Handsets Iridium offers four satellite handsets: the 9555, 9575A (which is only available to US government customers), the Extreme, and the Extreme PTT.
Wi-Fi Hotspots In 2014, Iridium began to offer the Iridium Go!
hotspot, which can also be used as a distress beacon under certain circumstances. As of September 2020, Iridium's manufacturing contractor, Beam Communications, had built 50,000 of these devices.
One-way pagers Two
pagers were made for the Iridium network – the
Motorola 9501 and
Kyocera SP-66K. These are one-way devices that could receive messages sent in the form of
SMS. Messages are delivered to pre-selected "MDAs" which cover a certain geographic area. Three of these MDAs may be selected on a web-based portal or updated automatically if the paging service is bound to an Iridium phone. Each country has its own MDA based on its
country code; some of the larger countries are divided into several MDAs, while separate MDAs exist for sections of ocean and common aeronautic routes. Pagers are assigned with telephone numbers in
area code 480 and can also be contacted using email, SMS and the web-based interface used to send messages to Iridium phones.
Two-way satellite messengers In 2017,
Garmin announced
inReach SE+ and inReach Explorer+ satellite communicators, which use Iridium satellite network for global coverage. The Garmin inReach Mini, a satellite messenger, was announced a year later. These devices can send and receive text messages with any cell phone number, email address or another inReach device, as well as to provide location sharing, navigation and direct communication options to emergency services. ZOLEO satellite communicator uses global Iridium network when cellular or Wi-Fi coverage is unavailable. It does so by means of Bluetooth connection to provide two-way messaging to connected smartphone or tablet devices.
Other satellite phones Several other Iridium-based telephones exist, such as
payphones, and equipment intended for installation on ships and aircraft. The DPL handset made by NAL Research combined with a 9522 transceiver is used for some of these products. This handset provides a
user interface nearly identical to that of the 9505 series phones.
Standalone transceiver units These can be used for data-logging applications in remote areas (as in
data collection satellites). Some types of
buoys, such as those used for the
tsunami warning system, use Iridium satellites to communicate with their base. The remote device is programmed to call or send short
burst data (SBD) messages to the base at specified intervals, or it can be set to accept calls in order for it to offload its collected data. The following transceivers have been released over the years: • Iridium Core 9523 – Similar to the 9522B, a modular transceiver released in 2012 • Iridium 9522B – A transceiver released in late 2008, is smaller than the 9522A and has similar features. It also supports Circuit-Switched Data (CSD), not just SBD. • Iridium 9522A – Based on the 9522, some variants have built in GPS and autonomous reporting functions. Supports SBD. • Motorola 9522 – Last Motorola transceiver, supports outgoing SMS but no SBD. • Motorola 9520 – Original transceiver module, does not support outgoing SMS or SBD. Designed for use in vehicles with accompanying handset
Short burst data modems These devices support only SBD for
Internet of things (IoT) services and do not use a
SIM card. • Iridium 9601 – Supports only SBD, several
tracking devices and other products have been built around this modem. It was an Iridium manufactured product designed as an OEM module for integration into applications that only use the Iridium Short Burst Data Service. Short Burst Data applications are supported through an RS-232 interface. Examples of these applications include maritime vessel tracking or automatic vehicle tracking. • Iridium 9602 – Smaller, cheaper version of 9601 (released in 2010). • Iridium 9603 – One-fourth the volume and half the footprint of 9602
Iridium OpenPort Iridium OpenPort is a broadband satellite voice and data communications system for maritime vessels. The system is used for crew calling and e-mail services on sea vessels such as merchant fleets, government and navy vessels, fishing fleets and personal yachts. Iridium operates at only 2.2 to 3.8
kbit/s, which requires very aggressive voice
compression and decompression
algorithms. (By comparison,
AMR used in 3G phones requires a minimum of 4.75 kbit/s,
G.729 requires 6.4 kbit/s, and
iLBC requires 13.33 kbit/s.) Latency for data connections averages 1800
ms round-trip, with a mode of 1300 to 1400 ms and a minimum around 980 ms. Latency is highly variable depending on the path data takes through the satellite constellation as well the need for retransmissions due to errors, which may be around 2 to 3% for mobile originated packets under good conditions.
Iridium Certus One of the Iridium NEXT services is Iridium Certus, a globally available satellite broadband which is capable of up to 704 Kbps of bandwidth across maritime, aviation, land mobile, government, and
IoT applications. Terminals for the service are provided by
Cobham, Intellian Technologies and
Thales.
Iridium STL Iridium is providing Satellite Time & Location (STL) service. It was developed by
Satelles company, which was later acquired by Iridium Communications in April 2024. According to the company, it is the only
LEO satellite based commercial
positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) service (as of April 2024). == See also ==