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The first appearance of the UAE's "Saab Global Eye"

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The four aircrafts will carry the new Saab ERIEYE ER radar, which uses a semiconductor based on the Gallium Nitride-GaN, enabling SAAB to use the same dimensions to obtain a more powerful radar-based emission, less energy consumption and more accurate against targets with small radar segments.

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The radar has a range from 650 to 700 kilometers, according to Saab's Martin Malmfors. The radar range can be increased above that when focusing on one area.

The radar next to its power will use a very sophisticated algorithm built on AI and the Deep Machine Learninig.. it can detect and classify low radar section targets from a very long distance.

Next to the new radar the aircraft will carry in AESA X Band - Seaspray 7500E with a maximum range of 575 km, the Belly radar is intended to track land targets and sea targets in particular, as well as mapping the ground..

http://www.******************/dbtgallery.php?do=gallery_image&id=740&gal=gallery&type=full


In the front, the aircraft will carry the FLIR System Star Safire 380HD

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The aircraft carries an Electronic Support Measure package in addition to the Electronic Intelligence package and the Self-protection package.

Link 11/16/22
is available in addition to satellite communication systems, IFF airspace recognition systems, Automatic dependent surveillance for air and the Automatic identification system for the Sea.

The aircraft is equipped with a Data Fusion system that integrates all the inputs of these systems and integrates them in a way that gives an accurate picture of the external situation and displays it to the Operator through a high-resolution touch screen measuring 30 inches.

The UAE AWACS has also a MAD Boom or Magnetic anomaly detector to detect submarines..

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Global eye has same radar as eri eye. It's just mounted on a G6

The GlobalEye differs in its use of the all-new Erieye ER (Extended Range) radar and mission system. Some undisclosed sensor systems will also be produced in UAE, at a new Saab facility to be based at the Tawazun Industrial Park in Abu Dhabi.


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The Bombardier global 6000 aircraft that will be converted to GlobalEye are all at the company's headquarters in Linköping the 3 at a different stage (one ready + the other two in process)
 
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From Flight International

Saab's first GlobalEye breaks cover

Swedish company unveils lead example of new airborne early warning and control asset for United Arab Emirates

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Saab has unveiled its first GlobalEye surveillance aircraft, revealing the extensively modified Bombardier Global 6000 business jet in the livery of launch customer the United Arab Emirates air force.

Conducted at the Swedish company's Linköping site as this issue of Flight International passed for press on 23 February, the event came a little over two years after the GlobalEye deal was announced at the Dubai air show in November 2015. The UAE initially signed a two-aircraft order, before also taking an option on a third example last year.

Adaptations include adding a Saab Erieye ER airborne early warning and control radar in a "skibox" fairing above the fuselage, plus a search radar and electro-optical/infrared sensor beneath, enabling the GlobalEye to also perform maritime and overland surveillance tasks.

This combination of sensors aboard an ultra-long-range business jet platform "brings extended detection range, endurance and the ability to perform multiple roles with one solution, including search and rescue, border surveillance and military operations," Saab says.

"This first aircraft is equipped and being prepared for ground and flight trials to gather aerodynamic data as part of the ongoing development and production programme," the company adds. It has not disclosed a delivery schedule for the UAE's new capability.

"This milestone is clear evidence that the GlobalEye programme and Saab are delivering on our commitments," says Anders Carp, senior vice-president and head of the company's surveillance business area.
 
Wait what? The feminist government of Sweden actually lowered its standards and allowed Saab to sell 4 pieces of high-end military equipment to a monarchy? And an Arab monarchy for that matter?! I thought they only dealt with democratically elected governments, @A.P. Richelieu ?
I also thought so.
There are some contracts even with Saudi Arabia, which was meant to be Sweden's enemy to some extent. Both are worth billions of dollars.
But I also think that there is no way this can be used to kill people, so there is no way it could be used to carry out human rights violations.
But then, I could be wrong.
 
Saab has sky-high sales hopes for GlobalEye
  • 28 FEBRUARY, 2018
  • SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM
  • BY: CRAIG HOYLE

Saab is poised to start ground-test activities with its first GlobalEye surveillance aircraft, having unveiled the heavily-adapted Bombardier Global 6000 for launch customer the United Arab Emirates.

Rolled out at the Swedish company's Linköping site on 23 February, the modified business jet is the first of three such "swing-role" platforms ordered by the Gulf nation since November 2015.

Revealed in UAE markings, the lead GlobalEye has its approximately 1t Saab Erieye ER airborne early warning (AEW) radar mounted atop the twinjet's fuselage. Additional sensors include a Leonardo Seaspray 7500E maritime surveillance radar – which also has synthetic aperture radar and ground moving target indication modes – and an electro-optical/infrared sensor, to be fitted underneath the forward fuselage.

"This aircraft is ready to commence testing – as soon as we are done here," Lars Tossman, head of airborne surveillance systems for Saab's surveillance business unit, said during the roll-out event.

Ground-based testing with the active electronically scanned array Erieye ER is already at an advanced stage in Gothenburg. While the sensor is contained within the same "skibox" fairing as previous versions of the radar, Saab says the use of new technology – including gallium nitride transmit/receive modules – provides a 70% increase in detection range. The company has previously cited a horizon-limited capability of 216nm (400km) for the new product, while operating at an altitude of 30,000ft.

Pointing to Saab's previous experience with installing the Erieye sensor on a trio of aircraft types, Mats Wicksell, head of systems integration, comments: "I expect to have a good performance from this system quite early in the programme."

Mission system testing is also being conducted in Gothenburg, as part of an integrated campaign with work spread across multiple Saab sites. "Today, all the equipment is integrated, to make a complete system," Wicksell adds.

Saab officials decline to reveal when the GlobalEye is expected to make its flight debut, or to detail the expected duration of its test campaign or delivery schedule. However, Wicksell says flight tests will be used "largely to validate the results in the final environment."

The UAE signed for two GlobalEye systems at the Dubai air show in November 2015, and exercised an option last year to add a third example. An image shown during the event showed that all three aircraft have entered the conversion process in Linköping, with Saab having secured a supplemental type certificate to modify the Canadian-built business jet.

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After arriving at the site, each "green" Global 6000 undergoes extensive work, including airframe and wing strengthening to enable it to carry the Erieye array and other sensors, including wingtip-mounted electronic warfare equipment. An extended tailfin is also fitted, along with "finlets" and ventral strakes beneath the rear fuselage. Additional power and cooling equipment is also added, along with a self-protection suite comprised of laser and radar warning receivers, and countermeasures dispensers.

Other mission equipment includes data links, voice and satellite communications and a command and control suite with five onboard operator stations.

"The aircraft is a wonderful fit for what we are trying to achieve," says Wicksell.

Speaking in a video shown during the roll-out, UAE air force chief Ibrahim Naser Al Alawi described his service's coming capability as a "strong force multiplier".

"Our requirements for the future will consist of having an early warning radar which is capable also of detecting ballistic missiles, and to cover the whole domain as an air power," he says.

Describing the GlobalEye's ability to perform simultaneous airborne, maritime and ground surveillance tasks as "absolutely unique", Tossman says the product is attracting strong interest from other potential buyers.

"A lot of nations are interested in this kind of capability," he says. "We have a lot of potential customers we are talking to." This includes existing Erieye operators, he says, along with "some countries without any [AEW] capability, or which have a rival system and are looking to increase their fleet".

Tossman refers to interest as coming from several nations in Asia, Europe and Latin America, and notes: "The NATO [Boeing E-3] fleet is going to be renewed around 2035".

"Today we have a customer base of eight countries – the biggest in the world," he says of Saab's sales success with the Erieye system. Flight Fleets Analyzer records Brazil, Greece, Mexico, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Thailand and the UAE as currently flying a mix of adapted Embraer EMB-145s, Saab 340s and Saab 2000s.

The UAE's two Saab 340 AEW aircraft are operated with a radar technician but without onboard operators, and have their surveillance output downlinked to the ground. The company says the GlobalEye could potentially be used in such a way by some users.

But where onboard system operators are preferred, Torstein Bergli, Saab's product manager for airborne surveillance, says that the Global 6000 has a "very low noise level" and a 3,500ft cabin altitude pressure, both of which will reduce crew fatigue during missions of up to 11h.

While it scans for additional customers, Saab says it will be able to prepare up to three GlobalEye systems per year, and could commence deliveries within three years of receiving a contract. "We have had discussions with Bombardier on slots, and on how to shorten the lead-time when we are in need of more platforms," Wicksell says.
 
Wait what? The feminist government of Sweden actually lowered its standards and allowed Saab to sell 4 pieces of high-end military equipment to a monarchy? And an Arab monarchy for that matter?! I thought they only dealt with democratically elected governments, @A.P. Richelieu ?

Nope, there are different classifications and it is easier rules for AWACS than for a lot of other things. UAE would not be able to buy a Kalashnikov from Sweden.
Pakistan could buy EriEye, but not Gripen.
There are no simple strict rules, instead there is a set of criteria which definitely favours democractic states when weapons are deemed useful to support a repressive regime.
GlobalEye is deemed essential for defense, but not so useful to put down, lets say a new Arab Spring.

There was a big deal on refurbishing ATGMs with Saudi Arabia, but when the deal, which was kept secret from the government was revealed a few years ago, it was quickly canned, and so was a Strategic Agreement on Cooperation between Sweden and KSA. It had been signed a few years earlier, but when the ATGM affair made headlines, when it was up for renewal, it was dropped like a hit potatoe.
 
Nope, there are different classifications and it is easier rules for AWACS than for a lot of other things. UAE would not be able to buy a Kalashnikov from Sweden.
Pakistan could buy EriEye, but not Gripen.
There are no simple strict rules, instead there is a set of criteria which definitely favours democractic states when weapons are deemed useful to support a repressive regime.
GlobalEye is deemed essential for defense, but not so useful to put down, lets say a new Arab Spring.

There was a big deal on refurbishing ATGMs with Saudi Arabia, but when the deal, which was kept secret from the government was revealed a few years ago, it was quickly canned, and so was a Strategic Agreement on Cooperation between Sweden and KSA. It had been signed a few years earlier, but when the ATGM affair made headlines, when it was up for renewal, it was dropped like a hit potatoe.
No problem.. Matar-4 made in KSA now is much better.. And BTW it was your own minister of defence who kept the deal secret!
 
GlobalEye on course
DAVID DONALD
18 February 2019

Speaking to the IDEX Show Daily just prior to IDEX, Saab said the GlobalEye multi-sensor airborne early warning/multirole surveillance programme is "on schedule" in the build-up to its entry into service with the UAE Air Force and Air Defence. The UAE became the launch customer for the GlobalEye just over three years ago, announcing an initial deal for two of the aircraft at the Dubai air show in November 2015. A third was subsequently added during IDEX in February 2017.

Also known as the SRSS (Swing- Role Surveillance System), the GlobalEye is an adaptation of the Bombardier Global 6000 longrange business jet to the multi-surveillance role. The chief sensor is a Saab Erieye ER airborne early warning (AEW) radar mounted in a 'ski-box' fairing above the aircraft's spine. Additional sensors reportedly include a FLIR Systems Star Safire 380HD electro-optic turret beneath the forward fuselage, and a Leonardo Seaspray 7500E AESA radar in a large belly radome.

Having been rolled out in February 2018, the first aircraft performed its maiden postmodification flight on 14 March at Saab's Linköping plant, where the three airframes have been converted from 'green' Global 6000 airframes. The extensive nature of the modifications - encompassing structural and significant aerodynamic changes, as well as an expanded and re-routed cabling network - has dictated a major flight test campaign to clear the GlobalEye for service.

Soon after its initial flights from Linköping, which had proved basic aircraft system functions and aerodynamics, the no. 1 GlobalEye - operating under the Swedish civil registration SE-RMY - was deployed to Granada in Andalucia for an exhaustive flight test campaign. The move to southern Spain was driven by the region's excellent weather and the need to fly regularly to meet the contracted schedule.

SE-RMY has subsequently been put through rigorous system and aerodynamic testing, flying numerous test points with varying speeds, altitudes and loads. The primary aim of the trials is to validate predicted calculations made using computers and wind tunnel trials. The GlobalEye is fitted with its own instrumentation and recording equipment so that no specific ground infrastructure is required to record gathered data.

This 'orange box' equipment will be removed prior to customer delivery.

While the aircraft remained in Spain throughout the late summer and autumn, test teams of between six and 10 personnel, including two pilots, have rotated to Granada every four to six weeks.

In December, the no. 1 GlobalEye returned briefly to Sweden, but has returned to Granada to complete its trials. It is scheduled to stay there until the late spring.

In the meantime, Saab achieved a major milestone on 3 January this year with the first flight of the second aircraft, SE-RMZ. The aircraft is intended primarily as the mission systems test aircraft, and is to remain in Sweden for trials. Much of the system test work has been accomplished in a ground rig. The third aircraft has completed the major part of the structural modification work, and the one-tonne 'ski-box' fairing has been mounted. The aircraft is undergoing the fitment of systems in preparation for its first flight.

No delivery schedule has been announced publicly for the GlobalEyes, and in the meantime the UAE AFAD continues to operate a pair of ex-Swedish air force Saab 340 aircraft carrying the legacy Erieye system. When the new SRSS platforms enter service they will bring a dramatic increase in capability. The Erieye ER S-band radar alone, with its gallium nitride (GaN) semiconductor technology, promises a 70 per cent increase in detection range against traditional aerial targets, as well as offering much improved performance against small, low-flying vehicles, as well as those with low-observable 'stealthy' characteristics. The Erieye ER also has a maritime surface detection capability.

On top of that, the Seaspray radar and electro-optic turret provide the GlobalEye with a powerful maritime and overland surveillance capability, including synthetic aperture radar imaging and ground moving target indication. With its array of sensors and communications links all being controlled by an advanced integrated mission system with five operator consoles, the GlobalEye offers a complete multi-intelligence package that can 'swing' between roles seamlessly.

Basing the system on the Global 6000 also provides long endurance with a high dash speed capability should the aircraft be required rapidly in a certain mission area.

The platform's business jet roots also make it a comfortable working environment for the crew, and it has size, weight and power growth potential to add further systems and personnel.

Since the type's official marketing 'launch' in 2016, Saab has reported significant interest in the GlobalEye from both countries with existing AEW assets and those that seek the capability. The 'system of systems' can be scaled and tailored to meet individual requirements, and Saab can localise the system through the integration of existing national command and control datalinks and networks.

https://www.janes.com/article/86507/globaleye-on-course-idex19d2
 
No problem.. Matar-4 made in KSA now is much better.. And BTW it was your own minister of defence who kept the deal secret!
Hmm, how about trading tech with Jordan? You get the Jadara-T tech and Jordan gets the Matar-4 tech albeit that not all the Terminator parts are made in Jordan. I always thought that technological exchange between Arab countries would be much better than individual R&D.




Also, could you give me some links or videos about the Matar-4 in Saudi Arabia?
 
Hmm, how about trading tech with Jordan? You get the Jadara-T tech and Jordan gets the Matar-4 tech albeit that not all the Terminator parts are made in Jordan. I always thought that technological exchange between Arab countries would be much better than individual R&D.




Also, could you give me some links or videos about the Matar-4 in Saudi Arabia?
It is somewhere on Made in KSA..you should look a month or two back in there..
 

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