A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. (April 2015) |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Hardware & software |
Founded | 1986 |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Tom O’Hanlan, Founder, CEO |
Products | Computing/HMI, serial boards, I/O boards |
Not Reported | |
Website | www |
Sealevel Systems, Inc. is a privately held manufacturer headquartered in Liberty, South Carolina,[1] which develops computer circuit I/O boards.
Sealevel Systems was founded by Tom O’Hanlan and his wife Susan, in 1986.[2]
In 1991 the company released a dual port serial card that allowed users to set its I/O addresses to any two COM ports.[3] In 1994, Sealevel developed the RS-485 auto-enabled circuit. The circuit eliminated the need to control the RS-485 transceiver-enable signal via software and removed the risk of communications error due to bus communications.[2][4]
In 1997, O’Hanlan was granted a patent for a communication device that transmitted asynchronous formatted data synchronously.[5] The company produced the communications card used for positioning the Space Shuttle's robotic arm in 2002.[6] Tom O’Hanlan and technical author Jon Titus co-authored a book, The Digital I/O Handbook, in 2004.[7]
In 2005, Sealevel Systems released the industry's first RoHS-compliant serial I/O board.[8] In 2008, Sealevel won a defense contract for a USB/serial port cable with a heavily encased circuit board.[9] The cable allows soldiers in the field to link laptops to AN/PRC-117F Multiband Manpack Radio (MBMMR) tactical radios, manufactured by any company, and transmit data, including GPS maps, images, coordinates and IM-type communications via radio signal instead of by satellite. It took seven years for the company to perfect the technology.[10] In 2013 the company was awarded a sole-source contract for Naval Air Systems Command for this cable.[11]
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