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The '''Defense Transportation Reporting and Control System (DTRACS)''' was a tracking and control system used by [[United States military]] units in [[Europe]] and [[South West Asia]] (SWA). The system is actually a commercial
After it became more heavily used, it was determined that the Army needed its own secure hub on a [[military base]] in [[Germany]]. This hub was located in [[Mannheim, Germany]] outside of [[Coleman Barracks]] at a ___location known as the "tank-farm". This ___location was chosen because it already housed other satellite hubs, one of which was for AFN.
▲'''DTRACS''' was a tracking and control system used by United States military units in Europe and South West Asia (SWA). The system is actually a commercial of the shelf (COTS) product from [[Qualcomm]]. Its commercial name is OmniTRACS and is in use by commercial trucking fleets throughout the world. Initially, when the system was first in use by the [[US Army]] in Europe (USAREUR), it was run through an Alcatel contract out of Paris with a [[data feed]] to the USAREUR G4 Logistics Automation Division (LAD).
The Land Earth Station (LES) portion of the system was maintained by a company called Data Path (which was acquired by Rockwell Collins in 2009<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.rockwellcollins.com/news/page12220.html|title = Error}}</ref>). The servers that processed the messages and GPS ___location information through the QTRACS software were initially housed in Friedrichsfeld, [[Germany]] and maintained by the USAREUR G4 office. The G4 contracted this work out to the Titan Corporation (now owned by L3 Communications). Management of the program was eventually turned over to PEO EIS.<ref>
▲After it became more heavily used, it was determined that the Army needed its own secure hub on a military base in Germany. This hub was located in [[Mannheim, Germany]] outside of Coleman Barracks at a ___location known as the "tank-farm". This ___location was chosen because it already housed other satellite hubs, one of which was for AFN.
▲The Land Earth Station (LES) portion of the system was maintained by a company called Data Path (which was acquired by Rockwell Collins in 2009<ref>http://www.rockwellcollins.com/news/page12220.html</ref>). The servers that processed the messages and GPS ___location information through the QTRACS software were initially housed in Friedrichsfeld, [[Germany]] and maintained by the USAREUR G4 office. The G4 contracted this work out to the Titan Corporation (now owned by L3 Communications). Management of the program was eventually turned over to PEO EIS<ref>http://www.eis.army.mil/</ref>. The servers were eventually moved to [[Kilbourne Kasserne]] in [[Schwetzingen]]. This move was made because the facility at Friedrichsfeld was not robust enough and had a poor communications path with no redundancy. The site in Schwetzingen, also known as "Site-S", had better comms and was also an official military [[Network Operations Center]] (NOC).
At its height, there were three server stacks for processing DTRACS data. One stack for European devices, another for devices in SWA and a third for receiving a split-feed from the KBR (Kellog Brown and Root) owned and operated server. While KBR had their own vehicles and server, all three systems used the same satellite for their communications. As of January 2010 the KBR solution still exists, but was moved to Ramstein Airbase.
On the military side, the system was replaced by a newer system called [[Movement Tracking System]], or MTS. The last use of DTRACS by US military
== Capabilities ==
DTRACS devices were capable of sending messages to each other and their
Vehicles could send free text messages containing up to 1,900 characters. There were all
* http://www.js.pentagon.mil/doctrine/jel/doddict/acronym/d/01790.html▼
* http://www.almc.army.mil/alog/issues/Mar-Apr07/midnight_run.html▼
* http://www.qualcomm.com/products_services/mobile_content_services/enterprise/assetmanagement/omnitracs.html▼
* http://www.qualcomm.com/products_services/mobile_content_services/enterprise/qtracs.html▼
* http://jitc.fhu.disa.mil/gccsiop/interfaces/omnitracs.pdf▼
== References ==
<references/>
== External links ==
▲* http://www.js.pentagon.mil/doctrine/jel/doddict/acronym/d/01790.html
▲* [https://web.archive.org/web/20070625095518/http://www.almc.army.mil/
▲* https://web.archive.org/web/20080925221351/http://www.qualcomm.com/products_services/mobile_content_services/enterprise/assetmanagement/omnitracs.html
▲* https://web.archive.org/web/20101204110643/http://www.qualcomm.com/products_services/mobile_content_services/enterprise/qtracs.html
* [[:de:Coleman Barracks]]
▲* https://web.archive.org/web/20110716145107/http://jitc.fhu.disa.mil/gccsiop/interfaces/omnitracs.pdf
[[Category:Military technology]]
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