Lockheed Martin has been awarded a contract valued at approximately $120 M to provide the US Army with five Enhanced AN/TPQ-36 radars. The contract was awarded by the Army’s Program Executive Officer-Intelligence, Electronic Warfare & Sensors (PEO-IEW&S) on September 26; the radars – also known as the EQ-36 Counterfire Target Acquisition Radar – will be delivered within 36 months.

The Army will use EQ-36 systems to replace aging TPQ-36 and TPQ-37 radars. The EQ-36 will provide soldiers with the capability to detect, classify, track and determine the location of enemy indirect fire such as mortars, artillery and rockets.

The potential exists for Lockheed Martin to provide the Army with more than 180 EQ-36 radars valued at more than $1.6 B.

Lockheed Martin MS2 will be the lead systems integrator for the program. It also will be responsible for the transmit/receive modules, the antenna array and the digital module assemblies. Lockheed Martin Simulation, Training and Support will lead the development and production of the EQ-36 training system and curriculum. Additional teammates include Syracuse Research Corp., which is responsible for the digital signal processor; Tobyhanna Army Depot, responsible for sustainment maintenance support; and Burtek Inc., which will provide the operations shelter and stationary platform.

“We are delighted to have this opportunity to significantly upgrade the Army’s counterfire target acquisition capability,” said Carl Bannar, Lockheed Martin’s vice president and general manager, Radar Systems. “We will provide today’s highly mobile brigade combat teams with a solid-state EQ-36 system that is rugged, adaptable, reliable and easy to upgrade.”

“I’m gratified that Central New York will play an important role in the execution of this program and provide support to our men and women in uniform,” said US Senator Hillary R. Clinton (D-NY).

"The US Army needed a superior radar system to protect our soldiers and two Central New York companies – Lockheed Martin and Syracuse Research – came together to provide it in the EQ-36," said Rep. James Walsh (R-NY-25). “Our soldiers always come first. Lockheed Martin and Syracuse Research continually reinforce this by providing the most capable war fighting technology available. EQ-36 is just one more example."