6U and 3U VPX power supplies for military ground vehicles and uncrewed aircraft introduced by Molex AirBorn
Summary points:
- AirBorn introduces 6U and 3U VPX power supplies, optimized for space-constrained aerospace and defense applications, offering high performance in a compact form.
- These power supplies meet critical MIL-STD-1275 and MIL-STD-461 CE101/CE102 conducted emissions requirements, with integrated EMI suppression for military-grade reliability.
- Designed for use in military ground vehicles, satellites, UAVs, robotics, and AI systems, these power supplies ensure reliable operation in harsh conditions, including voltage surges and spikes.
TAUNTON, Mass. – AirBorn Inc., a Molex company in Taunton, Mass., is introducing 6U and 3U VPX power supplies for space-constrained aerospace and defense applications that require high performance in a compact form.
These VPX models build on proven capabilities of 6U VPX power supply, and support 28-volt vehicle power environments as defined by MIL-STD-1275 and comply with MIL-STD-461 CE101/CE102 conducted emissions test requirements.
These power supplies are for military ground vehicles, satellites, unmanned aerial vehicles, robotics, and AI-driven distributed systems.
AirBorn’s patent-pending VPX power supplies optimize size, weight, power, and cost (SWaP-C) and meet VPX and VITA 62 open architecture and performance requirements.
6U and 3U power supplies
About one-third the size and weight of the 6U VPX power supply, the SOSA-compliant 3U power system offers a maximum output of 1,000 Watts and complies with MIL-STD-1275 and MIL-STD-461 CE101/CE102 conducted emission test requirements.
The 3U VPX power supply has AirBorn’s advanced internal filtering to meet stringent EMI/RF requirements. Integrated EMI suppression capability meets MIL-STD-461-conducted EMI emission requirements without external filtering.
The AirBorn 3U VPX power supply works in rigorous conditions common for military ground vehicles, which can create voltage spikes and surges, and safeguards essential onboard systems and applications like low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellites, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), industrial automation, robotics, and AI-driven distributed systems.
For more information contact AirBorn online at www.airborn.com.