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LM wins Aussie fire control contract

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Published: Sept. 27, 2007 at 4:48 PM
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CANBERRA, Australia, Sept. 27 (UPI) -- Lockheed Martin has won a $20.6 million contract to improve Australia's MK92 Fire Control System.

The upgrade is required "to support the introduction of Standard Missile 2 -- SM-2 --capability into the Royal Australian Navy Adelaide-class guided missile frigates -- FFGs," Lockheed Martin said in a statement Tuesday.

Lockheed Martin said its MK92 system "provides integrated X-band radar surveillance, target tracking and weapon fire control capability for naval gun and missile applications."

Under the contract, Lockheed Martin will provide MK92 alterations and related support services for the design, development and integration of the new system features supporting the new missile capability. "The upgrade is part of the Royal Australian Navy’s SEA 1390 Phase 4B program and will be performed by Lockheed Martin Australia in Sydney, as well as Lockheed Martin’s business in Moorestown, N.J.," the company said.

“The upgrade will ensure robust capability of the Royal Australian Navy FFG fleet against threats that have developed since the introduction of the current combat system,” said Paul Johnson, managing director of Lockheed Martin Australia. "The project complements our Aegis combat system integration work currently underway on the Air Warfare Destroyer project.”

“The MK92 upgrade represents the very first introduction of SM-2 into an FFG-class surface combatant anywhere in the world,” said Stan Ozga, Lockheed Martin’s director for Naval Radar Programs. “With this contract, Lockheed Martin will deliver a major improvement to the FFG anti-air warfare capability and continue more than two decades of support to the operational needs of the Royal Australian Navy customer.”

Lockheed Martin said that "more than 125 shipboard MK92 systems have been produced and are currently deployed in nine different navies -- including the Royal Australian Navy -- around the world. It has been installed on more than 70 guided missile frigates, as well as a variety of other surface ships including coast guard cutters, corvettes and fast attack craft."

Topics: Paul Johnson
© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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