Raytheon’s ‘Tippy Two’ Radar Gets Back In The Budget — Knock On Wood (2024)

Raytheon’s ‘Tippy Two’ Radar Gets Back In The Budget — Knock On Wood (1)[UPDATED 7pm with Sec. Hagel remarks] WASHINGTON: This afternoon, newly installed Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel gave a nod to a high-tech radar, the AN/TPY-2 — improbably nicknamed “Tippy Two” — as a key component of America’s burgeoning missile defenses. Next week could bring more good news for the radar’s manufacturer, Raytheon: Not only will the company announce the delivery of the eighth TPY-2 system to the Army, but Congress is expected to add back a $163 million radar the administration had cut from the program — that is, if the Senate manages to pass the defense appropriations bill.

“It’s not done yet, no fat lady’s singing,” said Raytheon’s Jim Bedingfield in an interview with Breaking Defense this morning, literally knocking on wood at a coffee shop table. Bedingfield is a retired Army air and missile defense officer who works in Raytheon’s Missile Defense & Space Programs unit, which makes the TPY-2 radar. He’s not come down from his Massachusetts office to DC to meet with members of Congress, he said, but he couldn’t speak to what Raytheon’s lobbyists are doing in the last-minute scramble to protect — or insert — items in the defense spending bill.

Unlike more traditional weapons systems — tanks, ships, planes — missile defense is a growing business both in the US and worldwide as concern rises over North Korean, Iranian, and other growing arsenals of ballistic missiles. With government blessing, Lockheed Martin is selling its THAAD (Terminal High-Altitude Air Defense) anti-missile system to the United Arab Emirates and Qatar — whose Sunni aristocracies are deeply nervous about revolutionary Shia Iran — and TPY-2 is the targeting radar for the THAAD package, so Raytheon gets a sale for every THAAD battery Lockheed sells. TPY-2 can also be used independently of THAAD as an early warning system, spotting enemy missile launches and relaying the data to distant missile-defense batteries, be they Army THAADs, Navy Aegis systems, or the Ground-Based Intercept (GBI) sites in Alaska and California that Hagel has ordered beefed up with almost 50 percent more missiles.

Currently there are two THAAD batteries in service and a third being organized, each with its TPY-2. Then there are five independent radars either currently or planned to be forward-based around the world: in Japan (the pending deployment Hagel talked up today) to keep an eye on North Korea; in Israel, Turkey, and (unofficially) Qatar to keep an eye on Iran and, secondarily, Syria; and at the Kwajalein range in the US Marshall Islands for missile defense tests.

Under intensifying budget pressure, however, the administration decided to cut back its purchases of THAAD and TPY-2. As last as the 2012 budget, the plan had been to buy 18 radars, two a year, nine for the Army’s nine THAAD batteries and the other nine for forward deployment and testing sites. The 2013 budget request released over a year ago, however, cut the 2013 buy from two to one and the long-term plan from 18 to 11. (It also cut the planned number of THAAD batteries from nine to six). Six months into fiscal 2013, the federal government is still operating on an ad hoc Continuing Resolution rather than a proper spending bill, but the Defense Department at least is likely to get an appropriations bill before March 27th, and that bill — as passed by the House and being considered in the Senate — includes an additional $160 million to put the second radar back in the budget. The bill also adds another $100 million for THAAD, although that’s not enough to buy back an entire battery.

It’s worth noting that doubling the number of radars purchased doesn’t double the cost to the federal government: Buying one radar was $217 million, buying two is $380 million. Part of the difference is the number of spare parts and other accessories, but part is genuine efficiency: Buying more radars spreads out both government administrative overhead and Raytheon’s fixed costs. But with budget numbers shrinking and the budget process in utter disarray, it’s increasingly difficult to invest more in the short term to reap long-term savings.

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Raytheon’s ‘Tippy Two’ Radar Gets Back In The Budget — Knock On Wood (2024)

FAQs

How much does a TPY 2 radar cost? ›

The U.S. currently has eight TPY-2 X-band radars, with four more under construction. These air-transportable radars are relatively inexpensive, costing about $180-200 million each including supporting equipment.

Did Raytheon invent radar? ›

MIT's Radiation Laboratory pioneered innovation of radar technology and chose Raytheon to develop the top secret cavity magnetron, the vacuum tube that made microwave radar a possibility. In 1941, the potential of radar was realized as Raytheon was awarded the contract for 100 radar systems for Allied naval ships.

What is the range of the TPY-2 radar? ›

The AN/TPY-2 Surveillance Transportable Radar, also called the Forward Based X-Band Transportable (FBX-T) is a long-range, very high-altitude active digital antenna array X band surveillance radar designed to add a tier to existing missile and air defence systems. It has a range of 2,900 mi (2,500 nmi; 4,700 km).

What is the best aircraft radar in the world? ›

Technology and modes from the APG-77 formed the basis of the Lockheed Martin F-35's AN/APG-81, which Northrop Grumman describe the APG-81 as “the latest and most capable AESA in the world,” and say that it “provides unparalleled battlespace situational awareness.”

What is the controversy with Raytheon? ›

Raytheon sued for age discrimination in hiring, favoring recent college grads. The AARP Foundation filed a lawsuit on behalf of a 67-year-old Virginia resident who applied to many positions at Raytheon but never received an interview.

What is the old name for Raytheon? ›

Raytheon Company, originally known as the American Appliance Company, was founded on July 7, 1922, near the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by Laurence Marshall, an engineer and businessperson; Dr.

What is the new name for Raytheon? ›

In July 2023, Raytheon Technologies Corporation changed its name to RTX Corporation.

How much does each Sidewinder missile cost? ›

AIM-9 Sidewinder
WarsSecond Taiwan Strait Crisis Vietnam War Falklands War 1982 Lebanon War Gulf War Israel–Hamas war
Production history
ManufacturerRaytheon Company Ford Aerospace Loral Corp.
Unit costUS$381,069.74 (Block II) US$399,500.00 (Block II Plus) US$209,492.75 (training missile) (All as of 2019)
21 more rows

How much does the sea giraffe radar cost? ›

According to a company announcement on 2 May, the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) has ordered 11 Saab Giraffe 1X radars for approximately SEK264 million (USD25. 6 million). Deliveries began at the end of 2022 and are scheduled to conclude in the summer of 2023 (June to September), an MoD spokesperson told Janes .

How much does the spy 6 radar cost? ›

US Navy orders seven more AN/SPY-6(V) radars at nearly $100m each. The $677m award for more AN/SPY-6(V) radars is the third option exercised to a March 2022 hardware, production, and sustainment contract worth up to $3bn over five years.

How much does a Patriot radar cost? ›

Each Patriot battery costs around $1bn (£800m), and each missile costs nearly $4m.

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