peoc3t
PM TN 2/3 ID TRILOS NET
PM Tactical Network (Product Manager Network Modernization) concluded new equipment training on the high-throughput Terrestrial Line Of Sight (TRILOS) Radio to the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, at Fort Stewart, Georgia, last week.
Packed in a few rapidly deployable transit cases, the expeditionary TRILOS Radio provides a significant reduction in size, weight and power (SWaP) compared to the legacy at-the-halt High Capacity Line Of Sight (HCLOS) Radio that is replacing, which needed two sheltered-vehicles and two large antennas to relay information.The TRILOS Radio will increase the robustness of the Army’s tactical network by providing a significant increase in bandwidth versus the HCLOS radio, along with increased range, with lower latency than satellite communications. It also increases multipath diversity in congested and contested environments.
Additionally, TRILOS is a dual channel radio as opposed to HCLOS which is a single channel radio. Thus the TRILOS Radio can execute two responsibilities at the same time -- it provide point-to-point communications, but unlike the HCLOS, it will also provide point-to-multipoint communications, enabling Soldiers to shoot multiple shots with one antenna mast, versus needing extra antennas to shoot to multiple terminals. With TRILOS fewer radios, Soldiers and supporting resources are needed.
U.S. Army photos by Amy Walker, PM Tactical Network/PEO C3T Public Affairs
PM TN 2/3 ID TRILOS NET
PM Tactical Network (Product Manager Network Modernization) concluded new equipment training on the high-throughput Terrestrial Line Of Sight (TRILOS) Radio to the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, at Fort Stewart, Georgia, last week.
Packed in a few rapidly deployable transit cases, the expeditionary TRILOS Radio provides a significant reduction in size, weight and power (SWaP) compared to the legacy at-the-halt High Capacity Line Of Sight (HCLOS) Radio that is replacing, which needed two sheltered-vehicles and two large antennas to relay information.The TRILOS Radio will increase the robustness of the Army’s tactical network by providing a significant increase in bandwidth versus the HCLOS radio, along with increased range, with lower latency than satellite communications. It also increases multipath diversity in congested and contested environments.
Additionally, TRILOS is a dual channel radio as opposed to HCLOS which is a single channel radio. Thus the TRILOS Radio can execute two responsibilities at the same time -- it provide point-to-point communications, but unlike the HCLOS, it will also provide point-to-multipoint communications, enabling Soldiers to shoot multiple shots with one antenna mast, versus needing extra antennas to shoot to multiple terminals. With TRILOS fewer radios, Soldiers and supporting resources are needed.
U.S. Army photos by Amy Walker, PM Tactical Network/PEO C3T Public Affairs