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Northrop Grumman Terpilih Sebagai Produsen Stealth Bomber USAF Terbaru
Quote:
UP IN THE SKY10.27.156:44 PM ET
Secret U.S. Stealth Bomber Project Takes Off
The Pentagon dishes out $79 billion to Northrop Grumman to produce the most advanced bomber ever made—part of an attempt to keep the American military edge over Russia and China.
Northrop Grumman has scored the biggest, most important U.S. weapons contract in a decade—beating out a consortium of Boeing and Lockheed Martin to design and build up to 100 new stealth bombers for the Air Force for an estimated $79 billion.
The Pentagon hopes the radar-evading bomber will be able to slip through the increasingly sophisticated air defenses that both Russia and China are building, restoring in the process America’s eroding ability to wage war anywhere on the planet whenever it wants to.
“Building this bomber is a strategic investment for the next 50 years,” U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter announced on Tuesday evening. “The Long Range Strike Bomber will support America’s defense strategy by forming the backbone of the Air Force’s future strike and deterrent capabilities.”
Details of Northrop’s bomber design remain classified. Pentagon officials wouldn’t even specify what kind of engines the new plane will have.
As part of the contract, Northrop Grumman will build an initial 21 bombers, for frontline service beginning around 2025, military officials said. The military’s accountants estimate Northrop Grumman can build 100 bombers for $56 billion. The 10-year development process should cost no more than $23 billion in today’s dollars,William LaPlante, the Air Force’s top weapons buyer, said at the Tuesday contract announcement.
“The Air Force has made the right decision for our nation’s security,” Wes Bush, president of Northrop Grumman, said in a statement.
Northrop’s win comes as no surprise. The company has more recent bomber experience than Lockheed and Boeing, having built all 21 copies of the Air Force’s last bomber, the B-2. Northrop is also the only one of the three companies that, prior to Tuesday’s announcement, lacked a major Pentagon warplane contract.
Boeing is building aerial tankers for the Air Force and Super Hornet fighters for the Navy. Lockheed makes the F-35 stealth fighter for the Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps. Industry analysts had speculated that losing the bomber contract could have forced Northrop Grumman to exit the warplane business entirely, leaving the United States with just two major military plane makers.
LaPlante denied that Northrop’s survival as a plane manufacturer factored into the bomber decision: “The industrial base was not at all a consideration.”
Lockheed and Boeing have 100 days to officially protest the contract award to the Government Accountability Office, which would compel the Pentagon to justify its decision.
The contract award marks the end of a nearly decade-long struggle for the military—and the beginning of a potential new one. The Air Force tried to kick-start a new bomber program way back in 2006 in order to begin replacing a mixed fleet of 50-year-old B-52s, 30-year-old B-1s, and B-2s dating to the 1990s, only to have then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates cancel the effort in 2010 for being too expensive.
The Defense Department took management of the bomber initiative away from the Air Force and relaunched it, assigning the secretive Rapid Capabilities Office to oversee the program. The Washington, D.C.-based office had previously shepherded design and deployment of the Air Force’s X-37B, a high-tech robotic space plane that can spend more than a year at a time in orbit.
The new bomber Northrop Grumman will build is an important component of the Pentagon’s strategy for deterring an increasingly well-armed and assertive Russia and China. The Air Force has expressed concern that its older warplanes can’t penetrate the latest Russian and Chinese defenses, which include long-range radars and powerful surface-to-air missiles.
“The capabilities of the Long Range Strike Bomber will ensure the United States can hold any target on the globe at risk,” said Gen. Mark Welsh, the Air Force chief of staff. “This is an exciting day for us.”
http://www.thedailybeast.com/article...source=twitter
Secret U.S. Stealth Bomber Project Takes Off
The Pentagon dishes out $79 billion to Northrop Grumman to produce the most advanced bomber ever made—part of an attempt to keep the American military edge over Russia and China.
Northrop Grumman has scored the biggest, most important U.S. weapons contract in a decade—beating out a consortium of Boeing and Lockheed Martin to design and build up to 100 new stealth bombers for the Air Force for an estimated $79 billion.
The Pentagon hopes the radar-evading bomber will be able to slip through the increasingly sophisticated air defenses that both Russia and China are building, restoring in the process America’s eroding ability to wage war anywhere on the planet whenever it wants to.
“Building this bomber is a strategic investment for the next 50 years,” U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter announced on Tuesday evening. “The Long Range Strike Bomber will support America’s defense strategy by forming the backbone of the Air Force’s future strike and deterrent capabilities.”
Details of Northrop’s bomber design remain classified. Pentagon officials wouldn’t even specify what kind of engines the new plane will have.
As part of the contract, Northrop Grumman will build an initial 21 bombers, for frontline service beginning around 2025, military officials said. The military’s accountants estimate Northrop Grumman can build 100 bombers for $56 billion. The 10-year development process should cost no more than $23 billion in today’s dollars,William LaPlante, the Air Force’s top weapons buyer, said at the Tuesday contract announcement.
“The Air Force has made the right decision for our nation’s security,” Wes Bush, president of Northrop Grumman, said in a statement.
Northrop’s win comes as no surprise. The company has more recent bomber experience than Lockheed and Boeing, having built all 21 copies of the Air Force’s last bomber, the B-2. Northrop is also the only one of the three companies that, prior to Tuesday’s announcement, lacked a major Pentagon warplane contract.
Boeing is building aerial tankers for the Air Force and Super Hornet fighters for the Navy. Lockheed makes the F-35 stealth fighter for the Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps. Industry analysts had speculated that losing the bomber contract could have forced Northrop Grumman to exit the warplane business entirely, leaving the United States with just two major military plane makers.
LaPlante denied that Northrop’s survival as a plane manufacturer factored into the bomber decision: “The industrial base was not at all a consideration.”
Lockheed and Boeing have 100 days to officially protest the contract award to the Government Accountability Office, which would compel the Pentagon to justify its decision.
The contract award marks the end of a nearly decade-long struggle for the military—and the beginning of a potential new one. The Air Force tried to kick-start a new bomber program way back in 2006 in order to begin replacing a mixed fleet of 50-year-old B-52s, 30-year-old B-1s, and B-2s dating to the 1990s, only to have then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates cancel the effort in 2010 for being too expensive.
The Defense Department took management of the bomber initiative away from the Air Force and relaunched it, assigning the secretive Rapid Capabilities Office to oversee the program. The Washington, D.C.-based office had previously shepherded design and deployment of the Air Force’s X-37B, a high-tech robotic space plane that can spend more than a year at a time in orbit.
The new bomber Northrop Grumman will build is an important component of the Pentagon’s strategy for deterring an increasingly well-armed and assertive Russia and China. The Air Force has expressed concern that its older warplanes can’t penetrate the latest Russian and Chinese defenses, which include long-range radars and powerful surface-to-air missiles.
“The capabilities of the Long Range Strike Bomber will ensure the United States can hold any target on the globe at risk,” said Gen. Mark Welsh, the Air Force chief of staff. “This is an exciting day for us.”
http://www.thedailybeast.com/article...source=twitter

Quote:
Northrop Grumman Wins The Contract To Produce America's Next Stealth Bomber
Tyler Rogoway
Filed to: Long Range Strike Bomber10/27/15 5:29pm
After a maze of programs and initiatives that lasted a decade-and-a-half, the U.S. Air Force has chosen its next bomber. The battle for the contract between a consortium of Lockheed Martin-Boeing and Northrop has been hard fought and comes with huge implication, and Northrop Grumman has been selected as the winner.
Information discussed during the press conference:
The aircraft is a complete package concept at this point, including engines and sub-systems. They will not discuss the engine used or manufacturer.
Today’s decision stands to rearrange the defense sector to some degree, as a loss for Northrop Grumman very well could have knocked them out as a prime aircraft contractor all together. This would have left the Boeing-Lockheed consortium, and namely Lockheed, with the Pentagon’s entire fixed-wing tactical and strategic combat aircraft portfolio. Such a reality could have meant that only Lockheed would have the knowledge or capacity to bid on future advanced air combat programs.
With Northrop Grumman being the winner, the sixth largest defense contractor stands to grow not just in wealth and size but also in technological capabilities and know-how. This is especially relevant considering the advanced technological nature of the LRS-B and its potentially half century or longer lifespan. The company will also hopefully bring focus to the program that may have been harder for the competition to achieve. Northrop Grumman does not have the F-35 and commercial airplanes, or a massive massive number of corporate divisions to worry about. They can apply their best people to largely this program alone to see the LRS-B into production. Still, there is no doubt that Boeing and Lockheed could have brought a lot of talent and deep corporate resources to the program if they would have won.
Now the Northrop Grumman will have to follow through and integrate the various pre-selected subsystems and engines into flying prototypes under the next phase of the program, although some of this may have already been done on various test articles and/or even prior clandestine aircraft. Northrop Grumman is thought to have built a next-generation bomber technology demonstrator in the mid-2000s and is known to have produced a very classified stealthy penetrating unmanned reconnaissance aircraft dubbed unofficially the RQ-180 around 2010. Even if these programs are one in the same they could have greatly enhanced Northrop Grumman’s capabilities when it comes to integrating high-end sub-systems in to a very stealthy airframe.
Regardless of speculating on secret projects, Northrop has built, maintained and upgraded the USAF’s B-2 Spirit for 25 years, the world’s only manned stealth flying-wing combat aircraft. They have also recently built the hugely successful X-47B flying-wing naval unmanned combat aircraft demonstrators. The YF-23 Black Widow that lost to the F-22 during the Advanced Tactical Fighter competition was another high-end stealth project they were involved in. Yet it was their Tacit Blue technology demonstrator that flew a decade earlier than even the YF-23 that paved the way for all these aircraft.
Now the biggest fear for the program is cost growth. The LRS-B program has been centered on building an aircraft for a fixed price of around $550 million dollars. If this figure balloons out of control, the program could easily enter a death spiral.
Northrop Grumman has already had some help in this cost control department though. The LRS-B acquisition program was ran through the USAF’s Rapid Capabilities Office, the same folks who streamlined the acquisition of the X-37B space plane. The requirements have remained frozen for years and the goal was to use mature and semi-mature subsystems for the new bomber instead of high-risk experimental new ones. This alone should help keep costs under control and timelines intact, but still these procurement tactics are not a total panacea for potential overruns.
Now there will likely be a formal protest from the Boeing-Lockheed consortium on the decision, although the Air Force seems confident it will not hinder their moving forward much. Maybe they have finally learned from their string of seemingly continuous past procurement boondoggles and executed this competition competently. At this time it appears this may be so.
As for when we will see an LRS-B for ourselves, it may be some time. The initial prototypes may work out of Area 51 before moving to Edwards AFB South Base complex. Or they could be go straight there first after a formal unveiling at Plant 42 in Palmdale CA. At this time we just don’t know. Although there may be a trickle of new concept art coming in the near term, it is likely we won’t see the aircraft’s true form until the USAF wants us to, and that could mean months from now or even years.
Congratulations to Northrop Grumman on their big win.
http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/nor...cas-1739037579
Tyler Rogoway
Filed to: Long Range Strike Bomber10/27/15 5:29pm
After a maze of programs and initiatives that lasted a decade-and-a-half, the U.S. Air Force has chosen its next bomber. The battle for the contract between a consortium of Lockheed Martin-Boeing and Northrop has been hard fought and comes with huge implication, and Northrop Grumman has been selected as the winner.
Information discussed during the press conference:
The aircraft is a complete package concept at this point, including engines and sub-systems. They will not discuss the engine used or manufacturer.
- The aircraft will supposedly cost $564 million per unit.
- Initial Operational Capability is set for 2025.
- Four aircraft were rumored to be part of the EMD phase, but the USAF would not give out the details again in the press conference.
- There is no designation for aircraft at this time.
- Two separate cost analysis were made for the decision, they came within two percent of each-other.
- Industrial base concerns were not a part of decision process.
- The structure of the deal will be cost-plus for development and fixed price for initial low-rate production.
Today’s decision stands to rearrange the defense sector to some degree, as a loss for Northrop Grumman very well could have knocked them out as a prime aircraft contractor all together. This would have left the Boeing-Lockheed consortium, and namely Lockheed, with the Pentagon’s entire fixed-wing tactical and strategic combat aircraft portfolio. Such a reality could have meant that only Lockheed would have the knowledge or capacity to bid on future advanced air combat programs.
With Northrop Grumman being the winner, the sixth largest defense contractor stands to grow not just in wealth and size but also in technological capabilities and know-how. This is especially relevant considering the advanced technological nature of the LRS-B and its potentially half century or longer lifespan. The company will also hopefully bring focus to the program that may have been harder for the competition to achieve. Northrop Grumman does not have the F-35 and commercial airplanes, or a massive massive number of corporate divisions to worry about. They can apply their best people to largely this program alone to see the LRS-B into production. Still, there is no doubt that Boeing and Lockheed could have brought a lot of talent and deep corporate resources to the program if they would have won.
Now the Northrop Grumman will have to follow through and integrate the various pre-selected subsystems and engines into flying prototypes under the next phase of the program, although some of this may have already been done on various test articles and/or even prior clandestine aircraft. Northrop Grumman is thought to have built a next-generation bomber technology demonstrator in the mid-2000s and is known to have produced a very classified stealthy penetrating unmanned reconnaissance aircraft dubbed unofficially the RQ-180 around 2010. Even if these programs are one in the same they could have greatly enhanced Northrop Grumman’s capabilities when it comes to integrating high-end sub-systems in to a very stealthy airframe.
Regardless of speculating on secret projects, Northrop has built, maintained and upgraded the USAF’s B-2 Spirit for 25 years, the world’s only manned stealth flying-wing combat aircraft. They have also recently built the hugely successful X-47B flying-wing naval unmanned combat aircraft demonstrators. The YF-23 Black Widow that lost to the F-22 during the Advanced Tactical Fighter competition was another high-end stealth project they were involved in. Yet it was their Tacit Blue technology demonstrator that flew a decade earlier than even the YF-23 that paved the way for all these aircraft.
Now the biggest fear for the program is cost growth. The LRS-B program has been centered on building an aircraft for a fixed price of around $550 million dollars. If this figure balloons out of control, the program could easily enter a death spiral.
Northrop Grumman has already had some help in this cost control department though. The LRS-B acquisition program was ran through the USAF’s Rapid Capabilities Office, the same folks who streamlined the acquisition of the X-37B space plane. The requirements have remained frozen for years and the goal was to use mature and semi-mature subsystems for the new bomber instead of high-risk experimental new ones. This alone should help keep costs under control and timelines intact, but still these procurement tactics are not a total panacea for potential overruns.
Now there will likely be a formal protest from the Boeing-Lockheed consortium on the decision, although the Air Force seems confident it will not hinder their moving forward much. Maybe they have finally learned from their string of seemingly continuous past procurement boondoggles and executed this competition competently. At this time it appears this may be so.
As for when we will see an LRS-B for ourselves, it may be some time. The initial prototypes may work out of Area 51 before moving to Edwards AFB South Base complex. Or they could be go straight there first after a formal unveiling at Plant 42 in Palmdale CA. At this time we just don’t know. Although there may be a trickle of new concept art coming in the near term, it is likely we won’t see the aircraft’s true form until the USAF wants us to, and that could mean months from now or even years.
Congratulations to Northrop Grumman on their big win.
http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/nor...cas-1739037579

yeah! selamat Northrop Grumman. emang dah pengalaman bikin bomber stealth, jadi kalo menang lawan Lockheed Martin & Boeing ya wajar2 aja

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