Faxes are low on Army's priorities list
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Congress wants the Army to replace thousands of fax machines with new fax technology, but the Army envisions the digital battlefield of the future as one without fax machines. The Senate Armed Services Committee requested a report from the Army on the future of secure fax machines, including the cost of replacing legacy systems in the fiscal 1998 Defense Authorization Act. The Army, however, told the committee that fax technology doesn't play a big part in
Congress wants the Army to replace thousands of fax machines with new fax technology,
but the Army envisions the digital battlefield of the future as one without fax machines.
The Senate Armed Services Committee requested a report from the Army on the future of
secure fax machines, including the cost of replacing legacy systems in the fiscal 1998
Defense Authorization Act. The Army, however, told the committee that fax technology
doesnt play a big part in the services modernization plans.
Rapidly advancing technology and the increasing use of computers in the tactical
arena may preclude or at least greatly decrease the requirement for secure fax
machines, said Col. Michael Brown, the Armys deputy director for information
assurance in the February report. He said the Army cant determine the cost of
replacing its fax technology until the digitized division has been tested and evaluated.
The Armys Training and Doctrine Commands emerging future requirements
document calls for an Integrated Services Digital Network voice-switching architecture.
The Army plans to field the first digital division by 2000 under its Force XXI
modernization. TRADOC is still deciding which systems to use and to what level the service
should digitize.
But the legacy AN/UXC-7 fax machine is at odds with modernization goals, Army officials
said. The fax machine was built to military standards in the 1980s by Magnavox and uses a
rolling drum to transmit documents. The Army bought 5,000 of them for $105 million, or
$21,000 apiece.
The fax machines are no longer produced. Expensive to maintain as well as purchase,
more than 500 of the machines are under repair at any given moment, Army officials said.
Most machines fail after 2,495 hours of use and cost around $4,325 each for repair or
overhaul, service officials said.
The bulky UXC-7 weighs more than 65 pounds in its standard configuration and 110 pounds
with supplies, Army officials said.
The Army is already using newer commercial fax machines from Richo Corp. of West
Caldell, N.J., and Ilex Systems Inc. of Milpitas, Calif. The Army also uses either Secure
Telephone Unit-III terminals or in-line encryptors for secure transmissions. The committee
urged the Army to buy more of the modern fax machines.
The service is also eyeing a secure fax from Turtle Mountain Communications Inc. of
Maryville, Tenn.
In anticipation of an upgraded requirement, we are reviewing an unsolicited
proposal from Turtle Mountain Communications Inc., which provides a ruggedized
multifunctional fax transceiver, Brown said.
The Armys 1st Cavalry division at Fort Hood, Texas, is evaluating TMCs
SMF-1M-TAC fax machine in field trials.
Preston Leingang, TMCs president, said his companys fax machine would fit
well with the Armys new digital division. The standalone fax machine, with carrying
case, weighs about 35 pounds. A 21-inch rack mount secures the fax into Humvees and other
combat vehicles to offset vibration caused by uneven terrain.
The SMF-1M-TAC is a commercial fax machine from Mita Copystar America Inc. of
Fairfield, N.J., that TMC modified by installing a 110/220-volt power supply, mobile
subscriber equipment connectivity, cryptographic equipment for satellite use and a secure
fax interface board that switches between secure and nonsecure Group 3 modes of
communications, Leingang said.
The machine, which costs $5,900, also serves as a printer, scanner and copier. About
300 TMC fax machines of various models are scattered among the Armys commands and
organizations, Leingang said.
The Army also uses the TS-21 Blackjack by Cryptek Secure Communications LLC of
Chantilly, Va. The Armys III Corps, U.S. Special Operations Command, as well as
Britains Royal Marines and Norways Special Forces, use the $14,000 machine.
The Blackjack is capable of transmitting and receiving photo-quality imagery, drawings
and documents at 64 Kbps, a Cryptek spokesman said.
As much as the Army wants to have a digital battlefield and be paperless, they
havent figured out a way to get rid of paper, said Cryptek president David
Gross. So they use the TS-21 as a printer, scanner, copier and point-to-point fax
machine.
The Armys 11th Signal Brigade at Fort Huachuca, Ariz., just completed testing the
TS-21 as part of the Grecian Firebolt exercise. The TS-21, which weighs about 40 pounds,
can be installed on aircraft, ships and ground equipment.
But because TMCs SMF-1M-TAC is a commercial fax machine that has been ruggedized,
Leingang said, it has lower maintenance costs than the TS-21.
But the TS-21 is designed to replace the UXC-7, Gross said, and is more rugged and can
withstand the extreme temperature, dust and vibration of the battlefield better than
TMCs fax machine.