Terrestrial trunk radio relay systems are primarily used to connect the headquarters of
brigades,
divisions and higher military formations. They typically deliver voice and data services, and can be based on boxed or palletized equipment, or vehicle installations, which may be mounted under armour for use on the battlefield.
In-service systems FALCON FALCON has replaced Ptarmigan with a new generation tactical trunk communications system, manufactured by BAE Systems Military Air and Information. It will deliver secure voice and data over an all
Internet Protocol system across multiple security domains. The system is fielded by the
Royal Signals and the
Royal Air Force. The key platforms will be the Wide Area Service Provision (WASP) nodes with up to six radio links and a series of Command Post Support (CPS) nodes which will be scaled for headquarters of differing sizes, further supported by transportable (palletised) and early entry nodes. All wheeled platforms will utilise the British Army's standard MAN HX 60 Cargo Vehicle (Light) platform.
No longer in service BRUIN Introduced in 1967, BRUIN was the Army's first area trunk network mounted in both wheeled and tracked vehicles, which connected formation headquarters and units using multi-channel
UHF radios. BRUIN provided a partially secure and automatic system for the transmission of both voice and
teleprinter traffic. It was the primary trunk communications system of the
British Army of the Rhine from 1967 to 1982. During the
Cold War,
Royal Signals units in the
1st British Corps trained with BRUIN. They deployed their equipment and vehicles among the woods and farms of northern
West Germany, putting their skills to the test in an annual cycle of command and signal exercises.
Ptarmigan Ptarmigan was a mobile, cryptographic digital and modular battlefield
wide area network communications system based on the
Plessey System 250 architecture. It was initially designed to meet the needs of the
British Army of the Rhine in
West Germany, and replaced the BRUIN system. The system consisted of a network of electronic exchanges known as trunk nodes. These nodes are connected by multichannel
UHF and
SHF radio relay links that carry voice, data, telegraph and facsimile communications. The Single Channel Radio Access subsystem is effectively a
VHF secure mobile telephone system that gives isolated or mobile users an entry point into the network. First delivery of Ptarmigan equipment was to 1 Armoured Division HQ and Signal Regiment in December 1984, and it entered service in February/March 1985. Subsequent upgrades include the introduction of an Air Portable Secondary Access Node for
16 Air Assault Brigade, and the General Purpose Trunk Access Port software enhancement which provides interconnectivity to other nations' tactical communications systems. Ptarmigan's system design was the result of detailed studies and feasibility trials carried out jointly by the UK MoD, the Royal Corps of Signals and Royal Signals and Radar Establishment (RSRE), the British Army Royal School of Signals and industry.
The Plessey Company, subsequently
Siemens Plessey Systems and then a constituent part of
BAE Systems was appointed prime contractor and system design authority for Ptarmigan in 1973, with responsibility for engineering development of the complete system. The initial development programme was followed by a series of production contracts worth some £500 million. They covered the provision of the full range of Ptarmigan items from small individual equipments, such as subsets, to major vehicle-mounted installations such as switches and SCRA radio centrals. A major phased enhancement programme to provide high-integrity packet switched data, including mobile
X.25 packet access, international interfacing and the development of equipment for use in armoured vehicles commenced in 1984 and was completed in 1992. BAE Systems was the appointed design authority for supporting the system throughout its post-design phase. This covers the full range of support services from components and equipment up to network level. During the 1991
Operation Granby, Ptarmigan was deployed extensively throughout the operational area with extended satellite trunk links, and was heavily used by British and Allied forces. The system gained further in-service use when deployed in support of the International Peace Implementation Force (
IFOR) in Bosnia. Total investment in Ptarmigan by mid-1992 was approaching £1 billion. In August 1993, a £22 million contract was awarded to modify the system to allow deployment over long distances with satellite links.
Cormorant Cormorant was the area trunk communications network that linked the component headquarters of the British
Joint Rapid Reaction Force. The system was manufactured by the European
EADS company. Cormorant had two basic elements: • The local access component, based on an
ATM switch, provided local digital voice subscriber facilities and a high speed data
local area network for over twenty headquarters. • The wide area component allowed the interconnection of these headquarters across a large geographical area, as well as the means to interconnect with single service and multinational systems. The system was containerised and could be operated in either vehicle mounted or dismounted mode. The underlying technology was based on open standards such as
ATM and
TCP/IP. A Cormorant network consisted of the following installations: • Local area support module • Core element • Bearer module • Long-range bearer module (
tropospheric scatter) • Management information systems • Interoperable gateways • Tactical
fibre-optic cabling • Short range radio ==Combat net radio==