Raytheon to build Rolling Airframe Missile for Navy

May 18, 2005
TUCSON, Ariz., 17 May 2005. Raytheon Co. has been awarded a $45.2 million contract from the U.S. Navy for fiscal year 2005 Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) production.

TUCSON, Ariz., 17 May 2005. Raytheon Co. has been awarded a $45.2 million contract from the U.S. Navy for fiscal year 2005 Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM) production.

The RAM MK 31 Guided Missile Weapon System is co-developed and co-produced under a bilateral program agreement between the United States and German governments.

RAM is a supersonic, lightweight, quick-reaction, fire-and-forget missile system ideally suited to counter the modern anti-ship missile threat. It has been designed for use in a layered ship defense system. RAM Guided Missile Weapon Systems are aboard more than 60 ships in the navies of the United States, Germany, Greece and Korea.

Under the contract Raytheon will deliver 70 launching canisters, 65 RAM Block 1/HAS (helicopter, aircraft, surface) Tactical Guided Missile Round Packs (GMRPS), 25 RAM Block 1/HAS Telemeter GMRPs, active optical target detectors and related spares. Work on the contract will be performed at Raytheon's Missile Systems business in Tucson, Ariz., and RAMSYS GmbH of Ottobrunn, Germany. This contract is the U.S. Navy's eighth production installment of the GMRP Block 1 configuration.

Raytheon, with 2004 sales of $20.2 billion, is an industry leader in defense and government electronics, space, information technology, technical services, and business and special mission aircraft. With headquarters in Waltham, Mass., Raytheon employs 80,000 people worldwide. For more information, see www.raytheon.com.

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