Raytheon Sentinel
|
The Raytheon Sentinel is under development as the RAF's ASTOR (Airborne STand-Off Radar) aircraft. It will be a joint asset with the British Army, providing battlefield and ground surveillance in a similar role to the American E-8 JSTARS aircraft. ASTOR will be totally interoperable with allied systems such as JSTARS and the NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) system.
The first flight of a modified Bombardier Global Express was in August 2001 which validated the modifications required for the ASTOR system. The first production Sentinel R1 made its 4.4 hour maiden flight on May 26 2004. The initial operating capability will be achieved in 2005.
The original contracts call for a total of five aircraft, eight mobile ground stations (six on wheeled all terrain vehicles and two in air transportable containers), and extensive training facilities at the main RAF station.
The aircraft will normally fly at 15,000 m (40,000 ft) to ensure a high resolution view of a large battlefield area. It will be crewed by a pilot, a co-pilot and three technicians. Mission endurance should be about 9 hours. While the technicians can analyse the images on board the aircraft it is expected that, unlike the JSTARS, the actual battle management will occur on the ground.
The radar which provides this capability is supplied by Raytheon Systems Ltd, UK subsidiary of the Raytheon Corporation. It is an enhanced version of Raytheon’s well-proven dual-mode Synthetic Aperture/Moving Target Indication (SAR/MTI) ASARS2 radar. The radar is installed on a heavily modified Bombardier business jet - the Global Express, which will be known as the Sentinel R1 in RAF service. The aircraft is powered by the same engines used in the BAe Nimrod upgrade programme, the Rolls-Royce BR710.
The aircraft will be based at RAF Waddington and operated by 5 Sqn.
As the images show prototype 9001, a Global Express development aircraft belonging to Bombardier, carries the external fairings and antennas of the radar and communications systems that will be fitted on the production aircraft. However it is substantially different in other areas, such as the number of portholes and military colours.
While suffering from delays the project is one of few procurement projects to be below cost estimates.
Related topics
External link
- Raytheon: ASTOR (http://www.raytheon.co.uk/what_we_do/astor.html)
Lists of Aircraft | Aircraft manufacturers | Aircraft engines | Aircraft engine manufacturers Airports | Airlines | Air forces | Aircraft weapons | Missiles | Timeline of aviation |