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A MIL-DTL-38999 circular connector plated with a nickel–teflon composite. Left: plug (male) type connector; Right: receptacle (female) type connector) Electrical or fiber-optic connectors used by U.S. Department of Defense were originally developed in the 1930s for severe aeronautical and tactical service applications, and the Type "AN" series set the standard for modern military circular ...
MIL-DTL-5015 is a United States Military Standard which covers heavy-duty circular electrical connectors with soldered or crimped contacts. [1] They are used for both digital and analog signals, as well as power distribution, and are common in various fields, including defense, aerospace, and industrial machinery. [ 2 ]
Definition [2] MIL-HDBK: Defense Handbook: A document that provides standard procedural, technical, engineering, or design information about the materiel, processes, practices, and methods covered by the DSP. MIL-STD-967 covers the content and format for defense handbooks. MIL-SPEC: Defense Specification
They are widely used in military, aerospace, industrial machinery, and rail, where MIL-DTL-5015 and MIL-DTL-38999 are commonly specified. Fields such as sound engineering and radio communication also use circular connectors, such as XLR and BNC. AC power plugs are also commonly circular, for example, Schuko plugs and IEC 60309.
The US army has several standards for rolled homogeneous armour: Current use is based on military standard MIL-DTL-12560 [1] by several manufacturers. The typical Brinell Hardness range of MIL-A 12560 is 302-400 [2] The MIL-12560K standard actually specifies four classes of hardnesses. The softest class I rates as 260-310.
MIL-DTL-5015 / MIL-C-5015, a circular connector; MIL-DTL-26482 / MIL-C-26482, a circular bayonet connector; RJ21, used in aggregated telecommunications cabling; Micro ribbon, used to connect a personal computer to printers or SCSI equipment; ARINC 828, a repurposing of MIL-DTL-38999. UHF connector, a threaded RF coaxial connector
List of initialisms, acronyms ("words made from parts of other words, pronounceable"), and other abbreviations used by the government and the military of the United States. Note that this list is intended to be specific to the United States government and military—other nations will have their own acronyms.
Compatible to US TADIL–C to be operated in NATO UHF (225–400 MHz) RF band 5 Fast HF Automatic Link Broadcast: 1st Cancelled (see Link 11) 6 5506 (Draft) Missile Base to Control Centre Link Link 6 – (NADGE Link) SAM Automatic Data Link Point-to-point 1st Draft STANAG (US MBDL, ATDL–1, PADIL) 7 5507 (Draft) ATC / Defence Link Link 7 –