Patrol
Aircraft
Boeing
on Nov. 3 received a $1.7 billion low-rate initial production (LRIP)
award from the U.S. Navy for seven additional P-8A Poseidon maritime
surveillance aircraft.LRIP-II is the follow-on to an initial LRIP-I
contract awarded in January to provide six Poseidon aircraft. Overall,
the Navy plans to purchase 117 Boeing 737-based P-8A anti-submarine
warfare, anti-surface warfare, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance
aircraft to replace its P-3 fleet.
As part of the contract, Boeing will provide aircrew and maintenance
training for the Navy beginning in 2012, in addition to logistics support,
spares, support equipment and tools. The training system will include
a full-motion, full-visual Operational Flight Trainer that simulates
the flight crew stations, and a Weapons Tactics Trainer for the mission
crew stations.
"This contract is the result of the Boeing and Navy team's
hard work and commitment, and moves us a step closer to P-8A full-rate
production," said Chuck Dabundo, Boeing vice president and P-8
program manager. "We've assembled and flown the first LRIP plane
and continue to focus on building P-8A aircraft on cost and on schedule."
US
Navy P-8A Poseidon Maritime Patrol Aircraft
(picture: US Navy)
"LRIP-II brings the P-8A program one step closer to delivering
the Poseidon to the fleet," said Capt. Scott Dillon, P-8A deputy
program manager for the Navy.
Boeing completed assembly of the first LRIP-I aircraft at its Renton,
Wash., facility this summer. The aircraft subsequently completed a
successful first flight July 7, 2011, from Renton Field to Boeing
Field, which marked its transition from fabrication and assembly to
mission system installation and checkout in Seattle.
The Poseidon team is using a first-in-industry in-line production
process that draws on Boeing's Next-Generation 737 production system.
All P-8A-unique aircraft modifications are made in sequence during
fabrication and assembly.
The team has built and is testing six flight-test and two ground-test
aircraft under the U.S. Navy System Development and Demonstration
contract awarded to Boeing in 2004. Four flight-test aircraft -- T1,
T2, T3 and T5 -- are conducting testing at Naval Air Station Patuxent
River, Md. The program's static test plane, S1, completed its test
program in January. S2, the fatigue test plane, will begin testing
next year. Initial operational capability is planned for 2013.
A derivative of the Next-Generation 737-800, the Poseidon is built
by a Boeing-led industry team that includes CFM International, Northrop
Grumman, Raytheon, Spirit AeroSystems, BAE Systems and GE Aviation.
From: Boeing press release