"This new engineering funding will enable KVH to expand and refine the capabilities of our proven navigation and guidance solutions as well as pursue new technologies that could support future product development efforts," said Dan Conway, KVH's vice president of business development.
KVH's proposed ActiveFiber technology uses the company's patented D-shaped fiber and electro-optic polymers to create components inside the fiber itself, making the fiber an active element within an optical system. In 2003, the company demonstrated in a laboratory what it said was the world's first in-fiber optical modulator. KVH said the modulator could potentially be used as a component in fiber optic gyros that are subjected to shock and vibration, such as in artillery shells.
KVH TACNAV navigation systems have been used most recently in US military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. TACNAV complements global positioning systems (GPS) but operates independently of them, via KVH's digital compass and fiber optic gyro (FOG) technology and software algorithms; it provides navigation, position and heading data to a digital battlefield system even if GPS is blocked, jammed or unavailable. TACNAV systems have been sold for use aboard US Army, Marine Corps and Navy vehicles and to Canada, Sweden, Britain, Germany, Spain, Australia, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Malaysia and Italy. KVH FOGs are used in applications including inertial measurement units for torpedoes, precision tactical navigation systems for military vehicles and image stabilization and synchronization for shoulder- or tripod-mounted weapon simulators.
For more information, visit: www.kvh.com