EMS Takes an Early Lap in the Race
To Install Real Web Access on Bizjets
Dassault Falcon (Booth 7201) is claiming to be the first OEM to
bring high-speed Internet access to the sky, in a production aircraft,
with installation of an HSD-128 satcom unit on the firm's Falcon
900EX demonstrator.
The initial four-hour flight took place on April 30 from Dassault's
completion center in Little Rock, Arkansas.
Truly convenient, real-time, onboard-aircraft e-mail and web-surfing
seems chronically a step or three away, with the market hotly
contested by companies including Honeywell, Rockwell and Atlanta-based
EMS Technologies, which is sharing Booth 7100 here with Inmarsat.
All three are using Inmarsat's Swift64 service.
Dassault's use of the AMT-50 high-gain antenna marks a victory
for manufacturer EMS. Coupled with the HSD-128 single box data
solution, an 8 MCU package, it affords users "global digital
geo-stationary satellite communications with 25 times the speed
and efficiency (per channel of previous airborne satcom systems,"
Dassault says. It can support up to four users at once.
"Our customers are in the habit of accomplishing as much
business as possible during their flights," said Dassault
Falcon president John Rosanvallon. "With the installation
of HSD-128, they will have easy access to the Internet as well
as a high-quality phone connection."
The HSD-128 is said to be the first available stand-alone high
speed data satcom with a pair of independent channels, each capable
of uncompressed, 64-kilobyte-per-second symmetric bandwidth. Today's
standard is a tortoise-like 2.4Kbps.
The phone connection boasts 4.8Kbps bandwidth, and thus eliminates
the "tin-can" sound of existing 2.4Kbps systems, Dassault
says.
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