All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
The ordered RUAG Space receivers will be launched for different Low Earth and Geostationary Earth Orbit missions within the next few months and years.
More than 80 RUAG Space receivers of the latest generation (LEORIX, GEORIX, and PODRIX) have been ordered by customers in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and the USA.
South Korea plans a follow-on satellite mission named CAS500-2 that will carry a LEORIX receiver from RUAG Space.
RUAG Space will deliver the three satellite containers in the first quarter of 2022.
RUAG Space delivered a first spacecraft container to Ball Aerospace in 2019.
RUAG Space and OHB signed a contract for the Sunshield Solar Array Subsystem worth more than 20 million Swiss Francs.
The RUAG Space navigation receiver for WSF-M will be built in Vienna, Austria and is scheduled for delivery to Ball Aerospace in September 2021.
RUAG Space considers the WSF-M contract a breakthrough order for its U.S. electronics initiative and expects it to open a pipeline for similar orders in 2021.
RUAG Space began focusing on the U.S. electronics market in 2019 to reach a target segment previously hard to reach from Europe.
TTTech Aerospace and RUAG Space will deliver the first equipment to Maxar in mid-2021.
RUAG Space operates 12 sites in 6 different countries.
RUAG Space will create an enhanced Key Accounts and Sales organization with a worldwide focus to increase customer proximity and growth.
RUAG Space will reduce up to 100 of today’s approximately 1,300 positions by the end of 2021.
RUAG Space plans to implement up to 100 position reductions across its sites in Austria, Sweden, and Switzerland as part of the reorganization until the end of 2021.
RUAG Space is repositioning itself along a flatter organization that will take effect as of Q3/2021.
The dedicated RUAG Space AB dispenser used on Flight ST29 is designed to accommodate up to 36 spacecraft per launch.
Peter Guggenbach built up RUAG Space's U.S. business with its own production sites.
RUAG Space operated 12 sites in six countries while Peter Guggenbach headed the division.
RUAG Space developed the Lynx Single Board Computer in Gothenburg, Sweden with support from a contract under the European Space Agency’s ARTES program.
RUAG Space offers a direct technical interface to U.S. clients for its entire electronics portfolio from its office in Denver, Colorado.