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U.S. Navy taps Raytheon for additional SPY-6 integrated air and missile defense radars

The U.S. Department of Defense and Raytheon Company announced on Friday an agreement worth about $250 million to build two additional shipsets of SPY-6 integrated air and missile defense radars. The company is now contracted to deliver a total of nine radar shipsets to DDG-51 Flight III destroyers, according to a recent company news release.

Two SPY-6(V)1 radar arrays inside Raytheon’s Andover, Massachusetts radar development facility.

SPY-6 is a family of next generation, integrated air and missile defense radars that scale to meet the mission requirements of any ship.

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“SPY-6 delivers significantly enhanced range and sensitivity [compared to legacy sensors], and gives geographically dispersed ships the ability to share – and act on – sensor data in ways never before possible,” said Scott Spence, senior director of Naval Radar Systems at Raytheon. “This radar gives the Navy unprecedented operational flexibility to defend against ballistic and cruise missiles as well as advanced surface and air threats.”

Since its inception in January 2014, the SPY-6 program has met all 20 milestones, ahead of or on schedule. The radar has a track record of performance, demonstrating its multi-mission capabilities against an array of single and multiple, simultaneous targets throughout the Navy’s extensive testing program.

Now in production at Raytheon’s advanced Radar Development Facility, AN/SPY-6(V) remains on schedule for delivery to the first DDG 51 Flight III, the future USS Jack H Lucas (DDG 125). The first delivery of AN/SPY-6(V)2 to LHA-8, the America Class Amphibious Assault Ship, is on plan for 2021.

Photo courtesy of Raytheon
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