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US Navy Recommends Raytheon Submarine Combat System For Fleet Introduction

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by Staff Writers
Tewksbury MA (SPX) Aug 22, 2007
The U.S. Navy has recommended Raytheon's advanced submarine combat control system, AN/BYG-1, for fleet introduction on the SSGN Ohio Class and SSN-21 Seawolf Class attack submarines after favorable tests and evaluations. The recent Follow-on Operational Test and Evaluation reports highlighted several performance enhancements and confirmed the operational effectiveness and suitability of the AN/BYG-1(V)6 and (V)7 for the SSN-21 and SSGN platforms.

AN/BYG-1 exploits the power of sonar, electronic support measures, radar, navigation, periscopes, communication, command and weapons to provide a fully integrated submarine combat system. The system was designed using commercial off the shelf (COTS) equipment and open standards that provide interoperability, portability, scalability and supplier independence for all hardware and software components. The AN/BYG-1 system allows for rapid COTS insertion to accommodate and integrate additional functionality, sensors and/or weapons.

"The customer commended the AN/BYG-1 combat system's reliability, maintainability, training and documentation," said Upinder Dhinsa, vice president of Raytheon Integrated Defense Systems' (IDS) Maritime Mission Systems. "We see this as a testament to Raytheon's ongoing commitment to delivering highly capable and affordable solutions for the U.S. Navy's submarine fleet."

Raytheon IDS is the AN/BYG-1 systems integrator for the combat control suite, delivering the advanced communication, navigation and weapon launch capabilities that are critical to submarine combat operations. In addition to the weapons control subsystem, the company provides integration, control and coordination of the tactical control, weapons control, and tactical network subsystems, ensuring complete end-to-end functionality.

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Analysis: Chinese navy starts long march
Hong Kong (UPI) Aug 17, 2007
China is bent on the simultaneous development of both an aircraft carrier and a strategic nuclear submarine, or SSBN. Discussions over which should take priority are over, as a higher military budget allocation has accelerated the People's Liberation Army navy's ambitious plan.







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