For almost twenty years, Collins has been a major source of civil-certified, high-integrity, safety-critical processors for military aircraft. The display has undergone over 6,000 hours of flight testing and is designed for use in rotary-wing, fighter, bomber, and trainer aircraft.
FREMONT, CA: Collins Aerospace, an RTX (NYSE: RTX) company, has earned the first-ever FAA Technical Standard Order (TSO) certification for a fully enabled multicore processor. The Collins Multifunction Display, powered by Mosarc™, improves aircraft flight deck speed, capacity, and flexibility, providing 75 percent more capabilities than ordinary single-core processors. With this authorization, the Multifunction Display becomes the world's first multicore processor authorized for civil and military aircraft, enabling simultaneous operation of all processing cores across all Design Assurance Level (DAL) criteria. This certification lays the path for future hardware to utilize the processor to provide multicore computation.
"On a military mission, every second counts and access to information is critical," said Dave Schreck, vice president and general manager of Military Avionics and Helicopters at Collins Aerospace. "Collins' display is the only multicore processor on the market that is certified by the FAA and is being used by the U.S. Army. This translates to being much more efficient in integrating new capabilities while also being able to safely run more applications in parallel than ever before."
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This improved performance stems from the system's ability to process data 12 times faster than a single-core processor while using 40 percent less electricity. It connects several operating systems, enabling quick third-party integration and reducing vendor lock. Finally, this provides platforms the flexibility to integrate developing mission-system capabilities in weeks rather than recertifying flight-critical applications every time, which can take months or longer.
For almost twenty years, Collins has been a major source of civil-certified, high-integrity, safety-critical processors for military aircraft. The display has undergone over 6,000 hours of flight testing and is designed for use in rotary-wing, fighter, bomber, and trainer aircraft.

