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Curtiss-Wright

20130 Lakeview Center Plaza
Suite 200
Ashburn, Virginia 20147
[email protected]
https://www.curtisswrightds.com/
Curtiss-Wright
Articles related to Curtiss-Wright
Radar/EW

DSP goes all digital to boost real-time sensor data analysis - Story

February 20, 2012
Digital electronics take DSP into High-Performance Embedded Computing (HPEC) systems to optimize the fuel/data communications and system functionality/SWaP envelopes.
Comms

Lead-free technology in mil/aero electronics - Story

December 16, 2011
Reports, standards, best practices, and solutions are being generated in regard to the reliability concerns of lead-free electronics in A&D applications.
Avionics

ARM inside SWaP-C savvy flight control computer - Product

October 17, 2011
Well known for sitting inside smartphones, GPS, and many other mobile devices, the ARM processor has found a home inside Curtiss-Wright Controls Electronic Systems' Versatile Flight Control Computer (VFCC).
Radar/EW

VPX standards keep pace with faster fabrics - Story

October 12, 2011
High-speed fabrics driven by the commercial market are also revolutionizing the military embedded market, by way of the VITA 46, 65, and 68 open standards - which aim to keep VPX on track to deliver the ever-increasing need for speed.
Radar/EW

Defense trends lead to a COTS renaissance - Story

October 12, 2011
The COTS industry is positioned perfectly to meet the DoD?s changing demands for affordable and mature technological alternatives that ensure reliability and product road maps.
Radar/EW

PCOTS versus LRU: COTS moving up the integration food chain - Story

September 02, 2011
Advantages in cost, design risk, and time-to-market, plus the ability to leverage LRUs into a packaged subsystem, have PCOTS on the rise; even as fully integrated systems.
Comms

A new chapter in secure "Data at Rest" using cryptography - Story

July 25, 2011
Cryptography has evolved over many years to prevent unauthorized access to communications, whether the information was transported by courier, teletype, radio waves, or the Internet. Its use in protecting information on computer storage devices is a relatively new and rapidly evolving cryptographic technology.