ThinKom Satellite
Antennas to Be Tested During U.S. Army Armored
Brigade Pilot Program
April 20, 2021
ThinKom Solutions, Inc.,
has been selected to supply phased-array
satellite terminals for a pilot program
evaluating communications on-the-move (COTM)
options for U.S. Army Armored Brigade Combat
Teams (ABCT).
The ABCT COTM solution will
integrate enhanced mobile network solutions
directly onto select vehicles to make command
posts more expeditionary, while enabling
soldiers to retain network connectivity as they
drive across the battlefield.
The Army is currently
setting the stage for an ABCT On-The-Move (OTM)
pilot this year, to evaluate new commercial
network system prototypes integrated onto select
ABCT vehicles. The goal is to enhance mobile
battlefield ABCT network communications, mission
command, situational awareness and ultimately
unit lethality.
Three ThinKom ThinSat® 300
vehicular satellite antennas were acquired by
General Dynamics Mission Systems for testing as
a design option for mounting on command-post
vehicles in armor formations. As a
subcontractor, ThinKom provided these three
antennas as part of the Army’s contract award to
General Dynamics on Sept. 30, 2020, to support
integration, engineering and fielding services
for the ABCT COTM experimentation effort.
The Ku-band ThinSat 300
antennas are based on ThinKom’s patented and
proven Variable Inclination Continuous
Transverse Stub (VICTS) phased-array technology.
VICTS antennas are currently deployed on 1,600+
aircraft with over 20 million accrued
operational hours, representing an impressive
100,000 hours mean-time-between-failure record.
Vehicle-mounted VICTS antennas are also widely
deployed in a range of commercial and government
COTM programs.
ThinKom’s low-profile,
lightweight antennas provide industry-leading
spectral efficiency and are capable of
sustaining network connectivity at high vehicle
speeds, on-road or off-road. They support robust
network operations at very high and extremely
low elevation-angle requirements with
near-instant connectivity recovery after partial
or sustained blockages.
Designed to work with a
full range of modems and networks, the ThinKom
system provides flexible “future-proof”
interoperability options with current and
next-gen satellite systems, including
geostationary and low earth orbit
constellations.
The COTM experimentation
program is expected to lead to prototype
deployment and testing under the Army’s two-year
Capability Set cycle in 2023, according to the
U.S. Army’s Program Executive Office for
Command, Control, Communications-Tactical.
“The ABCT pilot program
will demonstrate that our field-proven
commercial off-the-shelf technology can provide
a reliable and low-cost solution to meet this
demanding requirement in support of U.S. armed
forces,” said Bill Milroy, ThinKom’s CTO and
Chairman.