News
Eurotech: Parvus Receives $4.9M Order for DuraCOR Rugged Mission Computers Deployed in Mine Detection
Parvus Surpasses $15M Order Milestone for Rugged Embedded Processor Subsystems Supporting Mine Detection.
Eurotech subsidiary Parvus announced that it has received a $4.9 Million (USD) follow-on order for DuraCOR mission computer subsystems specified in the Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) Husky Mounted Detection System (HMDS) developed by Virginia-based NIITEK (part of the Chemring Group). With the latest contract, Parvus surpasses a $15 Million (USD) order milestone for rugged COTS DuraCOR embedded computers used in this detection system in military and humanitarian landmine road clearance applications. Parvus has been supplying DuraCOR computers to NIITEK since 2009. All new units ordered are expected to ship this year.
DuraCOR Mission Computer Subsystems
The latest DuraCOR order comes upon the heels of NIITEK’s recent announcement relating to a sole source U.S. Army Indefinite-Delivery/Indefinite-Quantity (“IDIQ”) contract for the GPR HMDS which has an initial order value of $161 Million and ceiling of $579 Million. This contract provides the US Army the ability to procure spares and replacement systems to replenish theatre sustainment stock. Additionally, this contract will serve future system requirements for the US Army, the US Marine Corps, and potential Foreign Military Sales.
“This $15 Million program milestone further highlights the evolution of Parvus’ value-stream to our DuraCOR customers, offering not only a growing portfolio of MIL-STD qualified, modular COTS computing platforms, but also application engineering and subsystem integration services that reduce customer program risk, total ownership cost, and time to deployment,” said Parvus President Dusty Kramer. “We are delivering fully pre-integrated solutions, which enables customers such as NIITEK to improve their supply chain lead times and product reliability, while also freeing them up to focus on their core competencies in mine detection technology.”