Again, you misunderstood what I'm talking about. You take the view of program management, which is very good, and I take the view of an engineer. Both Westinghouse (NG) and Raytheon have extensive surveillance radar experience. Westinghouse has contracts with the USAF on surveillance radar and Raytheon has contracts with the USN on surveillance radar. I would argue that Raytheon has radar receivers and antenna design that would allow better target detection based on the work they've done on other surveillance systems for civilian use and that of the AN/SPY-2, but share the same engineering resources on the military side. I also realize that from a program already underway, such as the E-3 replacement, NG has significantly more experience now than Raytheon and it doesn't make sense to do an expensive re-work as it doesn't fit the E-3 development path requirements
I am well aware of where Raytheon's and Northrop's strengths and weaknesses lie. Having said that, for the roles demanded there is absolutely ZERO edge in raytheon being awarded. There is nothing in the requirement that Northrop has not successfully demonstrated to be capable of achieving or hasn't actually demonstrated. Furthermore, as mentioned they have secured each and every contract for such systems over the past many decades. Because Raytheon worked on the Spy system, it does not qualify them to do something better than Northrop in an area where Northrop is incumbent and has demonstrated capability to the satisfaction of the customer. There is absolutely no ENGINEERING capability requirement that Northrop is incapable of accomplishing or is inferior to in capability compared to Raytheon. Strength of portfolio has little to do with it especially when it is the responsibility of the technical evaluators to do just that i.e. EVALUATE.
A large chunk of the Top Hat program was kept afloat by Northrop Grumman (Westinghouse) IRAD. There was absolutely nothing stopping Raytheon from putting money where their mouth is and developing a sensor of their own. They have the engineering to do so but they did not. Even when a large market-share was up in the air with the Project Wedgetail (it was known that this platform would be the modern AEW for many western kit users) they decided again not to pursue a sensor. They chose to be the "INTEGRATOR" of the Phalcon sensor which was a tried, tested and fully internally developed sensor marketed by IAI.
Claiming that they could do something because they have a portfolio that puts them in a position to be competitive means little if they do not have a product. Without a product its all hypothetical especially when going up against a highly trusted brand in this market segment.
E-3 replacement, NG has significantly more experience now than Raytheon and it doesn't make sense to do an expensive re-work as it doesn't fit the E-3 development path requirements
In this context extensive is a bit of an understatement.
Northrop Grumman - E-3, E-8, E-2, E-7. Basically 100% of the USAF and USN E series platforms.
Now if you are going to talk about Maritime domain, that is indeed Raytheon's strenght given their heritage with the P-3 and the fact that they have maintained that portfolio nicely funded with IRAD since winning the P-3. Therefore others were always the outsiders in that market because Raytheon enjoyed an engineering, project management, and internal R&D funding lead in that domain. For an AWACS, they DO NOT.
Same thing applies to advanced sensor platform needs. They lost the bulk of the "sensor craft" design contracts to Northrop Grumman (from which apparently the RQ-180 takes its heritage). They have since looked at that aspect of the portolio and made some serious IRAD efforts. The NGJ success is a direct result of that. Expect them to make similar investments early on in the Advanced AESA fighter radar market where their product (Apg-79) is lagging in capability compared to the performance expected and they were not selected by the winning team for either 5th generation effort. I expect them to field the first prototype Gallium Nitride fighter AESA prototype a full 12-15 months before Northrop Grumman. The next radar contracts are most likely going to be awarded before the end of the decade, and although they would be funding both teams for at least 5-6 years I expect raytheon to make greater investments internally as they need to catch up.
If it wasn't for the AAS and the Super Hornet AESA, Northrop would have practically swept the entire new Airborne AESA market. The MP-RTIP was supposed to provide sensors from the E-3, E-8 and the Global Hawk. Add F-22 and F-35 to the mix in addition to the F-16 AESA recap. The F-15 AESA for the first two versions was an antennal upgrade for raytheon and it wasn't until they developed the Apg-79 that they made significant enhancements to the back end of the -63/82. They are yet to deliver an Electronic Warfare capability on the Apg-79, something that they touted years ago. That capability is now expected in the mid 2020's iirc, while Northrop has introduced that with the Apg-81 and as an upgrade to the Apg-77. The sensor craft victories have kept Northrop secured in the "Very_High_End" sensor market in the USAF and this applies to the RQ-180 as much as the LRS-B (even if Boeing/Lockheed win).