Navy orders additional shipboard Internet terminals

Follow-on order for 23 shipboard terminals is worth $10.7 million.

Harris Corp. will help Navy personnel at sea stay connected to home and handle routine activities online as a result of a follow-on order for 23 shipboard terminals worth $10.7 million.

The Navy order will give sailors access to the Internet, video and other high-speed, broadband services.

The terminals are part of the potential $77 million Commercial Broadband Satellite Program (CBSP) Unit Level Variant contract Harris won in 2008. Awards-to-date under the five-year indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract total $28.2 million, according to a company announcement today.

Through this follow-on order, Harris is supplying the Navy with 1.3-meter satellite communications terminals that offer both X- and Ku-band capabilities and support 10 times the bandwidth now available on Navy ships.

The new terminals will enable the Navy to augment military satellite communications by supporting essential mission requirements and providing high-speed Internet access and video communications on Unit Level class ships, the announcement said.

The CBSP program began as a Rapid Deployment Capability acquisition designed to reduce the time required to deliver critical or emerging warfighting capabilities.

The Satcom terminals will significantly enhance the Navy’s ability to provide the latest advances in broadband communications services to shipboard personnel, Allen Lindsay, vice president of Harris Defense Programs, said in the announcement.

About the Author

David Hubler is the former print managing editor for GCN and senior editor for Washington Technology. He is freelance writer living in Annandale, Va.

Reader Comments

Please post your comments here. Comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately after submitting. We will not post comments that we consider abusive or off-topic.

Your Name:(optional)
Your Email:(optional)
Your Location:(optional)
Comment:
Please type the letters/numbers you see above

Webcast

  • Improving Performance Management and Project Control to Meet Cost/Schedule Milestones in DoD Procurement

    It can be nearly impossible to build annual budgets that consider forecasted project and program work plans along with detailed cost data, particularly when attempting to reconcile actual and projected program costs with actual schedule performance. In this webcast, a defense IT program manager will share best practices and hard-won lessons aligning critical data on project performance, cost systems and schedules for truly big picture program management insight. Read more