industry news
Subscribe Now

Teledyne e2v Releases Upscreened Arm® based LX2160 Processor for Hi-Rel Aerospace and Defense Applications

Teledyne e2v guarantees reliable operation of the military-qualified version of NXP’s LX2160 16-core Arm® Cortex® A72 based processor at -55°C to +125°C

Grenoble, the 16th of July 2024 – Teledyne e2v announces that the company has qualified and released an upscreened version of the LX2160 to operate between -55°C to +125°C. The military-qualified processor implements a 16-core Arm® Cortex® A72 design providing developers of AI-at-the-Edge computing systems, single board computers (SBCs) and other compute intensive systems embedded on aerospace and defense equipment unparallelled performance in the smallest form factor and optimized power envelope.

Compared to the previous generation processor LS1046, a quad-core processor in NXP’s 64-bit Arm® Layerscape portfolio which Teledyne e2v has also qualified, the power-efficient LX2160 offers designers of embedded systems a lift of 2.6 more Giga instructions per Watt. With 4x more cores and 6x more DMIPS (201k DMIPS @ 2.2 GHz) computing capability, the LX2160 delivers significant performance benefits for aerospace and defense applications, including 2 DDR4 interfaces, 100 GbE, multiple PCIe Gen3.0 and SATA Gen3.0, to enable faster switching and routing of data. The LX2160 also provides engineers with an easy migration pathway for previously developed software assets on Arm® based systems to more compute intensive designs or system upgrades.

The Teledyne e2v military-qualification of the LX2160 processor assures designers its functionality over a wide -55°C to +125°C operating temperature range. The device is housed in a compact 40mm x 40mm package, which reduces mounting area and minimizes installation space. In addition, Teledyne e2v is committed to supporting the LX2160 processor for 15+ years, avoiding common and costly obsolescence issues.

“The military qualification of NXP’s flagship LX2160 processor enables Teledyne e2v to deliver to our aerospace and defense customers the high-performance needed for their compute-intensive applications,” says Thomas Guillemain, Marketing and Business Development Manager of Digital Processing Solutions at Teledyne e2v. “We are already working to generate a space-qualified version of the LX2160 for launch next year.”

Samples of the military-qualified LX2160 processor are available today. For more information, please visit: https://semiconductors.teledyne-e2v.com/en/products/processors-and-processing-modules/lx2160/

About Teledyne e2v
Teledyne e2v’s innovations lead developments in healthcare, life sciences, Space, transportation, defense and security and industrial markets. Teledyne e2v’s unique approach involves listening to the market and application challenges of customers and partnering with them to provide innovative standard, semi-custom or fully custom solutions, bringing increased value to their systems.

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Jul 17, 2025
Why do the links in Outlook emails always open in the Microsoft Edge web browser, even if you have another browser set as your default?...

Libby's Lab

Libby's Lab - Scopes out Eaton EHBSA Aluminum Organic Polymer Capacitors

Sponsored by Mouser Electronics and Eaton

Join Libby and Demo in this episode of “Libby’s Lab” as they explore the Eaton EHBSA Aluminum Organic Polymer Capacitors, available at Mouser.com! These capacitors are ideal for high-reliability and long life in demanding applications. Keep your circuits charged and your ideas sparking!

Click here for more information

featured paper

Maximize Power Efficiency in Embedded Applications with Agilex™ 5 E-Series FPGAs and SoCs Memory Solutions

Sponsored by Altera

Learn how Altera Agilex™ 5 FPGAs and SoCs deliver up to 1.9× lower system power than Zynq UltraScale+ without sacrificing performance. This white paper dives into real benchmark data, memory interface efficiency, and architectural advantages that make Agilex 5 the smart choice for embedded, vision, and AI edge applications. Optimize for power, performance, and design simplicity.

Click to read more

featured chalk talk

Vector Funnel Methodology for Power Analysis from Emulation to RTL to Signoff
Sponsored by Synopsys
The shift left methodology can help lower power throughout the electronic design cycle. In this episode of Chalk Talk, William Ruby from Synopsys and Amelia Dalton explore the biggest energy efficiency design challenges facing engineers today, how Synopsys can help solve a variety of energy efficiency design challenges and how the shift left methodology can enable consistent power efficiency and power reduction.
Jul 29, 2024
258,908 views