Rockwell Collins to complete advanced JTRS waveform for aircraft battlefield communications

July 29, 2011
ROME, N.Y., 29 July 2011. Military communications systems designers at Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, will complete enhancements to the U.S. Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) over the next four years to include Tactical Targeting Network Technology (TTNT) capability -- a next-generation digital communications system that provides an aerial network layer for manned and unmanned aircraft operating with forward-deployed fighting forces.

ROME, N.Y., 29 July 2011.Military communications systems designers at Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, will complete enhancements to the U.S. Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) over the next four years to include Tactical Targeting Network Technology (TTNT) capability -- a next-generation digital communications system that provides an aerial network layer for manned and unmanned aircraft operating with forward-deployed fighting forces.Officials of the Air Force Research Laboratory in Rome, N.Y., say they plan to increase the maximum value of a contract awarded to Rockwell Collins last year from $49.9 million to $85.4 million to develop TTNT Waveform Version 7 increments three and four, which will complete, qualify, and deliver the waveform to the Pentagon's JTRS waveform repository by the end of 2013.This contract increase also calls for Rockwell Collins to meet urgent U.S. military needs for TTNT radio terminals, perform system upgrades, as well as provide system refurbishment, maintenance, and training. As part of the contract increase, Rockwell Collins engineers also will test TTNT radio terminals for interoperability with Quint Networking Technology terminals.

The Quint Networking Technology (QNT) program, supervised by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in Arlington, Va., is developing a modular network data link to establish multiband communications among manned aircraft, unmanned combat air vehicles (UCAVs), weapons, tactical unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), and infantry ground forces.

QNT technology seeks to use data links to integrate tactical UAVs, infantrymen, and weapons into the future digital battlefield for network-centric warfare operations that use distributed sensor platforms to find, fix, track, and engage important stationary and moving targets in real time.

QNT systems users are weapons, air control forces on the ground, and tactical UAVs. These three are the focal points of the QNT effort with the other two elements using hardware and waveforms from established programs.

The original TTNT program began in 2001, with Rockwell Collins and four other contractors involved in the program's initial phase, in which Rockwell Collins engineers developed TTNT prototype terminals with advanced airborne mesh networking capability. Company experts demonstrated the terminal prototypes with the Air Force and U.S. Navy in flight tests in 2005.

Although pleased with the Rockwell Collins prototype terminal demonstrations, Air Force and Navy users asked the company to refine the TTNT waveform by extending it to the Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) Software Communications Architecture (SCA) before they could field the system. To do this, the Air Force awarded Rockwell Collins a maximum $90 million contract to develop the TTNT Waveform Version 7 increment one and two.

This latest contract increase is to develop TTNT Waveform Version 7 increments three and four, which will complete, qualify, and deliver the waveform to the Pentagon's JTRS waveform repository by the end of 2013.

This contract also calls for Rockwell Collins to meet urgent U.S. military needs for TTNT radio terminals, perform system upgrades, as well as provide system refurbishment, maintenance, and training. As part of the contract, Rockwell Collins engineers also will test TTNT radio terminals for interoperability with Quint Networking Technology terminals. For more information contact Rockwell Collins online at www.rockwellcollins.com, the Air Force Research Laboratory at www.wpafb.af.mil/AFRL, or DARPA at www.darpa.mil.

Related stories

-- Air Force awards $49 million contract to Rockwell Collins for TTNT and quint networking technology to help warfighters attack important targets in real time;

-- SDR: a spectrum of possibilities; and

-- Avionics enter the fifth generation.

About the Author

John Keller | Editor

John Keller is editor-in-chief of Military & Aerospace Electronics magazine, which provides extensive coverage and analysis of enabling electronic and optoelectronic technologies in military, space, and commercial aviation applications. A member of the Military & Aerospace Electronics staff since the magazine's founding in 1989, Mr. Keller took over as chief editor in 1995.

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Military Aerospace, create an account today!