DocumentCode :
2456749
Title :
A case for flight line testing of EW suites meeting the war fighter\´s need "a strike mission situational awareness issue"
Author :
Voigt, Karl A. ; Bendot, Kathleen R.
fYear :
2002
fDate :
2002
Firstpage :
761
Lastpage :
768
Abstract :
The Electronic Warfare Operational Advisory Group (EW, OAG) presented {again, this year} that a significant need has arisen from the war-fighter and user community to test and confirm the various EW systems in our operational platforms in a quick, efficient and cost effective manor. There are at least eleven (11) discrete threats identified which are 100% lethal against US tactical aircraft. Situational awareness on-board tactical aircraft is essential to our war-fighters´ survival. We base this situational awareness on Radar Warning Receivers detecting and alerting the pilot of lethal threats in time to react to them, as well as an active jammer capability towards these and other threat signals. We have observed in numerous years of experience, with the current fleet of tactical aircraft, many tens of thousands of maintenance actions related to EW systems. The data on these actions reveal a multitude of system failures that went initially undetected or misdiagnosed. The result is at least unknown to the pilot that he has a reduced EW capability, in terms of range or as basic as actual functionality of these systems. This places the war-fighter at extreme risk for he expects these systems to perform when they, in fad, may not. It is easy to see the critical nature of this need of this surety. A flight line test concept would verify the systems effectiveness or at least its functionality. Functionality that escaped the system´s or a subsystem´s ability to detect through BIT. The continued experiences of inadequate BIT testing, both in the new systems but, more importantly, in the existing legacy systems is reality. These elements, in fact, are where the greatest occurrence of failures in the system performance and yet we have no method of detecting them on a real time, nonintrusive way. Mission accomplishment is placed at risk and lives in jeopardy.
Keywords :
aircraft testing; built-in self test; electronic warfare; military aircraft; active jammer; built-in testing; electronic warfare system; flight line testing; radar warning receiver; situational awareness; strike mission; tactical aircraft; war fighter; Aerospace electronics; Aircraft; Costs; Electronic equipment testing; Electronic warfare; Jamming; Radar detection; Real time systems; System performance; System testing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
AUTOTESTCON Proceedings, 2002. IEEE
ISSN :
1080-7725
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7441-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/AUTEST.2002.1047957
Filename :
1047957
Link To Document :
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