Northrop Grumman wins $15 million contract for electro-optic sensor

Nov. 8, 2006
November 8, 2006, Los Angeles, CA--Northrop Grumman has been awarded a $15 million U.S. Army contract for the company's Lightweight Laser Designator Rangefinder (LLDR). The contract will fund LLDR upgrades for all shipments after 2009 as the Army continues to purchase and upgrade this dismounted electro-optic sensor.

November 8, 2006, Los Angeles, CA--Northrop Grumman has been awarded a $15 million U.S. Army contract for the company's Lightweight Laser Designator Rangefinder (LLDR). The contract will fund LLDR upgrades for all shipments after 2009 as the Army continues to purchase and upgrade this dismounted electro-optic sensor.

Northrop Grumman's LLDR accurately targets enemy positions during the day, at night and in nearly all battlefield conditions including haze, smoke, fog and rain. It ranges to the targets at an eye-safe wavelength and calculates grid coordinates with built-in GPS, elevation and azimuth sensing capabilities. The system then provides this information to other digital battlefield systems. The LLDR can also be used with semi-active laser-guided munitions and laser spot trackers. The system has been used in Afghanistan and Iraq to provide targeting information for laser-guided, GPS-guided and conventional munitions.

To make the LLDR even more capable on the battlefield, the U.S. Army is funding system improvements that include decreasing system weight, increasing its ability to operate in low visibility conditions and replacing components no longer supported by vendors.

Through a number of innovations, the improved LLDR's overall weight will be reduced by nearly five pounds. The improved night vision capability will increase the stand-off distance and thus the survivability of forward observers and forward air controllers. In addition, by addressing several parts-obsolescence issues, warfighters will have access to state-of-the-art electro-optic sensor equipment.

"These improvements to the LLDR represent a significant leap in capability while reducing the overall weight," said Gregory Williams, general manager of the Northorp Grumman's Laser Systems business unit. "Giving our customer more capability in a smaller package has been a true technological feat. Our designers and engineers have used leading-edge technology to give our warfighters exactly what they want...an even smaller and better system than what they are currently using."

For more information, contact Northrop Grumman.

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