Personal Role Radio

Summary

The H4855 Personal Role Radio (PRR) is a small UHF transmitter-receiver issued to the British Armed Forces. It is used by the British Army, Royal Marines, Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force Regiment. The radio has a range of 500 meters, weighs 1.5 kilograms, has 256 different radio channels and a battery life of 20 hours continuous use. It allows users to communicate over short distances. Effective even through thick cover or the walls of buildings, PRR is issued to every member of an eight-strong infantry section.[1] Originally conceived by Davies industrial Communications the headset manufacturer, who took the prototype to Marconi in late 1999, It is manufactured by Marconi-Selenia Communications (then Selenia Communications, Selex ES until 2015, now Leonardo new name of Finmeccanica since 2016). The PRR was originally part of the wider Bowman radio project but was hived off in October 1999 for more rapid implementation, and the first of 45,000 units formally entered service in early 2002. Operating in the 2.4 GHz band, PRR has integrated encryption but does not intercommunicate with the rest of the Bowman network, but is widely acclaimed as having revolutionised intra-squad communications and small-unit tactics.

H4855 Personal Role Radio

Additional features being the ability to be re-configured in the field with 16 channels available on the selector knob and fifteen other groups of sixteen available with a simple tool. The radio operates on spread spectrum and has a good level of security being designed with LPI (low probability of interception). An inbuilt receiver enables the radio to be keyed remotely via a short range encoded Press To Talk switch fob, the switch being mounted on a weapon or hand grip of a military vehicle. The switch code can be changed in the field and the radio configured to work with up to 4 different switches (useful for soldiers sharing transport such as motor cycles where the PTT switch can be handlebar mounted). The side-mounted switch-pack is supplied with a single Transmit switch for general use and a double switch pack and auxiliary lead and connector to operate a second "Bowman" radio from the same users headset. Multiple security switches and block outs are fitted to prevent re transmission of secure Bowman signals over the personal network. The switch unit is secured with a single screw, the slotted head being wide enough to accept the tang of the standard screwdriver tool supplied with the SA80 rifle. removing the switch assembly also gains access to the 16 group selector switch allowing the radio to reconfigured in a to a different group of channels. The PRR is used with a dedicated headset, no inbuilt speaker or microphone are included in the radio. The headset design is a ventilated plate with a waterproof earpiece mounted on a frame. The design is such that normal conversation and surrounding sounds are not blocked from the user, a soft ear pad rests against the user and an open mesh headband with straps secures it. The design allows the headset to be worn with very little strap pressure for long periods unlike small "star wars" headsets that need a tight strap to keep them in place. The comfort level was high on the list for the design. The plate has a flat external surface and can be used with a standard ear muff type hearing protector over the top. This requirement being for training and range practice use when not in combat. The microphone is a noise cancelling electret type housed in a black glass filled nylon case made from a type of nylon that will crystallise at flash temperatures giving it a good chance of survival .

References edit

  1. ^ "Personal Role Radio". Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom). Retrieved 28 January 2010.

External links edit

  • "Personal Role Radio - UKSF Gear". eliteukforces.info. 2015.
  • "Personal role radio". British Army. 2015.
  • "Personal role radio". Leonardo. 2016.