Satcom Direct (Booth H226) has helped revolutionize the communications capabilities of the typical business jet cabin over the past 20 years, since it was founded by Jim Jensen in Satellite Beach, Florida. It comes to ABACE after one of its most active years ever, with the launch of SD Pro, roll-out of the SD Wi-Fi Hub, plus the acquisition of Comsat, AircraftLogs and TrueNorth Avionics.
Nathan Andrews, regional director for the Asia Pacific, who was appointed to the role last October after many years with the company, told AIN, âWe are hoping to take on additional resources in Hong Kong and Australia this yearâ to help grow the business in the region. âThe company has developed rapidly since 2013,â he added, putting part of that down to aircraft owners wanting to upgrade, now that new capabilities are available.
Although upgrades are proving popular, and Satcom Direct has a dedicated person in the region advising and assisting clients, Andrews said customers should plan âfrom the outsetâ to equip the aircraft at its entry into service. That way you have âa happier customerâ and also a less frustrated service provider, he said.
Either way, âWe can sit down with the customer and their preferred MRO to plan the installation and provide them with the cabin Wi-Fi block diagram, breaking it down into multiple Wi-Fi zones for example.
âThen, once we have a draft, we can hand it off to the engineering facility.â He said the time to do the work can âvary widely, but recently weâve seen a 12-month timeframe. The caveat is how soon the aircraft is going in for scheduled maintenance anyway,â as that would be the best time to do the work, âand how long it takes to get the avionics to them.â
Getting on new aircraft platforms such as with Gulfstream is helping given that ânow things are a lot more complex, with networks, equipment and so on. The OEMs are recognizing itâs better to do the airframes earlier,â said Andrews.
He noted the âgreat take-up rateâ of the Satcom Direct Router and Wi-Fi Hub âand now we have TrueNorth tooâ offering the Optelity family of satcom systems.
SD Pro has provided âan integrated flight operations platform bringing all the elements into one platformâconnectivity, maintenance, automatic flight log and data links. You can avoid the pilot having to tally everything up as the data is taken straight off the cockpit avionics to the server. So now you can open up the concept of connectivity much wider than the cabin, to operations, maintenance and so on.â And these donât impact the cabin (Live TV for example) as they donât take up much bandwidth.
One thing people insist on now is â24/7 connectivity,â said Andrews, who noted, âthe airlines are looking at that now, too.â He also predicted that data rates and bandwidth would continue to increase, driven by the increasing uptake of videoconferencing. âPeople use this a lot now, as you can really go beyond e-mailâ
âThere is a general perception that Asian customers are tech savvy and connectivity hungry,â said Andrews.
At ABACE this year Satcom Direct is focusing on its 20th anniversary âand what the evolution has been,â including explaining to customers and potential customers what the acquisition of TrueNorth Avionics (completed in December) is bringing to the business. With Satcom Directâs services and equipment widely used in the U.S. and elsewhere, it is making Asia Pacific growth a priority.
For example, Andrews told AIN in late March that the first Asia Pacific customer had signed up for the AircraftLogs web-based aircraft/crew scheduling service.
The company believes it has the market pretty much covered as a reseller, with ViaSat, Inmarsat, Iridium, etc. âAnd we have just brought on Panasonic as well,â said Andrews. âIt gives customers other options and continues our [service/platform] agnostic position, which also allows us to deliver the best solution for the customer depending on their operational requirements.â
He suggested that Chinaâs next step may be the addition of an air-ground system. âIf the Chinese government wanted to get this done, they wouldâŚbut one problem Asia may have [overall] is different regulatory regimes, unlike the U.S. and Europe. You can overfly half a dozen countries in a very short space of timeâso that might be the biggest stumbling block. But China could do itâassuming there will be a staggering number of airframes eventually.â
SDâs Timeline Highlights
1997 Founded by Jim Jensen
2002 Became Inmarsat Reseller
2004 Designated Iridium Service Provider
2008 ViaSat Reseller for Yonder
Acquired Honeywell OneLink
2009 Became SwiftBroadband Reseller
Launched AeroV VoIP
OneView (DirecTV)
SD Flight Tracker
2012 Started International Expansion
Opened Offices in Farnborough, Dubai, Montreal and SĂŁo Paulo
2013 Opened Hong Kong Office
SDR Certificated
Distribution Partner for Inmarsat JetConneX
2014 Opened Offices in Ottawa, Geneva and Moscow
GlobalONE IP, aeroXR
SmartSky SP
SDR Selected for Gulfstream new aircraft forward fit
2015 Opened Denver Office
New World HQ Opened in Melbourne, Florida
Global VT launch
2016 Launched live TV streaming on SD Live at NBAA