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Defense Advanced GPS Receiver

The AN/PSN-13 Defense Advanced GPS Receiver (DAGR; colloquially, "dagger") is a handheld GPS receiver used by the United States Department of Defense and select foreign military services. It is a military-grade, dual-frequency receiver, and has the security hardware necessary to decode the encrypted P(Y)-code GPS signals.

The Defense Advanced GPS Receiver (DAGR). Coordinates are for Rockwell Collins headquarters in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Manufactured by Rockwell Collins, the DAGR entered production in March 2004, with the 40,000th unit delivered in September 2005. It was estimated by the news source Defense Industry Daily that, by the end of 2006, the USA and various allies around the world had issued almost $300 million worth of DAGR contracts, and ordered almost 125,000 units.[1] The DAGR replaced the Precision Lightweight GPS Receiver (PLGR), which was first fielded in 1994.

Rockwell Collins also manufactures a GPS receiver known as the "Polaris Guide", that looks like a DAGR, but uses only the civilian C/A code signals. These units are labelled as "SPS", for "Standard Positioning Service", and may be possessed by non-military users.

Features

Comparison to PLGR

Parameter PLGR DAGR
Introduced 1990 2004
Frequency bands Dual (L1 & L2) Dual (L1 & L2)
Security PPS-SM SAASM
Display Text only GUI with maps
Number of channels (satellites) 5 12 (all in view)
Anti-Jam resistance 24 dB 41 dB
Time to first fix (TTFF) 360 seconds 100 seconds
Time to subsequent fix (TTSF) 60 seconds < 22 seconds
Weight 2.75 lb (1.25 kg) 0.94 lb (0.43 kg)
Dimensions (in inches) 9.5" tall, 4.1" wide, 2.6" thick 6.4" tall, 3.5" wide, 1.6" thick
(Fits in 2-magazine ammo pouch)
Battery life 13 hours (8 batteries) 14 hours (4 batteries)
Reliability 2000 hours 5000 hours

References

  1. ^ $82.7M more for DAGR GPS Receivers. Defense Industry Daily
  2. ^ GPS enables DAGR to track ‘bad guys’ 2007-07-08 at the Wayback Machine. Air Force Space Command News

External links

  • Rockwell Collins' DAGR technical specifications
  • US Army
  • Wikileaks' US Army AN/PSN-13A DAGR Operator's Manual -- Change 1
  • Brooke Clarke's excellent DAGR Information Page

defense, advanced, receiver, dagr, colloquially, dagger, handheld, receiver, used, united, states, department, defense, select, foreign, military, services, military, grade, dual, frequency, receiver, security, hardware, necessary, decode, encrypted, code, sig. The AN PSN 13 Defense Advanced GPS Receiver DAGR colloquially dagger is a handheld GPS receiver used by the United States Department of Defense and select foreign military services It is a military grade dual frequency receiver and has the security hardware necessary to decode the encrypted P Y code GPS signals The Defense Advanced GPS Receiver DAGR Coordinates are for Rockwell Collins headquarters in Cedar Rapids Iowa Manufactured by Rockwell Collins the DAGR entered production in March 2004 with the 40 000th unit delivered in September 2005 It was estimated by the news source Defense Industry Daily that by the end of 2006 the USA and various allies around the world had issued almost 300 million worth of DAGR contracts and ordered almost 125 000 units 1 The DAGR replaced the Precision Lightweight GPS Receiver PLGR which was first fielded in 1994 Rockwell Collins also manufactures a GPS receiver known as the Polaris Guide that looks like a DAGR but uses only the civilian C A code signals These units are labelled as SPS for Standard Positioning Service and may be possessed by non military users Contents 1 Features 2 Comparison to PLGR 3 References 4 External linksFeatures EditGraphical screen with the ability to overlay map images 12 channel continuous satellite tracking for all in view operation Simultaneous L1 L2 dual frequency GPS signal reception Capable of Direct Y code acquisition Cold start first fix in less than 100 seconds Extended performance in a diverse jamming environment 41 dB J S maintaining state 5 tracking 24 dB during initial C A code acquisition Utilizes Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring RAIM Selective Availability Anti Spoofing Module SAASM compatible currently version 3 2 Wide Area GPS Enhancement WAGE compatible Resistant to multi path effects Can be used as survey for weapons systems Fielded to the U S Army U S Marine Corps U S Navy U S Air Force and select foreign military forces Designed to fit in a Battle Dress Uniform s 2 magazine ammo pouch Approximate cost to government per unit to acquire 1 832 2 Comparison to PLGR EditParameter PLGR DAGRIntroduced 1990 2004Frequency bands Dual L1 amp L2 Dual L1 amp L2 Security PPS SM SAASMDisplay Text only GUI with mapsNumber of channels satellites 5 12 all in view Anti Jam resistance 24 dB 41 dBTime to first fix TTFF 360 seconds 100 secondsTime to subsequent fix TTSF 60 seconds lt 22 secondsWeight 2 75 lb 1 25 kg 0 94 lb 0 43 kg Dimensions in inches 9 5 tall 4 1 wide 2 6 thick 6 4 tall 3 5 wide 1 6 thick Fits in 2 magazine ammo pouch Battery life 13 hours 8 batteries 14 hours 4 batteries Reliability 2000 hours 5000 hoursReferences Edit 82 7M more for DAGR GPS Receivers Defense Industry Daily GPS enables DAGR to track bad guys Archived 2007 07 08 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Space Command NewsExternal links EditRockwell Collins DAGR technical specifications US Army DAGR information page Wikileaks US Army AN PSN 13A DAGR Operator s Manual Change 1 Brooke Clarke s excellent DAGR Information Page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Defense Advanced GPS Receiver amp oldid 1032772296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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