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SINCGARS (Single Channel Ground and Airborne Radio System) is a Combat Net Radio (CNR) currently used by U.S. and allied military forces. The radios, which handle voice and data communications, are designed to be reliable, secure and easily maintained. Vehicle-mount, backpack, airborne, and handheld form factors are available. SINCGARS uses 25 kHz channels in the VHF FM band, from 30 to approximately 88 MHz. It has single-frequency and frequency hopping modes. The frequency-hopping mode has a slow hop rate. The SINCGARS family has mostly replaced the Vietnam-war-era synthesized single frequency radios (AN/PRC-77 and AN/VRC-12), although it can work with them. An aircraft radio SINCGARS is phasing out the older tactical air-to-ground radios (AN/ARC-114 and AN/ARC-131). Over 250,000 SINCGARS radios have been purchased. There have been several system improvement programs, including the ICOM version, which has integrated voice encryption, and the ASIP version, which is less than half the size and weight of the ICOM-SIP version. In 1992, the U.S. Air Force awarded a contract to replace the AN/ARC-188 for communications between Air Force aircraft and Army units. SINCGARS is expected to be replaced starting in 2008 with the Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS), a software-defined radio that will work with SINCGARS, HAVE QUICK and other existing radios. [edit] Timeline
[edit] Models
Unit Replacement Cost: $6,500.
[edit] External links
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