Satnews Daily
August 4th, 2009
Rockwell Collins' DAGR Does GPS Right For USAF
Rockwell Collins has received a $20.2 million contract modification to provide 81,622 DAGR hand-held GPS receivers and accessories to the U.S. Air Force GPS Wing (GPSW/PK) in El Segundo, CA.
This contract modification is part of a $450 million DAGR follow-on contract (FA8807-09-C-0002) announced March 18/09 by Rockwell Collins. The company received its first order from the USAF under the contract that same month: 53,920 DAGR receivers and accessories for $87.5 million. The DAGR is a handheld GPS receiver that provides position, navigation and situational awareness for US troops and provides precise timing to synchronize tactical radios, missile platforms, and other situational awareness navigation systems and includes a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for ease of use. The DAGR design incorporates anti-jam improvements and denied GPS capabilities for worldwide enhanced battlefield protection. It is the first U.S. handheld GPS receiver program to include the Selective Availability Anti-Spoofing Module (SAASM) security device. The Rockwell Collins SAASM includes NightHawk 12-channel GPS signal processor, navigation using as many as 12 GPS satellites, advanced correlator engine for accelerated Direct-Y code and C/A code acquisitions, security architecture using a Key Data Processor (KDP-II), and unclassified-when-keyed operation and updated security features. The DAGR’s dual frequency RF front end allows continuous track of both the L1/L2 GPS satellite frequencies. A precision time source runs continuously to allow rapid acquisition of the GPS satellites when the receiver is turned on.

