Air Force asks Teradyne for test and measurement kits for VDATS open-architecture avionics test stations

Feb. 2, 2021
VDATS is the Air Force member of the U.S. military families-of-testers and is the Air Force's directed and preferred automatic test solution.

ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE, Ga. – U.S. Air Force test and measurement experts are asking Teradyne Inc. in North Reading, Mass., to provide kits for the Versatile Depot Automatic Test Station (VDATS) family of electronics testers to troubleshoot military aircraft.

Officials of the Air Force Sustainment Center at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., announced an $78.2 million contract to Teradyne on Friday for VDATS kits. VDATS is an organically designed test station with open-architecture and virtual modular equipment extensions for test and measurement instrumentation.

The VDATS consists of standardized and commercially available test equipment, components, and software, with two configurations: the digital analog (DA)-1 version to handle most analog and light digital electronics equipment, and the DA-2 station for enhanced digital testing for more advanced avionics testing requirements. The system also has a RF roll-up assembly for standard RF testing.

VDATS is for testing the A-10, B-1, B-2, B-52, C-5, C-17, C-130, E-3, E-8C, F-15, F-16, F-22, H-53, H-60, KC-135, MC-4, MQ-9 military aircraft, as well as for the UH-1 Marine Corps and Navy UH-1 helicopter and U.S. Navy ships.

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VDATS is the Air Force member of the U.S. military families-of-testers and is the Air Force's directed and preferred automatic test solution. The VDATS station also is adaptable to most electronic testing needs.

It was designed originally for depot testing capabilities, but is being put into use at electronics intermediate maintenance departments under controlled conditions at U.S. military bases. Manufacturing and maintaining the VDATS are experts at the WR Air Logistics Complex at Warner Robins Air Force base, and at the Tobyhanna Army Depot in Tobyhanna, Pa.

The VDATS design enables modular capability enhancements with mission equipment support sets for small augmentations or roll-up bays for larger augmentations that are portable among the core stations.

This design preserves the station's configuration while providing the ability to adapt to different workload requirements. The Air Force operates 150 VDATS stations.

Related: Navy orders 35 eCASS test and measurement systems to troubleshoot and repair avionics at sea or ashore

Before VDATS became the Air Force's standard test system in 2007, technicians at Robins Air Logistics Center needed 268 legacy testers to test the different weapons systems and aircraft components. Legacy testers were difficult and expensive to maintain, repair parts for the testers were unavailable, and the number of workers who knew how to use the legacy testers was diminishing.

The hardware and software design and construction of the VDATS was all completed at Robins through a partnership between hardware and software engineers from the 402nd Electronics Maintenance Group and the 402nd Software Maintenance Group. Naming VDATS to the Air Force family of testers means designers of new weapon systems first must examine VDATS first as a test system.

On this contract Teradyne will do the work in North Reading, Mass., and should finish five ordering periods in December 2025. For more information contact Teradyne online at https://www.teradyne.com, or the Air Force Sustainment Center at www.afsc.af.mil.

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