IN Brief:
- Enforce Tac 2026 concentrates European demand around security, defence, and communications hardware.
- Mobile Mark’s portfolio spans ruggedised mobile, embedded, infrastructure, and wearable antennas.
- Astute is pushing faster design-ins, customisation, and supply assurance for defence programmes.
Astute Group is using Enforce Tac 2026 in Nuremberg (23–25 February) to put Mobile Mark’s defence-focused antenna portfolio in front of European primes, system integrators, and government buyers looking for predictable RF performance under harsh mechanical and environmental constraints.
The timing is not accidental. Enforce Tac has tightened its focus on operationally relevant technologies, with communications sitting alongside mobility, unmanned systems, and optics in the show’s core scope. The event’s restricted-access model continues to pull in procurement and operational stakeholders who are typically harder to reach through general electronics exhibitions, and that makes it a practical venue for components and subsystems that live deep inside fielded platforms.
Mobile Mark’s defence offering centres on rugged antennas for vehicles, temporary infrastructure, embedded platforms, and body-worn equipment, with a mix of passive, active, and amplified options aimed at improving link reliability in complex RF environments. The company is positioning capability around both established and specialist military bands, including 1350 MHz and 4.4 GHz, mapping to use cases such as tactical mesh networks, mobile command posts, communications intelligence, UAV systems, and rapidly deployable networks.
Damian Semple, Franchise Marketing Manager at Astute Group, said, “Enforce Tac is a key European event for defence and security communications, and it provides an ideal platform to demonstrate the strength of UK antenna engineering. Mobile Mark’s ability to support both standard and specialist military frequencies, combined with rugged design and flexible COTS-based customisation, makes them highly relevant to modern defence programmes. We’re proud to be taking this UK manufacturing capability to a major European audience.”
Beyond frequency coverage, the engineering detail is where Mobile Mark is aiming to differentiate: mechanical robustness, repeatable RF performance across production, and the ability to adapt COTS designs quickly when programmes demand packaging changes, mounting constraints, or integration into composite enclosures. For defence electronics teams, antennas are rarely “fit and forget” parts; they are system components whose placement, cable routing, ground reference, radome materials, and vibration environment can decide whether a radio link survives real use.
Mobile Mark’s manufacturing footprint spans the UK and the US, backed by in-house design, test, and rapid customisation capability. The company also cites compliance targets aligned with military environmental expectations, including MIL-STD-810G, and is pitching antenna options engineered for demanding vibration, shock, ingress, and temperature profiles.
Astute, as an authorised European distribution partner, is framing its role around design-in support and supply continuity — a familiar message, but one that still matters when programmes transition from prototype builds to sustained production and spares. The practical outcome is a shorter path from RF requirements to buildable, supportable antenna selections, with fewer late-stage surprises around lead times, qualification evidence, and configuration control.



