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The Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) conformal airborne early warning and control (CAEW) aircraft was first unveiled in public at the UK's 2008 Farnborough Air Show. The prime contractor, system developer and system integrator for the CAEW is Elta Systems Ltd, a subsidiary of IAI.
The CAEW aircraft is based on the G550 airframe from Gulfstream Aerospace of the USA. The operationally proven G550 CAEW aircraft is the third generation of airborne early warning and control systems developed by IAI Elta since the mid-
Gulfstream was awarded a contract for four (plus two options) G550 modified aircraft in August 2003. First flight of the modified aircraft was in May 2006 and it was delivered to Elta for the installation of the mission systems in September 2006. The first and second CAEW aircraft were delivered to the Israel Air Force in February and May 2008 and since then have been in operational use.
In Feburary 2009, the Singapore Air Force recieved four CAEW aircraft from Elta Systems. The aircraft, worth $1bn, will replace four aging Northrop E-
The Singapore Air Force has also ordered a number of CAEW aircraft to be delivered during 2009 and 2010.The CAEW provides improved performance in terms of higher operating altitude, longer range and increased time on station. The main AEW performance advantages result from the capability to point the radar beams in any direction in space at any time, with the beam's parameters controlled by the radar computer. The CAEW aircraft is based on the Gulfstream G550 airframe, which is an upgraded variant of the Gulfstream V-
Compared to the original G550, the CAEW redesigned aircraft has an increased zero-
IAI's Bedek Aviation is contracted to provide the maintenance and logistic support for the Israeli CAEW aircraft.
The baseline G550 aircraft uses a Honeywell Primus Epic avionics suite and the two-
The AEW system has six multi-The Elta AEW system provides rapid target acquisition and target information with total 360° coverage. Avoiding host aircraft obstruction is achieved by using the placement of a number of conformal antennae combined with dynamic beam allocation to the targets. The multiple conformal antennae provide the coverage without the need for a large mushroom-
The aircraft is equipped with the Elta EL/W-
The system is highly automated and uses advanced multi-
The phased array airborne early warning radar, an active electronic steering array (AESA), operates in L and S bands (1GHz to 2GHz and 2GHz to 4GHz) and provides 360° azimuthal coverage. The system has high-
The modes of operation include track initiation, extended detection range mode with long dwell time, and target verification. When a target has been identified as a priority the radar switches to a high scan rate tracking mode with optimised beam to target characteristics.
The forward-
The information friend or foe system uses the radar's receive / transmit modules and antennae and provides target interrogation, decoding, target detection, location and target tracking.
The electronic support measures and electronic intelligence systems use multiple narrow and wideband receivers. The ESM / ELINT also provides the radar warning receiver function and supports the aircraft's self-
The automated communications intelligence system covers the high (HF) to very-
The aircraft's communications suite provides network-
The aircraft is fitted with a robust jam-
The aircraft can be fitted with the data link specified by the customer country.
CAEW countermeasures
The aircraft is fitted with an integrated self protection suite with 360° radar warning receiver (RWR), missile approach warning system (MAWS), chaff and flare decoy dispensers and directed infrared countermeasures (DIRCM).
The aircraft is powered by two Rolls-
The aircraft is equipped with a Hamilton Sundstrand electrical power generation system and the CAEW aircraft also has power generators mounted on the engines providing 240kW of power.
Gulfstream was responsible for the design and supply of the liquid cooling system to accommodate the high power consumption of the airborne electronics.
The CAEW can fly at a maximum speed of 1,084km/h. It has a range of 12,501km and a maximum endurance of nine hours.