Coverage assumes flat terrain with clear atmospheric conditions. Each tethered node operates at 400 ft AGL and doubles as a Silvus mesh relay node. Hills, vegetation, and urban areas may require tighter spacing in select segments. Aggressive stepped-zoom mode narrows FOV and increases scan revisit time.
| Parameter | L3Harris RF-7850A-ER | Silvus SL5200 | Impact |
| Throughput | 4 Mbps | 100 Mbps | 25× — enables full HD video to remote centers |
| Weight | 160 g | 52 g | 3× lighter — saves 108 g payload |
| Encryption | AES-256 · Citadel | AES-256 · FIPS 140-3 | Both meet requirements |
| Anti-jam / EW | Vapor™ / Vanguard™ | Spectrum Dominance suite | Both provide resilience |
| Blue UAS listed | N/A (military channels) | Yes — DIU framework | Enables LE / CBP procurement |
| Mesh networking | TNW waveform | MN-MIMO (hundreds of nodes) | Scales across 60+ border nodes |
| Freq. range | 225 MHz – 2.5 GHz | ISM / configurable | L3Harris broader mil spectrum |
| Range (A2G) | ~30 km (typical) | 85 km tested | Bridges inter-node gaps |
| Best for | DoD mil-spec networks | Border / LE / dual-use ISR |
The L3Harris RF-7850A-ER remains the right choice for integration into existing DoD Falcon III tactical radio networks. The Silvus SL5200 is recommended for border / law enforcement missions where high-bandwidth video to remote viewing centers is the primary requirement and Blue UAS compliance is needed.
5 kg margin available for companion compute (Jetson Orin Nano, ~0.5 kg), additional antennas, secondary sensor, or mission-specific payloads. No weight risk to the 24.95 kg MTOW ceiling.
| Sensor / zoom | Est. HFOV | Human detect | Human recognize | Vehicle detect |
| MWIR 1× (wide) | ~18° | ~3.2 km | ~0.8 km | ~13 km |
| MWIR 10× | ~1.8° | ~12 km | ~3.0 km | ~48 km |
| MWIR 45× (narrow) | ~0.4° | ~18+ km | ~4.5 km | ~72+ km |
| EO 1× (wide) | ~56° | ~0.5 km | ~0.15 km | ~2 km |
| EO 45× (narrow) | ~1.2° | ~22+ km | ~5.5 km | ~90+ km |
Estimates based on Johnson criteria (3px detect / 12px recognize) with assumed 15µm pixel pitch, ~25mm WFOV, and ~1125mm NFOV focal lengths. Cooled MWIR provides ~3–5× range improvement over uncooled LWIR (NETD ~20mK vs ~50mK). Requires Blitz datasheet for confirmed FOV values. Atmospheric conditions, humidity, and target contrast significantly affect real-world range.
| Sensor | Weight | IR type | IR resolution | Est. human detect | ~Systems for 600 mi | Key advantage | Est. volume unit cost |
| Logos MicroKestrel (WAMI) | ~2.3 kg | EO only | Multi-cam array | 3 km² / unit (180°) | ~160* | Tracks all movers; forensic DVR | $80K – $120K (est.) |
| Trillium HD59-MLVV | ~2 kg | MWIR cooled + LWIR | 640×512 + wide | ~8–12 km | ~65 – 100 | Cooled MWIR ID; 180× EO zoom | $70K – $130K (est.) |
| SPI M7D | 1.79 kg | MWIR cooled | 640×512 | ~20 km (claimed) | ~40 – 65 | Extreme range; 82× EO; LRF | $90K – $160K (est.) |
|
Blitz Spectrum 5500 ▸ SELECTED |
6.5 kg | MWIR cooled | 640×512 | ~12–18 km | ~45 – 75 | Same vendor family; 45× zoom; LRF + laser | $90K – $140K |
| Blitz Spectrum 3500 | 3.7 kg | LWIR uncooled | 640×512 | ~4–7 km | ~100 – 160 | 4 sensors; LRF; mid-weight | $40K – $70K (est.) |
| Blitz Spectrum 800 | 0.85 kg | LWIR uncooled | 640×512 | ~2–4 km | ~160 – 250 | 4 sensors with LRF; very light | $25K – $45K (est.) |
| Blitz Spectrum 500 (baseline) | 0.55 kg | LWIR uncooled | 1280×1024 | ~1.5–3 km | ~200 – 400 | Lightest; good pixel count | $15K – $30K (est.) |
All detection ranges assume 400 ft AGL, 20% overlap, and clear atmospheric conditions. Volume pricing estimates based on 60+ unit program buy with comparable market data — neither vendor publishes list prices. Cooled MWIR gimbals carry a significant cost premium due to cryogenic detector cores ($30K–$60K for the FPA alone). *MicroKestrel count assumes 360° config (2× units per drone). Blitz Technology (Turkey) typically prices 20–40% below equivalent Western OEMs. Formal vendor quotes required to validate all estimates.
The single biggest force multiplier in this sensor trade is the shift from uncooled LWIR (8–14 µm) to cooled MWIR (3–5 µm). Cryogenically cooling the focal plane array to ~77K dramatically reduces thermal noise on the detector itself, dropping the noise-equivalent temperature difference (NETD) from ~50 mK on a typical uncooled VOx microbolometer to ~20 mK or better on a cooled InSb or HOT MCT array. Lower NETD means the sensor can resolve smaller temperature differences at greater range — translating directly to a 3–5× improvement in detection range for the same aperture and pixel count.
For border surveillance, this range advantage is the difference between needing 200+ systems at 3 km spacing (uncooled LWIR) and ~62 systems at 16 km spacing (cooled MWIR) to cover 600 miles — a 69% reduction in deployed systems. Even though each cooled gimbal costs roughly 3–5× more per unit than an uncooled equivalent, the total program cost is substantially lower because the system count drops by more than the per-unit cost increases. Fewer nodes also means fewer tether ground stations, fewer DiaB enclosures, fewer maintenance crews, and a simpler logistics footprint.
Cooled MWIR also operates in the 3–5 µm atmospheric transmission window, which provides better performance in humid and coastal environments where LWIR can suffer from water vapor absorption. For desert border terrain with high daytime ambient temperatures, cooled MWIR maintains a sharper contrast between a human body (~37°C) and sun-heated ground (~55–65°C), whereas uncooled LWIR sensors can wash out when the background temperature approaches the target temperature.
The cost trade-off is the cryocooler — it adds weight (~0.3–0.5 kg), power draw (~5–15W), and a finite service life (typically 8,000–12,000+ hours for modern Stirling-cycle coolers before rebuild). However, in a tethered platform with unlimited power from the tether, the cooler's power draw is negligible, and the 8,000+ hour cooler life at continuous operation equates to roughly 1–1.5 years before maintenance — well within standard depot-level service intervals for a persistent surveillance program.
| Radio | Weight | Throughput | Range (A2G) | Encryption | Mesh networking | EW resilience | Blue UAS | Best for | Est. volume cost |
| L3Harris RF-7850A-ER | 160 g | 4 Mbps | ~30 km | AES-256 · Citadel | TNW waveform | Vapor™ / Vanguard™ | N/A (mil channels) | DoD Falcon III networks | $15K – $25K (est.) |
| Doodle Labs Mesh Rider Mini | 34 g | 80 Mbps | 330 km (field proven) | AES-256 · FIPS 140-3 | Mesh Rider waveform | Helix anti-jam suite | Yes (Helix) | Highest range; lightest | $3K – $8K (est.) |
|
Silvus SL5200 ▸ SELECTED |
52 g | 100 Mbps | 85 km (tested) | AES-256 · FIPS 140-3 | MN-MIMO (hundreds of nodes) | Spectrum Dominance 2.0 | Yes (DIU framework) | Max throughput; mesh scale | $6K – $10K |
All radios compared in OEM / embeddable form factors suitable for Group 1–2 UAV integration. Range figures are manufacturer-stated maximums under optimal line-of-sight conditions; real-world performance varies with terrain, antenna configuration, and bandwidth settings. Doodle Labs 330 km figure achieved with fixed-wing platform at altitude. Volume pricing estimates based on 60+ unit program buy — all vendors operate on quote-request basis. L3Harris pricing reflects military procurement channels.
The primary mission requirement driving radio selection is streaming full-resolution 1080p EO and thermal video simultaneously from 62 airborne nodes to remote viewing centers. A dual-stream H.265-encoded feed — 1080p visible at 8–15 Mbps plus thermal at 1–3 Mbps — requires a minimum of ~20 Mbps sustained throughput per node to maintain real-time video with C2 telemetry and MISB ST 0601 KLV metadata overhead. This immediately disqualifies the L3Harris RF-7850A-ER: at 4 Mbps maximum, it can carry compressed thermal or low-resolution video for situational awareness, but it cannot support the full-HD multi-stream feed that operators at a remote viewing center need for target identification and prosecution.
Both the Silvus SL5200 (100 Mbps) and Doodle Labs Mesh Rider Mini (80 Mbps) have sufficient throughput. The SL5200 is selected for three reasons. First, its MN-MIMO waveform can link hundreds of mesh nodes in a self-forming, self-healing network — critical for a 62-node linear border array where each tethered drone acts as both an ISR sensor and a communications relay, and ground patrol vehicles need to roam freely between sectors while maintaining connectivity. Silvus' MN-MIMO technology exploits multipath propagation rather than fighting it, which is particularly advantageous in desert terrain where ground reflections can degrade conventional OFDM links. Second, the SL5200 is natively interoperable with the full Silvus StreamCaster 4000-series family — meaning patrol vehicles equipped with SC4200EP handhelds or vehicle-mounted radios, and base stations running SC4400E units, all join the same mesh without gateways or protocol translation. This creates a unified operational network from the airborne sensor tier through the ground tactical tier to the remote viewing center.
Third, the SL5200's Spectrum Dominance 2.0 suite provides LPI/LPD (low probability of intercept/detection) and anti-jamming capabilities that are essential along a contested border where adversaries may employ electronic warfare to disrupt surveillance. This is a continuously updated, software-defined EW resilience package rather than a fixed waveform, allowing Silvus to push threat-response updates to fielded radios without hardware changes.
The Doodle Labs Mesh Rider Mini is the strongest alternative and deserves serious consideration. At 34 grams, it is the lightest option — 18 grams lighter than the SL5200 — and its field-proven 330 km range significantly exceeds the SL5200's 85 km tested range, which could be advantageous for extending the mesh backhaul between widely-spaced nodes. Its Helix variant is Blue UAS compliant and DIU-sponsored, with FIPS 140-3 encryption. The 80 Mbps throughput is sufficient for the dual-stream video mission, though it leaves less headroom than the SL5200's 100 Mbps for simultaneous multi-operator video pulls or future sensor additions. Doodle Labs' pricing is also typically lower, making it attractive for budget-constrained deployments. For programs that prioritize maximum range and minimum weight over peak throughput and ecosystem breadth, the Mesh Rider Mini is a strong choice.
The L3Harris RF-7850A-ER remains the right selection for one specific scenario: integration into an existing DoD tactical radio network where ground forces already carry AN/PRC-163 or AN/PRC-152A handhelds running Falcon III waveforms. In that context, the RF-7850A-ER's native interoperability with fielded military radios is the decisive factor, even at the throughput penalty. For a border surveillance program where CBP or law enforcement operators are the primary users and full-HD video relay to remote centers is the driving requirement, the Silvus SL5200 is the recommended selection.