P-8A/P-8I ASW/MPA Aircraft Thread

aksha

Captain
both the US navy and Australian navy Boeing ASW aircraft are called poseidons why do you think the indian ones are called neptunes?
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
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Times of India said:
NEW DELHI: The Indian Navy is likely to order four more P-81 long-range maritime patrol and anti-submarine warfare aircraft from American firm Boeing which delivered the sixth plane today as part of an eight-aircraft contract worth over Rs 12,000 crore.

The sixth aircraft landed at INS Rajali in Arakkonam in Tamil Nadu at about 4 PM today.

The eight-aircraft deal was signed in 2009 and as per the agreement, three each were to be delivered in 2013 and 2014 and two in 2015.

"The delivery schedule has been on time," a navy source said, adding that the force might go in for the option clause in the contract under which it can order four more.

The P-8I, based on the Boeing next-generation 737 commercial airplane, is a variant of the P-8A Poseidon that the US Navy uses.

India was Boeing's first international customer for this aircraft.

The aircraft features open system architecture, advanced sensors and display technologies.

It is equipped with foreign and indigenous sensors for maritime reconnaissance, anti-submarine operations and electronic intelligence missions.

It is integrated with latest sensors and anti-surface and anti-submarine weapons.

This is the sixth of the initial eight and it is almost certain that the option for four more will be executed. And possible quite a few more after that.

India received three in 2013, this is the 3rd in 2014, and two more are scheduled for 2015. It is the only other nation, outside of the US Navy, that has deployed, operational P-8 aircraft.

Australia has also ordered the aircraft and it is likely that the UK and others will too.

See my:

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aksha

Captain
How The Navy's Latest Anti-Submarine Aircraft Sees Under The Waves
Boeing's P-8A Poseidon has been a part of the US Navy for a year this month. The converted airliner brings the latest in anti-submarine capabilities, reaching greater altitude and speed than its predecessor (without the nausea factor for its crew).

At the front of the plane, the P-8A sports an exclusive radar system supplied by Raytheon. In certain detection modes, the 408-pound radar system has a range of 200 nautical miles and provides ultra-high resolution images. A shorter-ranged setting offers enough precision to pick up on "small targets with limited exposure time in high sea states," according to Raytheon's fact sheet on the product.

The P8-A also has a refueling receptacle for missions that go beyond the 20 hours it can fly on a full tank.

The back half is dedicated to the storing and launching of sonar buoys from on high, which allow members of the nine-person crew to measure the sound propagation around these underwater units - just as a submarine or warship typically would. The P-8A can send out more than 100 of these yard-long "sonobuoys" in a single flight.

And in the middle, "any operator can control and monitor any sensor from their station," a Boeing representative wrote in an email to Business Insider. Each of five operator stations is equipped with two 24-inch high resolution displays, which were designed to work seamlessly with Raytheon's radar system.

P 8A PoseidonUnlike some vehicles contracted from private manufacturers, the P-8A's militaristic features "are incorporated in sequence during fabrication and assembly" rather than being tacked on in post-production. It's built from the fuselage of Boeing's 737-800 and the wings of its 737-900.

The US Navy currently owns 13 units of the P-8A, with plans to eventually expand its stable to 117.

Already the plane has played a role in the South Asian theate



The P-8A doesn't just make spy flights; in addition to its primary function as an intelligence-gathering asset, it can carry various payloads: cruise missiles, naval mines, and even torpedoes.

Boeing has also created the P-8I, a variant on the Poseidon designed for foreign markets. The Indian Navy has purchased eight of these, the last two of which will be delivered next year, to replace their Russian Tu-142 aircraft.



According to Boeing, the company is fielding interest from other countries as well; Australia has moved to acquire eight of its own.

India's P-8I, per their contract request, is equipped with a Magnetic Anomaly Detector (MAD) eschewed by the plane's parent version.

The tailpiece picks up on variances in the Earth's magnetic field created by large metal objects (like submarines).

India's own group of planes may go towards monitoring the same rival its American cousin does.
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A Bar Brother

Junior Member
Different equipment fit. India doesn't get all the goodies.

IN placed a requirement for 360 degree air and surface surveillance capability. The Poseidons are front only, and more limited to surface capability. The P-8I is also equipped with a Magnetic Anomaly Detector.

And because we didn't sign the CISMOA, Boeing replaced their comm equipment and datalinks with ours.
 
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