U.S. Navy Awards L3harris
Contract For 16 Comsatcom Terminals
The U.S. Navy has awarded L3Harris
$18 million as part of the Commercial Broadband
Satellite Program (CBSP), a continuing effort to bolster
sailors’ access to commercial broadband communications
while on active maritime duty.
The company’s long-standing
commitment to the program and on-time delivery of the
systems led to four additional units being added to this
year’s contracted activities.
CBSP provides terminal-to-shore,
space and terrestrial connectivity, increasing
throughput for commercial satellite communications to
provide redundancy for military satellite
communications. The program includes two U.S. Navy
contracts for separate types of terminals, one for
Force-Level Variants (FLV) and another for Unit-Level
Variants (ULV).
“The CBSP program is a
quality-of-life program,” Lin Vinson, L3Harris Program
Director, SATCOM Solutions, said. “Sailors talk to
family back home, they stream videos, and they can
access NIPRS and SIPRS as they need to.”
There is so much commonality
between the FLV and ULV solutions that the company
treats them as a single program to keep production cost
low, Roy Paleta, L3Harris Chief Systems Engineer for
SATCOM Maritime Programs, said.
“The above-deck equipment is fairly
different because of the size of the antennas, but the
below-deck equipment is nearly 100 percent in common,”
Paleta said. “There’s a lot of commonality in sparing
and training requirements as well.”
The ULV contract is a 10-year
indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity award, through
which the Navy has deployed more than 150 systems to
date. This year’s award will provide the service with 16
new units; work is expected to be completed later this
year.
A Legacy of Support
The U.S. Navy has for decades
relied on L3Harris broadband communications solutions
because the company supports their modems of choice, be
they commercial or DOD, Vinson said.
“However their needs change, we can
still meet them, because our products are so
complementary to each other,” he said. “We have a
breadth of experience in the maritime arena, delivering
future-proof, very durable systems.”
L3Harris’ history in delivering
Satellite Communications antennas on U.S. Navy vessels
dates back to the Challenge Athena III program in 1995,
the first service initiative aimed at providing
broadband access to sailors at sea. In 1998, the company
continued its partnership through the AN/WSC-8 program.
CBSP grew out of a growing need in
2008, when leases the Navy used to provide satellite
bandwidth were ending.
CBSP is used as a secondary service
for communications that do not leverage the Advanced
Extremely High Frequency Naval Maritime Terminal (NMT).
It is also the backup for the NMT if it is unavailable,
Paleta said, noting the Canadian and New Zealand navies
use CBSP as their primary communications terminal.
CBSP antennas are now considered
mission-critical, and the U.S. Navy will not sail
without the capability because of the well-being they
provide the sailors.
A new home for production
L3Harris recently has moved CBSP
production into a newly renovated manufacturing space in
Melbourne, Florida. CBSP is the first program to build
product at the company’s Woody Burke site.
The new production space was
deliberately designed for a reduced footprint and
colocation of program teams – from engineering to
assembly and test functions – to speed production and
reduce waste, according to Brian Allen, L3Harris
Operations Management director. L3Harris strategically
planned and scheduled the CBSP transition to the new
space avoiding any program impact.
L3Harris has built ULV systems at a
90-day-per-unit clip since the inception of the program.
Despite the location change and supply chain challenges
faced by the COVID-19 pandemic and extreme winter
weather of early 2021, production didn’t skip a beat
this past year, according to Charlene Butler, L3Harris
Program Manager, SATCOM Maritime Programs.
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