Smartronix toughens Panasonic laptop
Although the solid magnesium case of Panasonic's CF-25 laptop
makes it unusually tough, some military users are taking its
ruggedization a step further with the assistance of start-up
hardware and software designer Smartronix Inc.
Smartronix, based in California, Md., is providing users with
extra protection for fragile PC Card cables and connectors as
well as a removable, ruggedizable hard drive for the computer.
Panasonic, which has sold "many thousands" of the rugged laptops
into the federal market, is evaluating Smartronix's technology
for possible endorsement, said Jan O'HARA, federal region
manager for Panasonic PC Co., Fairfax, Va...
The EA-6B program plans to use the Panasonic computers equipped
with the doghouse attachments as interface and control devices
to new communications jammers (USQ-113s), satellite data
receiver terminals and data transfer modems, explained Lt. Cmdr.
Barbara Bell, the USQ-113 program manager at Patuxent River, Md.
The Panasonic computers will replace nonruggedized models, which
are used by the airplanes' Electronic Countermeasures Officers,
known as ECMOs, until the systems can be integrated into the
aircraft displays.
The Navy program has bought 108 of the laptops and plans to have
the Smartronix devices on all of them to provide extra
protection for the computers as crews enter and exit the
aircraft, Bell said.
Smartronix also is developing a clamp-on Naval Tactical Data
System (NTDS) interface to communicate with shipboard systems
using the databus or to monitor the bus itself, Parris said.
Because current NTDS interfaces require full-size PC Cards,
maintenance personnel have to lug out bigger computers.
Smartronix is developing a combination PC Card, attachable
enclosure to house the extra circuitry and accompanying software
for the CF-25, he said.
A prototype is expected in September. NTDS signals will be
accessed through rugged connectors mounted on the side of the
enclosure.
Smartronix also has developed a CF-25 removable hard drive
targeting classified applications. But the Army
Communication-Electronics Command is going one step further and
adding ruggedization features to the drive, which fits in the
CF-25's multipocket bay.
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