Centralized Computing in Next-Generation Army Vehicles

TBMG-52836

03/01/2025

Abstract
Content

In an era where technological advancements are rapid and constant, the U.S. Army will need a more agile and efficient approach to modernizing systems on succeeding generations of Army vehicles. Legacy platforms like Abrams, Stryker, and Bradley vehicles use multiple mission computers tied to individual sensors that often required the addition of “boxes” to accommodate new capabilities, which could take years to deploy and drove sustainment costs up due to vendor lock. In addition, this antiquated approach doesn’t leverage data to converge effects across the formation in a multi-domain environment. Centralized, common computing as detailed in GCIA would help solve this problem, potentially linking all major subsystems and providing higher-speed processing to assess large datasets in real time with AI and ML algorithms. By using a common, open architecture computer, the Army will be able to rapidly integrate new capabilities inside one box, versus adding multiple boxes. This pivotal shift would address SWaP concerns because common hardware like antennas and amplifiers could be shared, and cabling would be reduced. It would also simplify sustainment, logistics, and supply chain efforts.

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Citation
"Centralized Computing in Next-Generation Army Vehicles," Mobility Engineering, March 1, 2025.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 01
Product Code
TBMG-52836
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English