Alta Data Technologies

The aerospace and defense industry is navigating a pivotal transition toward the Modular Open Systems Approach (MOSA), SOSA™ alignment, nimble mission systems and network-centric architectures. As platforms evolve to require greater integration and smaller footprints, system architects face a critical challenge: maintaining the integrity of established legacy I/O standards such as MIL-STD-1553 and ARINC-429 while seamlessly leveraging modern, high-speed networks.

Alta Data Technologies has emerged as the definitive leader in this space. Recognized for seven consecutive years as a top industry supplier, Alta is widely trusted for its cutting-edge, novel hardware miniaturization, robust packet-offloading protocol engines and unwavering support for open systems architectures.

Its solutions are field-proven and technically superior, with over 55,000 modules deployed across hundreds of global military platforms—including high-profile programs like the Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft (FLRAA / Cheyenne), C-130, AH-64 Apache, UH-60 Black Hawk, C-17, JSF, F-22 and F-16.

Championing MOSA and SOSA Platforms with XMC Open Standards

With Department of Defense mandates enforcing openarchitecture frameworks for interoperable military sensor systems, there is a massive surge in demand for high-density, multi-protocol integration on single-slot XMC cards.

Alta’s XMC cards (offering 1-10 1553 channels or multi-protocol combinations of 1553, ARINC and serial) serve as the cornerstone of this strategic shift. The XMC-MAS optimizes slot usage and power efficiency in VPX systems by consolidating disparate I/O requirements into a single, VITA 42-compliant site. Available in conduction-cooled and industrial extended-temperature (-40°C to +85°C) variants, these rugged cards are designed to withstand the high vibration and thermal extremes typical of military LRUs.

Leadership in Embedded and Modular Connectivity

Alta has set an industry benchmark for miniaturized embedded interfaces, particularly through its Mini PCI Express, M.2, and Ethernet-based mezzanine card product lines. Rather than scaling down full-sized PMC or XMC cards, it custom-engineers solutions that meet the rigorous space and weight demands of small-form-factor embedded systems while preserving strict compliance with modular industry standards.

Redefining Network-Centric Architectures

Alta pioneered the concept of Networked I/O, effectively transforming the standard Ethernet network into a pseudo-backplane for legacy avionics. This approach provides near-limitless software portability and drastically simplifies wiring complexity across complex airframes.

• ENET-1553™/ARINC Converters: This candy bar-sized device bridges legacy networks to Ethernet via a thin-server IP/UDP protocol engine. By optimizing the IP stack directly in hardware, the ENET achieves packet turnaround times under 20 µSec— frequently outperforming the host computer’s real-time operating system (RTOS) stack.

• NLINE™ Ruggedization: For deployments requiring extreme survivability, the NLINE series embeds Alta’s advanced ENET electronics directly into the cable harness. The assembly over-molds the components with multiple protective layers and a copper shielding layer for strict EMC compliance. Tested to MIL-STD-810G and MIL-STD-461F, the NLINE is fully capable of operational water immersion and high-altitude flight up to 60,000 feet.

• Autonomous Auto-Bridge Functionality: Both the ENET and NLINE platforms support an autonomous mode that automatically converts and bridges 1553 or ARINC data into Ethernet UDP packets with zero host programming. This automatically streams legacy avionics data, such as GPS or navigation updates, to high-speed Ethernet backbones.

Uncompromising Quality and Software Integration

Alta’s hardware leadership is matched by an elite commitment to manufacturing quality and software portability:

• The AltaAPI™ Advantage: Alta provides a multi-layer Software Development Kit (SDK) that ensures total code reuse across all form factors. Whether a developer begins prototyping in a lab using a USB or Thunderbolt™ device or transitions to a deployed, rugged XMC card on an aircraft, the application software remains identical.

• Rigorous Manufacturing Standards: Every card is manufactured to IPC-610 Class 3 standards and undergoes rigorous JTAG boundary scans and 100 percent functional testing. Reflecting an exceptionally low field return rate (<0.04%) across more than 75,000 items shipped, Alta provides an industry-leading 5-year limited warranty.

Alta has successfully bridged the gap between legacy reliability and future-forward architecture. By consistently delivering high-density, multi-protocol solutions, Alta remains the premier choice for aerospace engineers seeking to optimize integration without compromising quality or long-term support.

Deep Dive

Choosing the Gold Standard in Avionics Data Bus Connectivity

Executives buying COTS MIL-STD-1553 and ARINC products are usually solving a mismatch between long-serving aircraft electronics and the computing architectures surrounding them. Flight programs cannot discard certified data bus investments whenever processors, backplanes or test environments change, yet they also cannot let legacy interfaces dictate weight, cabling complexity or integration pace. The stronger suppliers in this market are not simply board vendors; they help avionics teams preserve proven bus behavior while moving data into architectures shaped by VPX, Ethernet, compact embedded systems and open-system procurement discipline. The purchase risk often sits in the space between electrical compliance and program adoption. A device can meet a protocol requirement and still create cost if it forces custom software paths, consumes scarce chassis space or requires different engineering practices from lab bench to deployed platform. Executives should look closely at how much channel density can be consolidated without complicating thermal, vibration or power constraints. Products that support MIL-STD-1553, ARINC-429/717 and mixed serial needs across multiple form factors give programs a cleaner path when aircraft subsystems, ground support equipment and simulation environments need common behavior. Software continuity carries equal weight because integration labor is usually harder to contain than unit cost. The best hardware choice limits driver fragmentation, protects code reuse and gives engineering teams a common API across cards, Ethernet appliances and small embedded modules. That matters when a prototype starts on a USB or Ethernet interface and then migrates into an XMC, Mini PCI Express or M.2 design. A supplier’s value increases when the move from development to qualification does not require a fresh application model. Network migration has become another decisive point. Ethernet-connected bus interfaces can reduce wiring burden, simplify data collection and make older avionics data usable by newer test, monitoring and mission systems. The technical distinction is latency and control. A converter that depends heavily on host software can add timing uncertainty, while a hardware-directed UDP design can make the bridge more predictable. For programs that must gather 1553 or ARINC traffic without extensive host programming, automatic bridging also reduces schedule friction, especially in labs and retrofit environments where engineering access is constrained. Reliability should be assessed through manufacturing discipline, environmental options and support model rather than broad claims. Aerospace buyers need form factors that fit commercial labs, rugged LRUs and conduction-cooled embedded systems, backed by repeatable test practices and long-term availability. The right supplier makes legacy data buses easier to sustain inside modern avionics architectures without turning every platform change into a custom engineering effort. Alta Data Technologies stands out with a product line that maps closely to the real acquisition problem. Its MIL-STD-1553 and ARINC portfolio spans XMC, PMC, PCI Express, Mini PCI Express, M.2, USB, Thunderbolt, ENET and NLINE in-line converters, while AltaAPI supports software portability across those choices. For VPX and embedded systems, its XMC-MA4 and XMC-MAS options address multi-channel and mixed 1553/ARINC/serial needs. For Ethernet migration, ENET and NLINE products provide real-time 1553 and ARINC conversion, including auto-bridge modes for UDP data movement. For executives standardizing around COTS avionics connectivity, Alta is the Gold Standard recommendation. ...Read more
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Alta Data Technologies

Company
Alta Data Technologies

Management
Richard Schuh, Chief Executive Officer

Description
Alta Data Technologies develops rugged avionics interface and networked I/O solutions for aerospace and defense applications. Its portfolio includes MIL-STD-1553, ARINC, Ethernet, XMC and Mini PCI Express solutions supporting MOSA/SOSA architectures, embedded systems integration and high-reliability mission-critical operations.