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Captain
As decided earlier on, the sole german Eurohawk demonstrator is going to fly again, to at least finish testing & development of the SIGINT payload.
With all the advances made in recent years in avionics, I really hope they get this airspace integration done.
Trying to migrate the system to another airframe will only lengthen the whole process once more.

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Northrop preparing German Euro Hawk to fly again
  • 26 February, 2016
  • BY: James Drew
  • Washington DC
The Northrop Grumman-built Euro Hawk unmanned air vehicle will fly again after the German air force decided to resume testing of the aircraft and its Airbus Defence & Space signals intelligence (SIGINT) payload.

Since the cancellation of Euro Hawk in May 2013, Germany's one RQ-4 Global Hawk-derived full-scale demonstrator has been in storage at Manching Air Base. Plans hatched last year will see testing resume as Germany looks to field the SIGINT payload, perhaps on an alternative platform.

“Working with our German partners, we are returning our full-scale demonstrator to flight status and we continue to negotiate with the German Air Force to prove out that [Airbus] payload that we’re currently under contract with,” says Northrop Global Hawk chief Mick Jaggers. “I have a crew in Manching right now putting that aircraft back into flight status.”

Euro Hawk development began in 2000, but the programme was shuttered because of concerns about airworthiness and unmanned aircraft integration in European airspace.

Early-model Global Hawks do not have a weather radar or anti-icing systems, and cannot automatically detect and avoid other aircraft when transiting to their operating altitudes of 60,000ft.

Germany is considering several options for hosting the Airbus-developed electronic and communications intelligence sensor, which began flight testing in January 2013 before being truncated.

One option is the Global Hawk-derived MQ-4C Triton – being built for the US Navy and Australia – or perhaps the same Global Hawk type being delivered to NATO for its Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) programme. Another option is to host the payload on a manned business jet aircraft.

Jaggers says airspace integration is not as problematic as it once was for the Global Hawk type.

“We’ve been in a couple of demos in the European theatre, including Unified Vision in 2014 and Trident Juncture in 2015,” he says. “When you look at the airspace that was opened for us, we’ve been through the entire European airspace right now.”

Three “Q-4” types will eventually be hosted in Europe at Sigonella Air Base in Italy: the US Air Force and NATO Global Hawks and MQ-4C Triton. The US military has already begun developing sense-and-avoid technologies and adverse weather modifications for its RQ-4s.

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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
German Navy’s Gepard-class fast attack vessels conduct final SQUADEX

The crews of the German Navy’s Zobel-class fast attack vessels ‘Hermelin’, ‘Zobel’, ‘Frettchen’ und ‘Hyäne’ started their final SQUADEX on February 29 before they bid farewell to their ships at the end of the year.
The Squadron exercise of the 7th Fast Patrol Boat Squadron takes place two times a year. In the following four weeks, sailors will be conducting a program packed with exercises.
Apart from the navigational drills, such as man-over-board exercises and formation sailing, the SQUADEX will incorporate air-defence exercises, sea- and air target practice as well as defending against asymmetrical threats such as piracy or terrorism.
The four fast attack vessels will, together with the German tender Elbe, return to their homeport in Warnemünde, Germany, March 24.
After the SQUADEX, the ships are set to take part in the multi-national exercise Baltops and the Kiel Week, which is often dubbed as the largest sailing event in the world.
The decommissioning ceremony for the four ships is scheduled for November 16, 2016 in Warnemünde.
A total of ten ships of the Gepard-class were introduced to the German Navy between 1982 and 1984. Only four are still in service and are the last attack vessels in the German Navy

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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Croatia confirms the purchase of OH-58 Kiowa

Croatia has approved the acquisition of 16 used helicopters OH-58D "Kiowa" armed reconnaissance from the US Army. The plan to buy a OH-58D helicopter squadron and three simulators valued at $ 41 million.

The OH-58D helicopters "Kiowa" will be removed from service at the end of this year in the US Army. Appliances intended to Croatia will be selected based on the potential of the cells, and then undergo a complete maintenance before being delivered to their new user.

Bell OH-58 "Kiowa"

Bell OH-58 Kiowa is a small military reconnaissance helicopter, derived from the famous Bell 206 "Jet Ranger". It entered service in May 1969 under the name OH-58A and was then repeatedly improved. He is one of the most versatile helicopter of the US Army. Its weaponry is extremely variable, versions A and C had a minigun M134, while the OH-58D carries a M2 machine gun and a rocket pod 7 "Hydra" series and improved optical, camera on the photo above the blades did not exist in versions A and C. the version Kiowa "Warrior" is itself equipped with four missiles Raytheon AGM-114 "Hellfire".

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navyreco

Senior Member
GE to Provide Gas Turbines for Italian Navy PPA Hybrid Drive
GE’s Marine Solutions will provide the LM2500+G4 gas turbine that will power the Italian Navy’s new Pattugliatori Polivalenti d’Altura (PPA) multipurpose offshore patrol ships. The ships’ hybrid electric propulsion system also will use GE’s shock-proof MV3000 drives and a GE-designed electrical network of motors as part of the propulsion system.
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Third of TKMS built F125 class Frigate “Sachsen-Anhalt” Christened for the German Navy
The third of a total of four 125 class frigates for the German Navy was christened “Sachsen-Anhalt” today at the Hamburg site of thyssenkrupp Marine Systems. Following the christening of the first two frigates “Baden-Württemberg” in December 2013 and “Nordrhein-Westfalen” in April 2015 this is a further important milestone in the shipbuilding program for this frigate class. Dr. Gabriele Haseloff, wife of the premier of the state of Saxony-Anhalt after which the frigate has been named, performed the christening ceremony in the presence of high-level representatives from government, the German Navy and the companies involved.
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Greek Navy
Numerous but have enough old ships.

In March 01, 2016 (updated article), Hellenic Navy consists of the following warships:

- 13 frigates (Hydra, Spetsai, Psara, Salamis, Elli, Limnos, Kountouriotis, Adrias, Aigaion, Navarinon, Kanaris, Themistocles, Nikiforos Fokas)

- 10 submarines (Papanikolis, Pipinos, Matrozos, Okeanos, Poseidon, Amfitriti, Pontos, Nireus, Triton, Pontos)

- 17 fast attack missile crafts (Roussen, Daniolos, Krystallidis, Grigoropoulos, Ritsos, Laskos, Blessas, Troupakis, Mikonios, Kavaloudis, Degiannis, Xenos, Simitzopoulos, Starakis, Votsis, Pezopoulos, Maridakis)

- 10 large patrol boats (Machitis, Nikiforos, Aittitos, Krataios, Kasos, Polemistis, Armatolos, Naumachos, Tolmi, Ormi)

- 6 coastal patrol boats (Antoniou, Stamos, Andromeda, Pigasos, Kyknos,Toxotis)

- 5 large tank landing ships (Chios, Lesvos, Ikaria, Samos, Rodos)

- 4 large hovercrafts (Kefallinia, Ithaki, Kerkyra, Zakynthos)

- 3 logistic support/replenishment ships (Prometheus, Axios, Aliakmon)

- 18 ASW helicopters S-70 and AB212

and many other auxiliary vessels (auxiliaries 2nd rate are excluded)

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Brumby

Major
France, UK To Fly Unmanned Combat Aircraft Demonstrator in 2025

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Defense ministers of France and the United Kingdom endorsed today the plan to launch the development of full scale operational demonstrator of the ‘Future Combat Air System’ Unmanned Combat Air System (
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) next year. This phase will prepare for the full-scale development of unmanned combat air system (
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) operational demonstrators by 2025. At a cost of €2 billion this demonstration programme, the most advanced of its kind in Europe, will be centered on a versatile
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platform that could serve as the basis for a future operational capability beyond 2030.

The
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of the program was launched at the Brize Norton Summit in 2014, at an investment of £120 Million, where France and the UK explored the feasibility of such future combat air systems. The first phase was a two-year feasibility study, which will continue next year into the follow-on demonstration programme. The project partners are Dassault Aviation,
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, Rolls Royce, SNECMA/Safran, Finmeccanica Airborne and Space Systems Division and Thales. The
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program continues following previous research programs conducted separately in the UK and France, including the
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and the international collaborative
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program lead by Dassault Aviation.

The next phase will be a technical review, scheduled for 2020. Under the research programs the two countries will also to analyse the future combat air environment including how manned and unmanned systems might operate together.
 
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