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Navy contracts Thales for airborne dipping sonar repairs by Stephen Carlson Washington (UPI) Nov 23, 2018 Thales Defense and Security was awarded a not-to-exceed $13.99 million delivery order under a previous contract for repair work on AN/AQS-22 Airborne Low Frequency Sonar systems. Work will be split between locations in Clarksburg, Md., and Brest, France, and is expected to run through November 2020. The Navy will obligate $10.5 million in working capital funds with the award. The AN/AQS-22 Airborne Low Frequency Sonar is the primary dipping sonar used by the H-60 series of naval helicopters for anti-submarine operations. It is designed to be fully integrated with the MH-60R Seahawk ASW helicopter and the MK 54 anti-submarine torpedo. Raytheon says the ALFS is the only multi-frequency dipping sonar in operation today, allowing the sonar to cover a larger area in order to detect, track and engage enemy submarines. The ALFS uses both passive sonar to detect and analyze underwater background and environmental conditions and a active sonar for target detection and acquisition. The MH-60R Seahawk is a naval derivative of the UH-60 Blackhawk medium-lift transport helicopter used by the Army and allied nations, operating from flight decks on aircraft carriers, surface combatants and logistics ships. It is designed primarily for anti-submarine and surface warfare operations. The MK 54 lightweight torpedo can be deployed from surface ships, helicopter and fixed-wing aircraft like the P-8 Poseidon to engage underwater targets. It uses algorithms to analyze and ignore false targets or countermeasures and help stay locked on its primary target. The MK 54 is a derivative of the older ML 50 and MK 48 ADCAP torpedoes while using the 100-pound warhead from the MK 46.
US carrier visits Hong Kong amid heightened China tensions Hong Kong (AFP) Nov 21, 2018 An American warship and carrier strike group visited Hong Kong Wednesday in a move seen as a conciliatory gesture by China ahead of next week's crunch meeting between the global superpowers' presidents. The port call at the semi-autonomous city comes just two months after China nixed a similar visit by the US Navy, and at a time of heightened tensions between Washington and Beijing, fuelled by a burgeoning trade war. The USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier arrived in Hong Kong waters with two des ... read more
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