Cobham unveiled the rights issue plan alongside a disastrous set of results.
The firm is still trading profitably and made a £225m operating profit.
But
it was thumped heavily into the red after it wrote down the underlying
value of its business. It declared a statutory pre-tax loss of nearly
£850m.
Cobham - whose founder, Sir Alan Cobham, was one of the pioneers of British aviation - has annual sales of £2bn.
The rights issue will be a blow to shareholders, who were stunned last June when the company asked for another £500m. It then said the money would put it on a "sound financial footing".
Analysts were puzzled when the company did not cancel its dividend payment to shareholders - worth £125m a year - at the time.
With
the latest rights issue - which has been underwritten by a group of
investment banks, meaning the company is sure to get the money even if
investors decline to put more money in - the dividend has been scrapped.

David Lockwood, chief executive since last summer, said he was confident Cobham could be "reinvigorated over time".
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