U.S. Army officials seek to replace the commonly used device. For decades, the U.S. Army has relied on the ubiquitous whip antenna for an array of air and ground communications, but those antennas ...
Standard whip or rubber duck antennas are extremely common due to their low cost and design simplicity. They work very well for long range transmission when the orientation doesn’t change and ...
"Whip" antennas—those long metal rods that used to extend from our cars—look pretty cool in a Smokey and the Bandit kind of way. But for military vehicles, they're not such a great solution. Troops in ...
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