Post on 26-May-2020
transcript
XG-100, September 2008
RF Communications
Multiband and SDR Public Safety Communications
Dan SullivanDaniel.sullivan@harris.com
XG-100, September 2008
Background - Principal Products
• Tactical radios– Interoperable Falcon® II,
software-defined tactical radios
– Falcon® III multiband, multimission, JTRS-compliant tactical radios
– HF, VHF, UHF, and multiband –manpack, vehicular, handheld, secure personal radios
• Cryptographic solutions– NSA-recognized leaders in embedded
encryption - Sierra,® Citadel,®
– Core differentiator and competitive barrier
– Communications security terminals
XG-100, September 2008
Multiband comms for the US Military
• Different communications use multiple frequencies & modes– Grd-Grd: Low band VHF-FM– Urban Comms: UHF-FM– Grd-Air: UHF-AM– Grd-SATCOM: UHF-Complex
Modulation
• Operational Drivers:– Special Forces– Multi-force operations– Has become the standard
• Warfighters needed an integrated solution - one radio, one battery
• Now moving toward a networked solution – basis behind Joint Tactical Radio Program (JTRS)
Which would you rather carry?
XG-100, September 2008
Harris Legacy: Software-defined and Multiband
AN/PRC-117F30-512 MHz
FALCON® IIIFALCON® IIFALCON® I
AN/PRC-150 (C)1.6-60 MHz
AN/PRC-152(C)30-512 MHz
AN/PRC-117G30-2000 MHz
200620042002200019981996199419921990 2007
AN/PRC-117D30-420 MHz
AN/PRC-1381.6 – 60 MHz
The key competency of radio products is interoperability
RF1033M(LMR)30-512 MHz
2008
XG-100, September 2008
SDR Defined
The SDR Forum defines SDR as:"Radio in which some or all of the physical layer
functions are software defined”This does not imply a particular architecture.
Rather, it opens up the possibility to modify things like modulation and demodulation that were formerly immutable.
XG-100, September 2008
Software Defined
Vendor Specific HW ArchitectureVendor Specific HW Architecture
Vendor Specific HW/FW Architectures
Vendor Specific HW/FW Architectures
Vendor Specific HW/FW/SW Architectures
Vendor Specific HW/FW/SW Architectures
Open Software Architecture
Open Software Architecture
Programmable
Hardware Only
1st Gen
2nd Gen
3rd Gen
Software Defined Radio Evolution
XG-100, September 2008
LMR SDR General Benefits
• Flexible design (soft keys, user configuration)• Standard interfaces allows porting of features between products and
vendors• Reduced cost of product development
– Single software package for multiple hardware platforms. (Family of radios)
– Single hardware platform for multiple software applications. (FDMA now, TDMA in P25 Phase 2).
– Components can be tested individually based on where changes have been made.
• Reduced cost of upgrading communications.• Segmented architecture improves opportunities for code re-use.• Provide a pathway to future technologies such as cognitive radio.• Improved battery life and reduced heat emissions via software
control of radio components and CPU usage
XG-100, September 2008
Design Considerations
• Multiband means different things to different customers. – Some want to operate in one band or another. – Some need to be able to have multiple bands in one scan list.
• Key design choices include component granularity, allocation of performance requirements, data flows.
• Software solutions need to be monitored closely for latency and timing issues as the product evolves.
• Use of a comprehensive SDR architecture like SCA can introduce unnecessary software “baggage”. Select an architecture that appropriate for the product you are developing.
XG-100, September 2008
Lessons Learned
• SDR ≠ SCA. Don’t assume that you must use SCA to build a Software Defined Radio.
• Critical system timing (key performance parameters) must be benchmarked periodically during development as features are added.
• Interoperability is more than just software.Harris has decades of experience in developing multiband antennas and multiband transceivers for mission-critical applications.
XG-100, September 2008
The Magnitude of It All
• US Federal Government (non-DoD)– Approximately 100 agencies and 200,000 agents/officers– Primarily VHF-High and UHF-Low bands– Large areas of responsibility
• State and Local First Responders– Approximately 48,000 agencies and 2.5 million first responders– ~18,000 Law Enforcement Agencies, ~24,000 Fire Departments, ~6000
Rescue Squads– 757,907 FCC issued licenses to these agencies (per analysis by APCO
in 7/2006)FREQUENCY BAND PERCENTAGE USAGEVHF Low 30-50 MHz 10%VHF High 136-174 MHz 47%UHF Low 380-470 MHz 25%UHF High 470-512 MHz 5%700 MHz 764-806 MH ?800 MHz 806-869 MHz 13%
Overlapping jurisdictions and missions create the need for interoperability
XG-100, September 2008
Unity™ XG-100 Multiband Radio
Multiband Software-Defined Radio• 136-174 MHz, 380-520 MHz, 762-870 MHz• Full APCO P25 Compliance• Designed for P25 Phase 2 with SW-only upgrade
Delivering Interoperability to the Hands of the User• Jurisdictional Overlap• Regional Systems• Joint Operations• Large Areas of Responsibility• Interoperability when infrastructure goes down• Ability to switch bands, eliminating dead zones
XG-100, September 2008
Channel 3:UHF Analog469.1 MHz
Channel 2:UHF Digital469.1 MHz
Unity XG-100 Operational Scenario136-870 MHz
VHF Low30-50 MHz
VHF High136-174 MHz
UHF Bands380-520 MHz
700/800 Bands762-870 MHz
Broadband4940-4990 MHz
Channel 1:VHF Digital136.1 MHz
Channel 4:800 Digital869.1 MHz
FEDERAL FIREPOLICE EMS
Channel 3:UHF Analog469.1 MHz
Channel 2:UHF Digital469.1 MHz
Channel 1:VHF Digital136.1 MHz
Channel 4:800 Digital869.1 MHz
TALK AS ONE – WORK AS ONE
XG-100, September 2008
Harris RF-1033M Portable LMR Radio
• Key Characteristics– Multiband Frequency Coverage
Including:• VHF-low: 30-50 MHz• VHF-high: 136-174 MHz• UHF: 380-512 MHz
– Multimode CapabilityIncluding: P25, FM, AM
– Secure Communications– Software Defined Radio– Most rugged LMR available– Standard 5-year Warranty
• Field Proven Multi-band Software Defined Radio
First Multi-band, Multi-mode Land Mobile Radio - available today
XG-100, September 2008
Unity™ XG-100 Multiband Radio
Speaker
256-Color 2.2” Display
Microphone
Programmable Buttons (3x)
Push-To-Talk Button
Intergral GPS
Top Status Display
Multiband Antenna
5-Way Navigator
Soft-Keys
DTMF Keypad
On/Off –Volume Knob
16-Channel Selector Capabilities:
• Frequency Range: 136-870 MHz
• P25 Conventional and Trunking
• Analog FM Backwards Interoperability
• Channel Scanning across all bands
• Analog, Digital, Dual-Mode, Priority Scanning
• Integral GPS allowing for situational awareness
• Security: AES, DES-OFB, P25 OTAR
• Software-Defined – Supports future standards
Specifications:• 1000 Active Channels per Mission File
• Capable of storing multiple Mission Files
• Dimensions: 6.5”H x 2.3”W x 1.8”D
• Weight w/ battery < 24 ounces
• 12+ hours battery life
• FCC/NTIA certified
• TIA-102/603 compliant
• NIST FIPS-140 certified
• MIL-STD-810F rugged and submersible
AVAILABLE MID-2009
XG-100, September 2008
Summary
• Software Defined Radio that has power and flexibility to support your missions now and into the future.
• The Harris Multi-Band, Multi-Mode Radio offers First Responders and LMR with TRUE INTEROPERABILITY– 1033M (30-512Mhz) Available today
• Provides multiple frequency bands in one radio– Unity XG-100 -- Demos late 2008, Available Mid 2009
• Customer driven design using 1033M using field trials with first responders
• Internally-funded development - full flexibility to meet the customers needs
• Design focus
Harris is Committed to First Responder Interoperability
XG-100, September 2008
Questions