Canadian CP-140 radar upgrade moves forward
January 26, 2007
(1) Canada’s military has embarked on the final phase of a multi-year plan to transform its version of the Lockheed P-3 Orion maritime patrol aircraft into a battlefield surveillance platform.
MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates (MDA) is the prime contractor on the 200 million Canadian dollar program (2) to develop a ground surveillance radar capability for 16 of Canada’s 18 CP-140 Aurora aircraft, acquired in 1980 for the anti-submarine warfare (ASW) mission.
MDA said it will now complete ground and flight testing of four prototype radars, while delivering 16 production systems for installation during the next Aurora upgrade slated for April.
“When the upgrade is completed, the Auroras will be able to detect, track and image anything moving on land or sea,” the company said.
Visually indistinguishable from other Orions, the Aurora’s feature an improved ASW electronics suite similar to that installed on the U.S. Navy’s S-3 Viking, a carrier-based ASW/patrol aircraft.
Canada’s CP-140s flew around 500 sorties in the Persian Gulf during the post-9/11 period, in support of U.S. operations in the region. They have also been used on anti-drug missions for NORAD and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
Two units fly the CP-140: the 19 Wing at Comox, British Columbia, and the 14 Wing at Greenwood, Nova Scotia. Typical crews include two pilots, a flight engineer, 4 navigators and three sensor operators.