Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > New deployable air traffic control system program taking shape
 
Photos 
D-RAPCON
The Lockheed Martin TPS-79 mobile surveillance and air traffic control radar system is one of the mobile ATC radar systems Electronic Systems Center officials expect will be proposed for the Deployable Radar Approach Control program. (Courtesy photo)
Download HiRes
New deployable air traffic control system program taking shape

Posted 2/18/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Chuck Paone
66th Air Base Group Public Affairs


2/18/2011 -  HANSCOM AIR FORCE BASE, Mass. (AFNS) -- Electronic Systems Center officials intend to call for proposals within the next few months for development and production of a new deployable air traffic control system.

Referred to as the Deployable Radar Approach Control the system could be used at forward operating locations, however austere, for warfighting needs or contingency response. The system could also provide rapid back up for failed military or even civil fixed-base systems, said Diane McElligott, a program manager for the Aerospace Management Systems Division.

The D-RAPCON system could be deployed very early in a conflict, or right after a natural disaster occurs.

"We're expecting minimal infrastructure to be there," Ms. McElligott said. "The system will come with its own back-up power and the stand-alone equipment needed so that it can function in just about any situation."

D-RAPCON is composed of two subsystems -- air surveillance radar and operations -- and the requirement is for each to be separately deployable, if necessary. This means that if the radar at a site becomes inoperable but the control tower is fine, or vice versa, the required D-RAPCON subsystem could be deployed to fill the need.

The system, once fielded, will replace aging systems that have become harder and far costlier to maintain. Most of those aging systems, including the TPN-19s, have been in the inventory for four decades or more.

"Maintainers are having to machine parts themselves because they can no longer be ordered," Ms. McElligott said.
Because of this, while the TPN-19 systems will continue to be used, when a system becomes inoperable, it will no longer be repaired.

In addition, the new system is expected to significantly improve radar accuracy and reliability. While the legacy systems rely on analog technology, D-RAPCON will process radar signals digitally. It will also operate in both military and civilian radar bands.

The system will provide sequencing, separation of aircraft, navigation assistance and airspace control services, all with the modern accuracy and other state-of-the-art features, said Col. Jimmie Schuman, the senior materiel leader of the Aerospace Management Division.

The new system will also offer capabilities that exceed the main "interim solution" the U.S. military is currently using, a system called Air Traffic Navigation Integration and Coordination System. D-RAPCON's radar will provide 60-mile lookout versus ATNAVICS' 30 miles and accommodate more operators.

The goal is to field a system that is deployable within 48 hours and can be carried by up to four C-130 cargo haulers. Once fielded, the system can be set up in less than 24 hours. In contrast, it generally takes about three months to put up a fixed-based system.

Air Force officials plan to buy 19 D-RAPCON systems, 10 of which will reside in the Air National Guard, seven at active-duty Air Force Space Command units, one for the service's air traffic control school and another for depot maintenance activities.

Ms. McElligott estimates the total contract value to be more than $400 million, with more than $300 million devoted to production and approximately $80 million earmarked for development.



tabComments
3/7/2011 10:32:49 AM ET
Hopefully this wil turn out better than the MACS program out of Hanscom. MACS was supposed to replace the 19 and 14K and reach IOC around 2006 ... think the program died.
JB, LA
 
2/23/2011 10:52:39 AM ET
The old radios are supposed to begin rolling out next year and phased out entirely by 2018. Still seven years out I know but we've got a firm timeline to finally dump all the GRT's and GRR's.
Jerry, TX
 
2/23/2011 7:34:32 AM ET
About time. Now can we please get some ATCALS radios that are under thirty years old? Also, what Jerry said.
SgtF, USAFE
 
2/22/2011 12:21:55 PM ET
What a difference maker this would have been in Haiti.
JL, LAFB
 
2/22/2011 6:21:40 AM ET
Ughh this is still way over due. The Air Force's support for ATCALS is way too often overlooked for flat screen TV's.
Jerry, TX
 
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Air Force begins testing newest AEHF satellite

Atlas V lifts off from Vandenberg AFB

Air Force, NASA leaders review F-22 findings, fixes with congressional subcommittee  1

Air Force Week in Photos  1

AFPC officials automate ADSC process

Wind energy at Cape Cod to save $1 million a year

Leaders issue Air Force birthday message  3  |  VIDEO

Alaska Reserve F-22 unit becomes fully operational  1

Through Airmen's Eyes: NCO finds restorative hobby

Vandenberg launch unit 'small squadron with big responsibilities'

F-35A maintenance training on track

Intelligence collaboration focus of net-centric operations conference  1

Deployed Airmen build Azerbaijan partnership through mutual respect

AF joins NATO partners in Ramstein Rover 2012

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Losing Your Future to Sexual Assault   22

Attacking Symptoms  7


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing