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  2. Bowman (communications system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowman_(communications_system)

    Bowman (communications system) Bowman is the name of the tactical communications system used by the British Armed Forces . The Bowman C4I system consists of a range of HF radio, VHF radio and UHF radio sets designed to provide secure integrated voice, data services to dismounted soldiers, individual vehicles and command HQs up to Division level.

  3. AN/PRC-163 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AN/PRC-163

    AN/PRC-163. The AN/PRC-163 Multi-channel Handheld Radio, is a dual-channel tactical handheld radio manufactured by L3Harris Technologies, Inc. for the U.S. military, referred to by the U.S. Army as the Leader Radio. [ 1] It is capable modes such as VHF/UHF Line-of-Sight (VULOS), SINCGARS, Soldier Radio Waveform, Tactical Scalable MANET, P25 as ...

  4. AN/PRC-117 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AN/PRC-117

    AN/PRC-117. The AN/PRC-117 translates to "Army/Navy, Portable, Radio, Communication". It is a man-portable, tactical software-defined combat-net radio, manufactured by Harris Corporation, in two different versions: AN/PRC-117G Falcon III MNMR[ 3] (Multiband Networking Manpack Radio), also referred to as AN/PRC-117G-MP, covering the 30-2000 MHz ...

  5. SINCGARS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SINCGARS

    A SINCGARS is being operated from within a HMMWV. Single Channel Ground and Airborne Radio System ( SINCGARS) is a very high frequency combat-net radio (CNR) used by U.S. and allied military forces. In the CNR network, the SINCGARS’ primary role is voice transmission between surface and airborne command and control assets.

  6. Nett Warrior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nett_Warrior

    Nett Warrior is based on an “end user device,” essentially an Android or iPhone-like smartphone tied to the Rifleman handheld radio, to link into command-and-control networks and use applications to call in fire support, plan and coordinate operations, and track friendly forces. The iteration used during the exercise performed poorly, with ...

  7. SCR-300 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCR-300

    Although a relatively large backpack-carried radio rather than a handheld model, the SCR-300 was described in War Department Technical Manual TM-11-242 as "primarily intended as a walkie-talkie for foot combat troops", and so the term "walkie-talkie" first came into use. [3] The final acceptance tests took place at Fort Knox, Kentucky in Spring ...

  8. British Armed Forces communications and information systems

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Armed_Forces...

    The British Armed Forces operates a wide range of communications and information systems (CIS). [ 1] Some of these are specialised military systems, while others are procured off-the-shelf. They fall into three main categories: satellite ground terminals, terrestrial trunk communications systems, and combat net radio systems.

  9. Joint Tactical Radio System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Tactical_Radio_System

    The program is budgeted at $6.8 billion to produce 180,000 radios, an average cost per radio of $37,700. Program delays forced DOD to spend an estimated $11 billion to buy more existing tactical radios, such as the U.S. Marine Corps' Integrated, Intra-Squad Radio, the AN/PRC-117F and the AN/PRC-150. [citation needed]