Military & Aerospace Electronics

| Add RSS Feed

ITT produces protection systems for U.S. Special Operations helicopters

Personnel at the U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC) Technology Applications Program Office wanted to infuse aircraft with a situational awareness and self-protection system.

They turned to ITT Electronic Systems engineers in White Plains, N.Y., for the solution. USASOC Technology Applications Program Office officials awarded ITT a $57.2 million firm-fixed-price contract for the AN/ALQ-211(V)6, as part of a $312 million indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity production contract. This critical situational awareness and protection system will be installed on Special Operations Aviation (SOA) MH-47 aircraft.

“Variants of these systems are protecting warfighters around the world, on both U.S. and international aircraft,” says ITT Electronic Systems president Chris Bernhardt.

ITT is contracted to deliver 25 systems, in addition to spares and lay-in material, to USASOC.

For more information, visit ITT Electronic Systems online at www.es.itt.com.

Military & Aerospace Electronics July, 2008



| Add RSS Feed


 
Return to Previous Page

 
 





 

Military & Aerospace Electronics Webcasts






OpenVPX 1.0 in Military Systems
Original broadcast on
February 10, 2010










Accelerating the Design of Complex Space Systems with Advanced Physical Modeling Techniques
Original broadcast on
January 27, 2010








Thermal Management: Keeping It Cool in Military Systems
Original broadcast on
November 16, 2009





More
 
Sponsored White Papers Library
Recently Added White Papers

Enabling Interoperability in High-Performance Embedded Applications - An OpenVPX System Specification Primer (01/29/2010, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

Physical Layer Switch - Simultaneous Processing & Recording of High-speed Sensor Data (01/29/2010, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

More
Featured White Papers

New! Critical Techniques for High-Speed A/D Converters in Real-Time Systems (12/28/2009)
 

More