Leonardo upgrades BriteCloud EAD with ‘smart' features

by Richard Scott Jan 18, 2024, 14:05 PM

The UK-based electronic warfare (EW) business of Leonardo has upgraded the large aircraft variant of its BriteCloud expendable active decoy (EAD) to meet the latest NATO...

An artist's rendering of the upgraded BriteCloud countermeasure for aircraft. (Leonardo)

The UK-based electronic warfare (EW) business of Leonardo has upgraded the large aircraft variant of its BriteCloud expendable active decoy (EAD) to meet the latest NATO STANAG-4871 self-protection standard and offer compatibility with new ‘smart' countermeasure dispenser systems.

Announcing the development on 18 January the company revealed that the latest BriteCloud 55-T variant will also be able to exchange data with the host aircraft's onboard self-protection system to maximise performance of the expendable in contested airspace.

BriteCloud is a compact digital radio frequency memory (DRFM)-based expendable jammer designed to provide fast jet aircraft with effective ‘endgame' protection against advanced RF-guided missile threats and/or tracking radars. After ejection, the BriteCloud decoy searches and locks onto the highest priority threat; the DRFM's coherent response prevents the threat from detecting the deception as the decoy separates, generating large miss distances and breaking the target lock.

The BriteCloud 55-T decoy adopts the same form factor as a standard 55 mm flare cartridge, and can be launched from a range of common dispensing systems. Whereas the original BriteCloud 55 was designed specifically for fast jets, the 55-T has been built to protect larger aircraft – such as the C-27J and A400M – and so features increased power output to mask the larger radar cross-sections of these types.

According to Leonardo, the BriteCloud 55-T EAD is now fully compatible with the Smart Stores Communication Interface (SSCI) incorporated as part of STANAG-4781 to enable in-flight communication and optimal use of smart expendables (such as EADs and multishot cartridges) as part of a mixed countermeasures load. The SSCI also enables automatic expendable type recognition and automatically logs payload logistic information, including air carriage life and use-by date.

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