ETL Systems Launches New
Smart Modular Genus “A Blueprint For The
Industry”
ETL Systems launched its
next generation Genus RF distribution modular
chassis, designed to make the leap to MEO and
LEO constellations possible, which are being
driven forward by the likes of OneWeb, Telesat,
Starlink and Amazon.
Genus enables ETL’s
products, including Falcon Frequency Converters,
Alto Amplifiers and Stingray RF over Fibre, to
be mixed and matched into a single compact
chassis and to communicate intelligently and
interoperably with the habitat they sit in.
This helps satellite
operators to improve link budgets and increase
connectivity, scalability and flexibility to
deliver a lower cost per bit for customers. Many
direct benefits include easier cabling, lower
power usage, greater rack density, plug and play
functionality and SNMPv3 remote control.
Almost all active elements
are hot-swappable, which is critical for comms
centres full of power hungry devices, where
requirements are constantly changing. Active
components can be swapped or field replaced in a
matter of minutes.
ETL has re-engineered its
whole RF product range, designing the Genus
chassis with a higher density, providing
significant rack space savings and incorporating
the latest security protocols including HTTPS
and SNMPv3.
The modular design, with
multi-function mix and match RF equipment,
frequency converters, amplifiers, switch
matrices and RF over fibre technologies in the
same chassis, means common spares provisioning
and resilience.
At the end of life, modules
can be renewed without the need to replace
entire units. This is especially important where
low-cost units such as power supplies and fans
can be easily replaced, becoming serviceable
parts, whilst the RF system modules remain
operational and software upgradeable.
The chassis also tracks
which modules are installed and records the
operational history of the unit alongside other
factors like heat, humidity, operational cycles
and other important environmental and functional
data.
Esen Bayar, ETL Systems
chief executive officer, said: “Genus is a major
step forward in ground-segment technology,
building on our 25 year heritage of designing RF
distribution equipment for the world’s satcom
market. We’re very proud of what we’ve achieved.
We’ve been able to condense our product range to
fit a new chassis, reducing existing module
sizes down, maintaining or improving RF
performance and adding new functionality with
SNMPv3 and HTTPS secure protocols.
“It has been critical
throughout the design and implementation that
our pillars of resilience and redundancy can
translate in this new era for satellites. With
that in mind, our engineers have made it
possible that all active components can be
serviced in-field, for greater flexibility and
maintenance for our customers.
“We believe Genus is a
blueprint for our industry; making the leap to
MEO and LEO possible. In time we will be
inviting partners and third party providers to
work with us on this journey. We can only
achieve this forward step through greater
standardisation and collaboration between space
and ground, partners and friendly competitors
alike.”