US Navy Orders General Dynamics' DMR Radios
“This contract demonstrates the Navy’s continuing trust in DMR as it keeps pace with new and innovative communications technology for sailors and their commanders to securely connect with one another anywhere, everywhere, worldwide,” said Paul Parent, vice president of Radio Products for General Dynamics Mission Systems. “The new radios, like the 550 DMRs already delivered to the Navy, are updated and upgraded using software, leaving the basic hardware in place, cost-effectively increasing radio functionality and versatility year after year.”
DMR radios allow sailors and commanders to talk and share data with a wide spectrum of military radios. Recently added to DMR radios, the MUOS waveform is the digital dial-tone needed to connect with the new Navy-lead Mobile User Objective System (MUOS) satellite communications network. Once the MUOS network is operational, it will deliver secure, smartphone-like capabilities including crystal-clear voice communications and access to video and mission command information with the quality of service that smartphone users enjoy every day.
The General Dynamics Mission Systems-built DMR for the Navy and the AN/PRC-155 two-channel Manpack radios used by the Army are the only radios fielded to the military that have successfully demonstrated voice, chat, video and data communications using on-orbit MUOS satellites.
General Dynamics Mission Systems radio products deliver secure voice and data communications for U.S. and international military and government agency customers. Mission Systems radios also provide long-term evolution (LTE) broadband communications for law enforcement, emergency first responders and others who need the ability to connect and communicate anywhere, anytime.