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Q.
How long has Thales Communications been in existence
and serving the warfighter?
Q.
Who are Thales Communications’ customers?
Q. Are Thales Communications’ products made in the USA?
Q.
What is the significance of the “proxy” company status?
Q.
What is the status of the new Liberty™ Land Mobile Radio?
Q.
Has the AN-PRC-148 JTRS Enhanced MBITR (JEM) gone through formal
Government qualification? Is it SCA-certified?
Q.
Is the AN/PRC-148 JEM NSA certified for Type 1 encryption?
Q.
How many AN/PRC-148 radios have been deployed?
Q.
What is CISCHR and what is Thales Communications providing under that
contract?
Q.
On which open contract vehicles does Thales Communications participate?
Q. Can Thales Communications’ technology be found in
products manufactured by other companies?
Q.
How do I access more technical information and firmware
downloads for the AN/PRC-148 MBITR, the Thales 25 and the Naval /
Maritime range of HF radios?
Q. How long has
Thales Communications been in existence and serving the warfighter?
A. Thales
Communications has been in existence since the early 1960’s. The company
was incorporated as Racal Communications in 1964. In 2000, Racal became
part of Thomson-CSF, and, in 2001, as part of a global change, our
company's name became Thales Communications, Inc. The company’s
technology and products have been serving the warfighter in the field
since the Vietnam War.
Q.
Who are Thales Communications’ customers?
A. Thales
Communications serves the U.S. Department of Defense, U.S. civilian
agencies, and defense, allied, and coalition forces globally.
Q. Are Thales Communications’ products made in the USA?
A.
Yes. Thales’ products,
including the AN/PRC-148 system solution and Thales 25 portable radio,
are manufactured at our Clarksburg, Maryland, and Germantown, Maryland,
state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities.
Q.
What is the significance of the “proxy” company status?
A. Thales
Communications operates as a proxy-regulated company, free of foreign
ownership, control, and influence. As such, it is considered a 100%
American company by the U.S. Government, approved to work on the full
spectrum of U.S. Government projects and positioned to support strategic
partnerships in the development of key technologies for the defense
market.
Q.
What is the status of the new Liberty™ Land Mobile Radio?
A. The Liberty Multiband Land Mobile Radio (LMR), introduced in 2008 and FCC-
certified in early 2009, is in pilot testing under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Multi-Band Radio
Program. It has been in service at the Presidential Inauguration, Academy Awards, Kentucky Derby, and ongoing live
burns. In late 2009, the Liberty radio successfully completed trunking interoperability testing and was certified by the
Tait Radio Communications laboratory. For the most up-to-date information on Liberty, click here.
Q.
Has the AN-PRC-148 JTRS Enhanced MBITR (JEM) gone through formal
Government qualification? Is it SCA-certified?
A. Yes. The
AN/PRC-148
JEM was the first JTRS radio to be
certified by the JTRS Joint Program Executive Office for SCA compliance1.
It is the only Software Communications Architecture (SCA) certified
handheld radio developed under a formal U.S. government program of
record. The JEM has successfully passed the complete gauntlet of
Government testing and evaluation, ensuring that the needs of the
warfighter are met with a low-risk radio that not only incorporates a
JTRS SCA architecture but has also been user-tested and qualified in
operational field conditions. The government’s comprehensive testing
included the Early Operational Assessment, Formal Qualification Testing,
Government Development Testing, Government Operational Testing, Joint
Interoperability Test Command Interoperability Testing, TEMPEST Testing,
and National Security Agency (NSA) Certification.
1with one waiver
Q.
Is the AN/PRC-148 JEM NSA certified for Type 1 encryption?
A. Yes. The
AN/PRC-148 JEM was the first
SCA-certified JTRS radio to receive certification from the National
Security Agency (NSA) to protect the confidentiality of voice and data
through the Top Secret level.
Q.
How many AN/PRC-148 radios have been deployed?
A. Nearly 200,000 AN/PRC-148 radios are deployed or on order.
Q.
What is CISCHR and what is Thales Communications providing under that
contract?
In 2007, the JTRS Joint Program Executive Office
(JPEO), through the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR)
procurement authority, consolidated handheld radio purchases for the
U.S. Department of Defense under the Consolidated, Interim,
Single-channel, Handheld Radio)sup>1 (CISCHR) contract.
Thales Communications was awarded a firm, fixed price,
indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) under CISCHR to provide
the AN/PRC-148 JEM system to all services of the U.S. Military. System
components include the
AN/PRC-148 JEM radio, dual radio
AN/VRC-111 Vehicle Adapter Amplifier (VAA),
Base
Station, and
Accessories. Thales
Communications was awarded several delivery orders in 2007 under this
contract, including an order by the U.S. Army for almost 40,000 JEMs
(and ancillary equipment).
1JTRS CISCHR Contract Number N66001-7-D-0107.
Q.
On which open contract vehicles does Thales Communications
participate?
A. Federal
Supply Schedule (GSA Schedule) Contract No. GS-35F-0001L
Department of the Interior Narrowband Radio Equipment Contract No.
NBC030001
Q.
Can Thales Communications’ technology be
found in products manufactured by other companies?
A.
Yes.
Thales Communications provides its expertise for the development of
products that exploit SDR technology. One example is the design and
production of the VHF/UHF transceiver module used in the U.S. Air
Force’s Combat Survivor/Evader Locator (CSEL) system. Thales
Communications' VHF/UHF transceiver module provides the CSEL radio with
its communications capabilities by combining a powerful software-defined
architecture and a multi-mode satellite radio on one board slightly
larger than a credit card. CSEL replaces line-of-sight radios with
multimode satellite radios that allow for immediate communication with
downed pilots (FLTSATCOM, COBRA, SARSAT, AM Ground-to-Air).
In July 2007, two U.S. Army pilots were rescued in
Iraq after being shot down by insurgents. CSEL played a key role in this
rescue. Many stories
appeared in the press about the story.
Read
one published on WGRZ.com (Gannett Broadcast Inc).
Another example is
Tactical Automated Security System (TASS), a rapidly deployable,
easily transportable, and quickly relocatable integrated electronic
security system that can be tailored for a wide variety of
semi-permanent, portable, and covert applications. TASS detects
intrusions into protected areas, directs responding forces to the
intruders, and assesses the strength and composition of the intruding
force. TASS enhances the warfighters' capability for early detection and
identification of threats to prevent damage or destruction of mission
critical assets and facilitates the collection of critical intelligence
information. TASS consists of five principal elements (data
communications, annunciators, sensors, assessment devices, and power),
two of which are provided by Thales Communications (communications and
annuciators).
Q.
How do I access more technical information and firmware downloads
for the AN/PRC-148 MBITR, the Thales 25 and the Naval / Maritime range
of HF radios?
A. Create a new
Customer Center user account and request Technical Resource access for
the appropriate product range, Tactical Communications, Public
Safety/Homeland Security or Naval/Maritime
click here
For technical FAQs, sign in at our Customer Center and go to Technical Resources. |