Raytheon’s Standard Missile Naval Defense Family: FY 2006 Contracts (updated)
Related Stories: ABM, Alliances, Americas - Other, Americas - USA, Asia - Japan, Asia - Other, BAE, Contracts - Modifications, Equipment - Other, Europe - France, Europe - Other, FOCUS Articles, Lockheed Martin, Middle East - Other, Missiles - Surface-Air, New Systems Tech, Protective Systems - Naval, R&D - Contracted, Raytheon
Variants of the SM-2 Standard missile are the USA’s primary fleet defense anti-air weapon, and in service with 13 navies worldwide. The most common variant is the RIM-66K-L/ SM-2 Standard Block IIIB, which entered service in 1998. It includes a number of modifications over previous versions, including greater capability at even lower altitudes, a more powerful fragmentation warhead, and a side-mounted infrared seeker developed in the Missile Homing Improvement Program (MHIP) to supplement the missile’s semi-active radar guidance system. These missiles work best when paired with the AEGIS radar and combat system, but can be employed independently.
DID details Raytheon’s recent US contracts related to the Standard Missile family, and also adds some budgetary and technical background that can help put them in context. For coverage of the Standard Missile family beyond FY 2006, turn to this DID FOCUS Article.
Displaying 146 of 2,084 words (about 6 pages)
- Follow the 80/20 rule and save time
- Don't miss important facts
- Get the big picture, quickly
- Eliminate your blindspots
- Stay on top of new and forthcoming events
- Ability to conduct complex searches
- Procurement and doctrine issues
- Timeline of past and future program events
- Links to other useful resources
- Instant content access after payment
"Well written, interesting daily with information not readily available elsewhere...! You handle it with aplomb!" - a defense contractor CEO




