![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hey all...
Has there been a move towards using consumer goods, particularly electronics, on military a/c? I was watching something about the AWACS recently and I thought to myself "I wonder how those systems are all networked." - which set the ball rolling and I began to wonder if indeed there were coax or RJ45 connectors someplace underneath all of that leading into 10/100 or 10BaseT network cards. -- http://www.delversdungeon.dragonsfoot.org Remove the X's in my email address to respond. "Damn you Silvey, and your endless fortunes." - Stephen Weir I hate furries. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
When we were producing CPUs for the military we built all to MilSpec and
tested to that spec. Those that passed were sold to the military for one price. Those that did not went for personal computers sold to the public at a lower price. Both parties were happy WDA end "Bill Silvey" wrote in message ... Hey all... Has there been a move towards using consumer goods, particularly electronics, on military a/c? I was watching something about the AWACS recently and I thought to myself "I wonder how those systems are all networked." - which set the ball rolling and I began to wonder if indeed there were coax or RJ45 connectors someplace underneath all of that leading into 10/100 or 10BaseT network cards. -- http://www.delversdungeon.dragonsfoot.org Remove the X's in my email address to respond. "Damn you Silvey, and your endless fortunes." - Stephen Weir I hate furries. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bill Silvey wrote in message
... Hey all... Has there been a move towards using consumer goods, particularly electronics, on military a/c? I was watching something about the AWACS recently and I thought to myself "I wonder how those systems are all networked." - which set the ball rolling and I began to wonder if indeed there were coax or RJ45 connectors someplace underneath all of that leading into 10/100 or 10BaseT network cards. Yes, there is a push to use more COTS (commercial, off-the-shelf) equipment where possible. -- Scott -------- "Interestingly, we started to lose this war only after the embedded reporters pulled out. Back when we got the news directly from Iraq, there was victory and optimism. Now that the news is filtered through the mainstream media here in America, all we hear is death and destruction and quagmire..." Ann Coulter http://www.anncoulter.com/columns/2003/091703.htm |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 2 Oct 2003 17:06:09 -0500, "tscottme"
wrote: Bill Silvey wrote in message m... Hey all... Has there been a move towards using consumer goods, particularly electronics, on military a/c? I was watching something about the AWACS recently and I thought to myself "I wonder how those systems are all networked." - which set the ball rolling and I began to wonder if indeed there were coax or RJ45 connectors someplace underneath all of that leading into 10/100 or 10BaseT network cards. Yes, there is a push to use more COTS (commercial, off-the-shelf) equipment where possible. Such that the ANR (Active Noise Reduction) equipment (and I believe much else) on the modern US combat vehicle crewman's helmet/headset is basically Bose's commercial gear, only ruggedized, AFAIK. Apparently, the sound quality (and the improvement in hearing protection) is measurably better than the previous version used with the VIC/3. I BELIEVE variants of the same helmet design are due to find themselves in the helmets of helo pilots, but am unsure. The basic pattern is the same, anyhow: Where they can pull it off without a quality difference, usually the military will just buy ruggedized versions of commercial gear. So, not ENTIRELY the stuff one can buy at CompUSA (namely, the government gets their cabling manufactured by white-collar criminals at your friendly neighborhood medium-security prison for a lot less than minimum wage (whereas CompUSA's cabling is made in China for a lot less than minimum wage)), but close. John |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
When I was still on active duty, we were doing some navigation experiments
with moving map technology in the MC-130E. Basically we took a handheld Garmin GPS and cabled it to two Dell laptops running a flight planning program. Additionally we did some radio tie-ins to get real time e-mail over HF for inflight updates. besides text, we pushed photos from plane to ground, plane to plane and ground to plane. All was commercial software, and except for the secure HF radio it was commercial hardware. -- Les F-4C(WW),D,E,G(WW)/AC-130A/MC-130E EWO (ret) "John Penta" wrote in message ... On Thu, 2 Oct 2003 17:06:09 -0500, "tscottme" wrote: Bill Silvey wrote in message m... Hey all... Has there been a move towards using consumer goods, particularly electronics, on military a/c? I was watching something about the AWACS recently and I thought to myself "I wonder how those systems are all networked." - which set the ball rolling and I began to wonder if indeed there were coax or RJ45 connectors someplace underneath all of that leading into 10/100 or 10BaseT network cards. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Not aircraft, to be sure, but the Marines in Iraq much preferred civilian GPS models to military issue. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Bill Silvey" wrote in message m...
Hey all... Has there been a move towards using consumer goods, particularly electronics, on military a/c? I was watching something about the AWACS recently and I thought to myself "I wonder how those systems are all networked." - which set the ball rolling and I began to wonder if indeed there were coax or RJ45 connectors someplace underneath all of that leading into 10/100 or 10BaseT network cards. ISTR reading about a roll-on/roll-off communications/network support package designed for use on the KC-135, allowing it to serve a dual role in theater as both tanker and data relay, and IIRC the racks were specified to enable upgrades to take advantage of commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) technology. I also recall that there was talk of refitting the Navy's S-3B's with COTS computers; not sure if anything came of it. Though not in the aviation vein, I do know that our heavy division's tactical network (TACWEB) used plain old Ethernet cards back in 2000, tied into the Mobile Subscriber Equipment (think of a fusion of FM and cellular phone tech in a big green box) system as a backbone, and a number of Army units were using various civilian software packages to support their tactical needs (we used Explorer on our TACWEB and purchased ArcView GIS for use in our engineer HQ, and XVIII Airborne Corps/30th Engr BN (Topo) used commercial GIS software for a lot of their mapping/battlefield visualization support). Brooks |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message Not aircraft, to be sure, but the Marines in Iraq much preferred civilian GPS models to military issue. all the best -- Dan Ford Haven't hearde from Tex recently? "Tex Houston" wrote in message ... Does it contain anything about military aviation? Tex |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Haven't hearde from Tex recently? Perhaps he's in my kill file? all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , "Bill Silvey"
wrote: Hey all... Has there been a move towards using consumer goods, particularly electronics, on military a/c? I was watching something about the AWACS recently and I thought to myself "I wonder how those systems are all networked." - which set the ball rolling and I began to wonder if indeed there were coax or RJ45 connectors someplace underneath all of that leading into 10/100 or 10BaseT network cards. Yes and No. For systems intended for transport platforms where the environment is fairly benign, ruggedized commercial or even pure commercial may work. These systems do not usually meet long-term reliability and life requirements though, and are usually larger and heavier than purpose-built military systems. For pointy nosed aircraft, it's rare to see COTS. The environment is too severe, and space and power constraints too much. Lots of co-ax, but usually better performing connectors than commercial RJ45s. From a functionality standpoint, networks need to be much more secure that commercial hardware and software can provide. Often the airborne networks and NICs are high-rel, secure derivatives of commercial hardware and software. If you can get a copy of the Fibrechannel Avionics Environment spec, you can see that it is a subset of the commercial Fibrechannel set of specs, which defines those functions necessary for avionics and military use that are not necessarily present in the commercial version. We had to work with the commercial guys for years to make sure certain things were in the commercial specs so we could use them in the avionics spec, even though the commercial guys didn't think they needed them. I mention FC because it is the most widely used high- bandwidth network going into military fighters. Real time performance and deterministic behavior are also crucial in avionics applications. Much of what passes for "real time" in commercial networks is woefully inadequate for military or even commercial avionics use. This is a huge subject with many details. -- Harry Andreas Engineering raconteur |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Aluminum vs Fiberglass landing gear - Pro's and cons. | Bart Hull | Home Built | 1 | November 24th 03 02:46 PM |
Aluminum vs Fiberglass landing gear - Pro's and cons. | Bart Hull | Home Built | 2 | November 24th 03 05:23 AM |
Aluminum vs Fiberglass landing gear - Pro's and cons. | Bart Hull | Home Built | 0 | November 24th 03 03:52 AM |
Aluminum vs Fiberglass landing gear - Pro's and cons. | Bart D. Hull | Home Built | 0 | November 22nd 03 06:24 AM |
07 Aug 2003 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | August 8th 03 02:51 AM |