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MK 54 Torpedo Ordered by U.S., Australian and Indian Navies

sudhir007

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MK 54 Torpedo Ordered by U.S., Australian and Indian Navies | idrw.org

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Raytheon Company has been awarded a $45.3 million U.S. Navy contract to provide MK 54 lightweight torpedo hardware, test equipment, spares and related engineering and repair services for U.S. fleet inventory and in support of foreign military sales to the Royal Australian Navy and the Indian Navy. The award represents an exercised option of a current Navy contract for MK 54 torpedo kits.

“As enemy submarines remain a threat to security, stability and access to the world’s oceans, naval forces worldwide require a reliable and effective undersea warfare weapon,” said Kevin Peppe, vice president of Seapower Capability Systems for Raytheon’s Integrated Defense Systems business. “Together with the U.S. Navy, we continue to advance the development of the world’s most effective lightweight torpedo, delivering its proven capabilities to meet the anti-submarine warfare needs of U.S. and allied fleets.”

Raytheon is the U.S. Navy’s sole production supplier for MK 54 lightweight torpedo hardware, in production since 1999. With an established infrastructure and experienced workforce co-located with the Naval Undersea Warfare Center, Keyport, Wash., the company works directly with the Navy to meet the lightweight torpedo requirements of U.S. and allied fleets.

The MK 54
The MK 54 is the Navy’s next-generation anti-submarine warfare (ASW) weapon deployed from surface ships, helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft to detect and attack underwater targets. Sophisticated processing algorithms allow the MK 54 to analyze the information, edit out false targets or countermeasures, and pursue identified threats. The MK 54 is designed for both deep water and littoral environments, making it the only lightweight torpedo capable of striking any underwater target in the world’s oceans, regardless of water depth.

Integrated onboard the MH-60R maritime helicopter, the MK 54 is the primary weapon for the helicopter’s ASW mission. Most recently, the U.S. Navy successfully launched the first MK 54 lightweight torpedo from the P-8A Poseidon aircraft. The torpedo adds a critical capability to these long-range ASW, anti-surface warfare, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft, which will be capable of broad-area, maritime and littoral operations.
 
https://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htnavai/20110708.aspx
July 8, 2011: India is buying 32 American Mk-54 lightweight anti-submarine torpedoes to equip their eight new P-8I anti-submarine aircraft. The existing P-3 aircraft (which the P-8 is replacing) usually carries eight torpedoes. The Mk54 is a 324mm (12.75 inch) weapon, weighing about 340 kg (750 pounds) and with a warhead containing 45 kg (100 pounds) of explosives.


The Defense Security Cooperation Agency notified Congress Friday of a possible Foreign Military Sale to the Government of India for 32 MK-54 All-Up-Round Lightweight Torpedoes and associated equipment, parts, training and logistical support for an estimated cost of $86 million.
 
are you sure about the numbers??? because i feel we need at least 100 of these with 8 P8I on order

We have added 4 more to the order and the internal weapon bay can carry up to 5 of them, so I would say 60 should be the minimum and 100 would indeed be a good number with some reserves. Not sure if we plan to integrate some of the new Indian torpedos.
 
We have added 4 more to the order and the internal weapon bay can carry up to 5 of them, so I would say 60 should be the minimum and 100 would indeed be a good number with some reserves. Not sure if we plan to integrate some of the new Indian torpedos.

Any update on the Varunastra program? Last I heard some Naval trials were to be conducted...but that was last year.


Added : - From the DRDO site....this is not the Varunastra program..it says light weight torpedo..."The torpedo met all of its required specifications and user acceptance criteria as stipulated by the user and production orders are placed on M/s. BDL, Hyderabad by the Indian Navy." :toast_sign:

http://drdo.gov.in/drdo/labs/NSTL/English/index.jsp?pg=achieve.jsp
 
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