Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: February 28, 2024
The Federal Aviation Administration has awarded Columbia, Maryland-based Frequentis USA a potential $477.3 million contract to provide air-to-ground protocol converter systems designed to replace radio control equipment in the National Airspace System.
FAA announced the contract award in a notice published Tuesday on SAM.gov.
The agency expects the APCs to replace legacy RCE to back existing analog communication links and facilitate the move to voice over internet protocol communications links.
Under the contract, the vendor will provide support services to facilitate the design, development, testing and deployment of APCs, including systems engineering, program management, test and evaluation, integrated logistics, operational, delivery and installation support.
Frequentis USA has been providing voice communications and data information systems for FAA, Department of Defense, NASA and other U.S. government agencies for over two decades.
Danbury Mission Technologies, an ARKA Group business unit, received a $95 million firm-fixed-price contract from the Defense Logistics Agency to provide…
U.S. Transportation Command has awarded 24 companies option period contract modifications to a $750 million indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity, fixed-price with economic-price-adjustment contract…
By Kim Koster, vice president of industry marketing at Unanet For U.S. government contractors, all the current flurry of activity notwithstanding, the…
The U.S. Air Force has awarded Alutiiq Operations Services a $464.1 million indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for the maintenance and repair of…