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November 7, 2006

Quintron DICES III Communications System – A Necessity for the Success of the Sea Launch Rocket Mission

Santa Maria, CA (November 7, 2006)  - Quintron, the recognized leader in advanced interoperable voice systems  and physical access control/intrusion detection systems, announces that its  DICES III system was the communications system of choice for the Sea Launch  Zenit 3SL rocket launch on October 30, 2006 to deploy the XM 4 satellite nicknamed  "Blues." The XM satellites serve seven million subscribers in the  United States and Canada, beaming signals to special radios installed in their  cars and for portable units. The October 30th flight was the 23rd for Sea Launch  since 1999, all of which relied on the Quintron DICES III system for its communications.

Quintron supplied two systems, one  for the Assembly Command Ship (ACS) and another for the Launch Platform (LP).  "Both vessels needed a 'launch grade' control center communications  system," said David Wilhite, Vice President of Quintron's Telecom  Systems Division. "The Quintron DICES III system was selected following  an extensive evaluation by SEMCO (supplier of all shipboard communications)  of multiple options." A key discriminator in favor of Quintron was the  availability of the Subsystem Multiplexer (Sub-MUX) product line, which includes  operator communication panels certified for operation in extreme hazardous operation  areas for fueling of the rocket and satellite sections.

An additional advantage was the selection  of control room operator panels, including rack mount and desktop designs. The  American control room section was designed for rack mount and the Russian section  was more suited for desktop. Thus, a single system solution provided both of  the key launch partners with their preferred operating equipment design. Another  unique feature was the ability to support multiple system management and configuration  terminals (essentially PCs with DICES III management software) that allowed  a central control point in the communications room under normal operations and  a second control point in the launch control center under actual launch operations.

The two DICES III systems were delivered  to SEMCO in 1997 for installation in Europe (Norway for the ACS and Russia for  the LP). Quintron engineers assisted in the final start-up and testing in 1998,  just before the vessels were moved to Long Beach for the beginning of operations.  The ACS system is the larger, supporting 176 operator communication panels of  four different styles (109 hazardous certified). The LP system supports 84 communication  panels of three different styles (70 hazardous certified). Both systems have  been in continuous use since delivery with no major updates required and complete  mission support success.

For more information and to schedule  a demonstration of the Quintron mission critical communications or physical  access control/intrusion detection systems, please visit www.quintron.com <http://www.quintron.com>  or call 805-928-4343.

About Quintron

For over 36 years, Quintron has provided high technology and cost effective  solutions to government and industry in support of mission critical communications  and security requirements for command and control applications. No other company  offers the depth of expertise found at Quintron in fault tolerant, interoperable  communications, and security systems. In addition to providing advanced products  and systems, Quintron's professional technical service capability provides  a superior level of customer satisfaction. Quintron's engineering services  provide off-the-shelf solutions to requirements or custom engineering solutions  to solve the toughest of challenges facing customers. Find out more about Quintron  at www.quintron.com <http://www.quintron.com>  or  by calling 805.928.4343.

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