Curtiss-Wright’s rugged commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) mission computer subsystems in the small form factor (SFF) Parvus® DuraCOR® product line feature modular, expandable designs, and powerful graphics and data processing capabilities, integrated together in an ultra-reliable and robust chassis.


With decades of experience developing small, smart, fast, and strong defense solutions, Curtiss-Wright has engineered its DuraCOR product family from the inside out to address stringent size, weight, power, and cost (SWaP-C) requirements. This enables our customers to deploy a fully-functional, environmentally-hardened subsystem — tailored to specific needs — in a matter of weeks.


These field-tested, MIL-STD qualified mission processors have been proven in C4ISR technology refresh and platform upgrade programs under thermal, shock, and vibration extremes in unmanned and manned aircraft, ground vehicles, and maritime platforms.

Expandable

Each unit features electrical/mechanical I/O expansion capabilities that enable rapid integration of payload-specific I/O interfaces for avionics, vetronics, situational awareness, and other applications.


Curtiss-Wright provides application engineering services to extend base system computing functionality for these small form factor SFF systems, adding in application-specific I/O and communications cards—typically without traditional NRE fees or development project delays.


With pre-integrated, pre-qualified subsystems tailored by the factory, DuraCOR customers dramatically reduce scheduling risk and program management overhead, while maximizing use of open architecture COTS technologies.

DuraCOR 312 Hardware from Curtiss-Wright

The Parvus DuraCOR 312 from Curtiss-Wright is an ultra-small form factor (USFF) modular mission computer built around the high-performance, yet power efficient NVIDIA® Jetson TX2i “supercomputer-on-a module” computing device that is integrated in a miniature rugged chassis with MIL-grade high-density connectors.

NVIDIA Jetson TX2 module

The DuraCOR 312 combines powerful NVIDIA Pascal™/CUDA-core GPU signal processing with 64-bit Armv8 heterogeneous multi-processing (HMP) for size, weight, power, and cost (SWaP-C) sensitive mobile, airborne, ground, manned, and unmanned vehicle and sensor platforms. The unit also integrates a massively parallel, many-core architecture boasting one of the highest computing FLOPS-per-watt architectures on the market.


Thanks to the unit’s Pascal GPU architecture (supporting Max-Q and Max-P dynamic energy profiles), larger memory bandwidth, and support for CANbus, the DuraCOR 312 can deliver up to twice the performance or power efficiency of TX1-based systems together with native vehicle bus interfaces.

Modular Design

The unit also delivers an unparalleled modular system design, boasting multiple Mini-PCIe I/O card slots, high-speed M.2 internal storage, removable SATA Flash SSD capabilities, and an aerospace-grade power supply supporting 50 ms power hold-up. This is all contained in a fanless IP67-rated mechanical package designed for wide temperatures and harsh shock and vibration, along with ECC memory for mitigation against single event upsets at high altitudes.


While the low-power DuraCOR 312 is miniature in size, this rugged COTS mission computer LRU packs performance with six (6) Armv8 processor cores and 256 Pascal/CUDA-core GPU along with multiple add-on I/O and storage expansion options to support additional vetronics/avionics interfaces beyond its already comprehensive set of base I/O (which include Ethernet, CAN, serial, USB, DIO, and video ports).


The unit comes with on-board eMMC Flash and supports an optional internal M.2 SSD (NVMe/SATA), as well as optional removable 2.5” SATA SSD storage for high capacity storage and information assurance requirements. Like other DuraCOR models, the 312 leverages both an ecosystem of rugged COTS Mini-PCIe modules (including MIL-STD-1553 and ARINC 429 avionics databus interfaces) and Curtiss-Wright’s responsive, cost-competitive application engineering services to deliver Modified COTS (MCOTS) variants quickly and without a traditional NRE fee.

Ruggedized for Harsh Conditions

With military-grade ruggedization to extend Jetson TX2i operation, the DuraCOR 312 is designed to operate reliably in extremely harsh environments, making it well suited on-board civil and military aircraft and vehicle platforms.


Comprehensive qualification testing validates its robustness under MIL-STD-810G, MIL-STD-461F, MIL-STD-1275D, MIL-STD-704F and RTCA/DO-160G conditions for environmental, power, and EMI (thermal, shock, vibration, dust, water, humidity, altitude, power spikes/surges, conducted/radiated emissions and susceptibility). In addition, optional 50 ms power hold-up capabilities are supported for MIL-STD-704F aircraft power switch-over requirements.

get in touch!

Curtiss-Wright Defense Solutions

www.curtisswrightds.com

ds@curtisswright.com

Go to article: Home | Defence in the information age: views from DSEI Go to article: In this issueGo to article: TECHWAN | Company InsightGo to article: TECHWANGo to article: ContentsGo to article: Euroquartz | Company InsightGo to article: EuroquartzGo to article: The defence industry briefingGo to article: MMDGo to article: MMD VideoGo to article: Industry newsGo to article: VPT | Company InsightGo to article: VPTGo to article: In pictures: Red Arrows on tourGo to article: Protomatic | Company InsightGo to article: ProtomaticGo to article: DSEI in 14 tweetsGo to article: Omnetics Connector CorporationGo to article: Cyber threats, disruption and how to deal with itGo to article: Arpa | Company InsightGo to article: ArpaGo to article: Facial recognition: essential for security or bordering on Big Brother?Go to article: TSS InternationalGo to article: Armoured fighting vehicles: tracks vs wheelsGo to article: Pico ElectronicsGo to article: Key takeaways from DSEI’s Maritime Capability ConferenceGo to article: Bellridge | Company InsightGo to article: BellridgeGo to article: The First Sea Lord’s five priorities for the Royal NavyGo to article: SimulincGo to article: Teaching an old ship new tricks: we visit HMS ArgyllGo to article: Concurrent TechnologiesGo to article: Royal Marines imagine high-tech future commandosGo to article: Evans Capacitor | Company InsightGo to article: Evans CapacitorGo to article: Explainer: the Royal Navy’s role in the Persian GulfGo to article: Betalight | Company InsightGo to article: BetalightGo to article: Event: 21st Annual Global MilSatComGo to article: ScioTeqGo to article: Industry eventsGo to article: Bright PlasticsGo to article: Event: Military Airlift and Air-to-Air Refuelling Go to article: J. Blaschke WehrtechnikGo to article: Next issue previewGo to article: Barrett CommunicationsGo to article: The GDT team - contact usGo to article: Curtiss-Wright Defense SolutionsGo to article: Curtiss-Wright Defense Solutions | Company Insight