October 10, 2014
Military Organization Orders EMRISE
By
Rahul Arora
TMCnet Contributor
EMRISE Corporation, a manufacturer of defense and aerospace electronic devices and communications equipment, recently announced it will provide custom electronic devices to a military organization. The devices will be used in a military program by the company's subsidiary, XCEL Power Systems, Ltd., in England. The delivery of $1.2 million order is expected to begin in mid-2015.
"This is the second large order for electronic devices to be used in a military application we have announced in the last two weeks," said EMRISE Chairman and Chief Executive Carmine T. Oliva, in a press release. "Together these two large orders have a combined total value of $3.3 million. The most recent order has further strengthened the growing backlog of our Electronic Devices segment, and is another indication of the increasing strength of our base military business."
EMRISE designs, manufactures and markets electronic devices, sub-systems and equipment for aerospace, defense, industrial and communications markets. EMRISE products perform key functions such as power supply and power conversion; radio frequency (RF) and microwave signal processing; and network access to public and private communications networks. The network products from the company are used in public and private, legacy and latest Ethernet and Internet Protocol (IP) networks. EMRISE serves customers in North America, Europe and Asia through operations in the United States, England and France.
In related news, the company recently announced that it received a $610,000 order for communications equipment to be used by a major European public utility. The order was received from a longstanding customer by Pascall Electronics Ltd. subsidiary in England.
Pascall provides custom and standard power systems, RF devices and integrated systems, subsystems and components for a broad range of military, civilian aerospace, commercial and other land-, air- and sea-based applications and programs.
Edited by Maurice Nagle