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anzha

Senior Member
Registered Member
US Air Force awards $9B contract to Boeing for next training jet

A Boeing-Saab partnership has won a $9.2 billion contract to produce the
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.

...

The indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract will allow the Air Force to buy up to 475 aircraft and 120 simulators, the Air Force said in a Sept. 27 statement, although the current plan is to buy 351 T-X aircraft, 46 simulators and associated ground equipment. The service stated that it chose an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity structure in case its requirements change in the future.

The Air Force stated that the T-X program originally was to cost about $19.7 billion, and that Boeing’s bid shaved $10 billion off that amount. However, it was not immediately clear where that estimate was derived, as the T-X request for proposals estimated a $16 billion program of record.



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anzha

Senior Member
Registered Member
Seems like Boeing's year. I was getting on the T50A as Boeing had to start from scratch on this.

Boeing needed it to keep their line open much longer. The orders for the Eagle and Rhino are slowing down.

Think industrial base.

I placed my chits on Boing because of that.

Supposedly, Lockheed won something biggish, but secret. They have the eternal program of the F-35 which is about to go into block buy and the work that has supposedly started on the D model of the F-35.

Northrop is probably up for the next win if industrial base is any guide, but they do make a large chunk of the F-35 fuselage...soo...
 

anzha

Senior Member
Registered Member
Yeah, but that's for 100 odd aircraft. If you want to keep the base going, you'll want another contract. NGAD/PCA is coming up relatively soon, but we're talking production contracts. We'll see. I could be wrong.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Yeah, but that's for 100 odd aircraft. If you want to keep the base going, you'll want another contract. NGAD/PCA is coming up relatively soon, but we're talking production contracts. We'll see. I could be wrong.

The initial order for the B-21 is 100 aircraft minimum, there could be more, but in any respect Northrup Grumman will be busy, designing, building, and flying the B-21...
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Outside of that Northrop's only other bird is the E2 Hawkeye and drones.

That's not quite true, Northrup Grumman is building every F-35 Center Fuse section in this country,,, the Turks may be building a few as well, but that is a BIG project, and a very high level project.. Our aerospace industry remains extremely capable and robust!
 
it's moderately interesting
Navy Awards Ingalls 6 Destroyers, Bath Iron Works 4 in Multiyear Deal; Ingalls to Build Both 2018 Ships
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The Navy awarded six of its next Arleigh Burke-class destroyers to Ingalls Shipbuilding and four to General Dynamics Bath Iron Works, in a combined $9-billion purchase right at the end of the fiscal year.

The two companies had been competing for work in a five-year multiyear procurement (MYP) deal that would cover at least 10 Flight III destroyers. The contracts span Fiscals Years 2018 – which ends on Sunday – through 2022.

“These contract awards are further evidence of the Navy’s continued delivery of lethal capacity to the nation with a sense of urgency while ensuring best value for the taxpayer,” Navy acquisition chief James Geurts said in a Navy news release.
“The Navy saved $700 million for these 10 ships by using multiyear procurement contracts rather than a single year contracting approach. We also have options for an additional five DDG 51s to enable us to continue to accelerate delivery of the outstanding DDG 51 Flight III capabilities to our Naval force. We executed this competition on a quick timeline that reflects the urgency in which the Navy and our industry partners are operating to ensure we meet the demands of the National Defense Strategy.”

Ingalls Industries’ contract is worth $5.1 billion and covers two ships in FY 2018 and one a year in FY 2019 through 2022. It also includes options for additional ships, which may be subject to a future competition with BIW.

Bath Iron Works’ contract is valued at $3.9 billion and covers one ship a year in 2019 through 2022 – and none in the short-term in 2018.

According to the Navy statement, “each shipbuilder’s contract contains options for additional ships in FY18/19/20/21/22, providing the Navy and/or Congress flexibility to increase DDG 51 build rates above the 10 MYP ships in the Navy’s FY 2018 budget request, if appropriated.”

Lawmakers in the House and Senate armed services committees have pushed for faster acquisition of the destroyers, and in the FY 2018 National Defense Authorization Act they authorized the Navy to enter into a multiyear procurement contract with the two builders for as many as 15 destroyers – three a year, compared to the previous shipbuilding rate of two a year.

The lawmakers on the appropriations committees only provided money to buy two ships in 2018, but they did
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, which the Senate passed last week and the House passed this week. It is unclear if that third ship in FY 2019 would have to be competitively awarded or if the Navy would be allowed to select a shipyard based on schedule, performance or other factors – the contract announcement notes the options “may” be subject to a competitive process. Program officials had been
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and how to handle options for additional ships.

All the ships covered under this pair of contracts is for the Flight III configuration, which is built around the powerful AN/SPY-6(v) Air and Missile Defense Radar.

“This procurement will efficiently provide Integrated Air and Missile Defense capability for our future fleet while strengthening our critical shipbuilding and defense industrial base,” DDG-51 program manager Capt. Casey Moton said in the news release.
“The Navy is proud to be working alongside the dedicated shipbuilders at BIW and Ingalls to continue to deliver these warships to the fleet.”

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that the contracts would be structured in such a way that additional ships – beyond the previous two-a-year rate – could be added easily if the Navy deemed it a priority in its spending request or if lawmakers wanted to add in more funding.

With this contract award, the two shipyards – who, for a time after the production line had restarted remained neck-and-neck on contract awards and deliveries – will further diverge. Ingalls Shipbuilding was
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, DDG-125. Two months later, Bath Iron Works was awarded a contract that would have the yard build DDG-126 with a Flight III configuration but DDG-127 in the older Flight IIA design, like the rest of the ships in the previous multiyear procurement contract.

Though Navy and congressional officials would not comment while the competition was occurring, Bath Iron Works had been challenged to balance the Arleigh Burke-class program and the DDG-1000 Zumwalt-class destroyer program. Keeping DDG-127 – which Congress incrementally funded in FY 2016 and 2016 – at the Flight IIA design would help ease the yard into Flight III production. The yard will not be building any new destroyers in FY 2018, according to the contract announcement, whereas Ingalls will take on two Flight III ships.
 
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