Author Topic: Off the Eastern Seaboard, a US Navy missile test could make big waves  (Read 190 times)

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Off the Eastern Seaboard, a US Navy missile test could make big waves
By: David B. Larter   

WASHINGTON — A test announced in late March could herald an enormous change in the way the Navy modernizes its ships, while making a once prohibitive cost of maintaining older ships attainable.

The Navy destroyer Thomas S. Hudner participated in a live-fire missile exercise using an Aegis “virtual twin” system, which the service is developing to significantly reduce the hardware footprint inside a ship needed to run the Aegis combat system.

When the Navy built its Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, installing the Aegis combat system into the hull required a large suite of hardware — computers, servers, consoles and displays — designed specifically to run Aegis software. Any significant upgrades to the suite of systems already installed, or to the Aegis system in general, required cutting a hole in the ship and swapping out computers and consoles — a massively expensive undertaking.

https://www.c4isrnet.com/digital-show-dailies/navy-league/2019/04/25/off-the-eastern-seaboard-a-us-navy-missile-test-could-make-big-waves/