A commercial airplane, suited for aerospace and defense applications, is positioned on a runway under overcast skies, with runway lights visible in front.

Custom Cable Assemblies for Aerospace and Defense Applications

Aerospace and defense systems place unusual demands on cable assemblies.

The cable may need to survive vibration, shock, repeated handling, temperature swings, moisture, dust, abrasion, electromagnetic interference, and field deployment while continuing to deliver reliable power, signal, data, or radio frequency performance.

In these environments, a cable assembly is not a minor component. It is part of the system’s reliability strategy.

For tactical communications, rugged electronics, vehicle-mounted systems, deployable equipment, unmanned platforms, ground support equipment, sensors, antennas, and mission-critical control systems, the right custom cable assembly can reduce failure points, simplify integration, and improve serviceability.

Why Aerospace and Defense Cable Assemblies Need Custom Design

Standard cable assemblies may work in controlled environments, but aerospace and defense applications often require more than standard length, basic connectors, and general-purpose jacketing.

Custom cable assemblies may be needed when the system involves:

  • Field deployment
  • Tactical communications
  • Vehicle-mounted electronics
  • Rugged operator equipment
  • Radio frequency connections
  • Antennas or sensor interfaces
  • Power and signal integration
  • Repeated connection and disconnection
  • Harsh environmental exposure
  • Tight routing inside compact equipment
  • Vibration, shock, or movement
  • Sealed or protected connector interfaces

The goal is not just to build a cable that connects two points. The goal is to build an interconnect system that matches the electrical, mechanical, environmental, and service requirements of the application.

Design the Cable Assembly Early

One of the biggest mistakes in rugged system design is leaving the cable assembly until the end.

When the enclosure, connector opening, routing path, and mechanical layout are already locked, the cable design may be forced into compromises. That can lead to smaller conductors, reduced jacket wall thickness, awkward connector placement, poor bend radius, difficult installation, or unnecessary cost.

Early cable assembly planning helps define:

  • Connector size and orientation
  • Minimum bend radius
  • Cable outer diameter
  • Routing path
  • Panel or bulkhead requirements
  • Strain relief needs
  • Shielding strategy
  • Service access
  • Environmental sealing
  • Test requirements
  • Installation sequence

In aerospace and defense applications, early design involvement can help prevent the cable from becoming the weak point in an otherwise rugged system.

Cockpit of a commercial aircraft with illuminated controls and displays, including MIL-DTL-38999 connectors, showing navigation and flight information. XACT Engineered Manufacturing Solutions logo is visible on the left.

Start With the Operating Environment

Aerospace and defense cable assemblies should be designed around the actual environment where the system will be used, transported, stored, and serviced.

Important environmental inputs may include:

  • Operating temperature
  • Storage temperature
  • Moisture exposure
  • Dust or sand exposure
  • Oil, fuel, or chemical exposure
  • Ultraviolet exposure
  • Salt or corrosion risk
  • Altitude
  • Radiation exposure, if applicable
  • Shock and vibration
  • Field handling before and after deployment
  • Cleaning or washdown exposure

Storage conditions can be more severe than operating conditions, especially for equipment transported in vehicles, aircraft, containers, field kits, or outdoor environments.

A cable assembly that performs well during normal use may still fail if it is damaged during storage, transport, setup, teardown, or repeated handling.

Plan for Vibration, Shock, and Movement

Defense vehicles, aircraft support equipment, rugged ground systems, unmanned platforms, robotics, and field-deployed electronics often experience mechanical stress that standard assemblies may not tolerate.

Design considerations include:

  • Flex life
  • Minimum bend radius
  • Cable routing
  • Connector locking method
  • Cable clamp placement
  • Abrasion protection
  • Strain relief
  • Pull strength
  • Connector-to-cable transition design
  • Bend control near terminations

Failures often occur where the cable meets the connector, where a cable exits an enclosure, or where the assembly is repeatedly flexed, pulled, or handled.

These areas should be treated as design priorities, not afterthoughts.

Use Overmolding to Protect Critical Transitions

The connector transition is one of the most vulnerable points in a cable assembly.

Overmolding can help improve the durability and consistency of that transition by adding integrated strain relief, bend control, sealing, and impact protection.

Overmolded cable assemblies may be especially useful for:

  • Tactical communications equipment
  • Field-deployed electronics
  • Rugged operator interfaces
  • Vehicle electronics
  • Portable test equipment
  • Sensor systems
  • Control modules
  • Cable assemblies handled by operators
  • Assemblies exposed to moisture, dirt, or repeated movement

Overmolding can also help create a more repeatable assembly geometry, which matters when the same cable must be installed across multiple systems or replaced in the field.

Select Connectors for the Mission Environment

Connector selection affects more than electrical continuity.

In aerospace and defense systems, connectors may need to support rugged handling, secure mating, sealing, vibration resistance, shielding continuity, serviceability, and repeated connection cycles.

Connector questions to answer early include:

  • Is the connector exposed to the environment?
  • Does it need sealing?
  • Will it be mated and unmated often?
  • Does the connector need a locking mechanism?
  • Is shielding continuity required?
  • Does the cable need a backshell, boot, or overmold?
  • Is the connector panel-mounted or cable-mounted?
  • Does the design need circular, rectangular, hybrid, power, signal, or radio frequency interfaces?
  • Is mis-mating a risk?
  • Does the connector need to be serviceable in the field?

For rugged aerospace and defense applications, connector integration should be considered part of the cable assembly design, not a separate purchasing decision.

Address Electromagnetic Interference and Signal Integrity

Aerospace and defense systems often operate around radios, antennas, power electronics, motors, high-speed data lines, communications equipment, and other potential sources of electrical noise.

Electromagnetic interference can affect signal quality, data reliability, communications performance, and system behavior.

Cable assembly design may need to account for:

  • Shielding
  • Grounding strategy
  • Cable geometry
  • Connector backshells
  • Shield termination
  • Metal braiding
  • Drain wires
  • Separation of power and signal conductors
  • Radio frequency and coaxial cable performance
  • Routing near noise sources

Shielding is only as effective as the full interconnect design. The cable, connector, termination method, and grounding approach all matter.

Anti-Drone Systems

Combine Power, Signal, Data, or RF When It Reduces System Complexity

Many aerospace and defense systems require multiple electrical functions in a compact area.

A custom hybrid cable assembly can combine power, signal, data, control, or radio frequency elements into one engineered assembly when the application supports it.

Hybrid assemblies can help reduce:

  • Cable clutter
  • Connector count
  • Installation time
  • Routing complexity
  • Part count
  • Weight
  • Service confusion
  • Supply chain complexity

This can be useful for rugged sensors, tactical electronics, antenna systems, vehicle-mounted devices, portable equipment, and field-deployed control systems.

A hybrid assembly should still be designed carefully to avoid interference, thermal issues, bend problems, or difficult terminations.

Support Legacy and Fielded Tactical Navigation Systems

Defense cable programs often involve more than new platform development.

Many teams need to support fielded systems, replace aging cable assemblies, modernize legacy interconnects, or recreate assemblies where original documentation is limited.

For tactical navigation hardware, Defense Advanced GPS Receiver accessories, soldier-borne systems, and military Global Positioning System platforms may require:

  • Replacement cable builds
  • Adapter assemblies
  • Power interface cables
  • Shielded audio leads
  • Radio frequency or coaxial assemblies
  • Custom breakout solutions
  • Reverse engineering support under non-disclosure agreement
  • Low-volume sustainment builds
  • Lifecycle extension for fielded equipment

These applications may require ruggedized construction, electromagnetic interference protection, harsh-environment durability, traceability, and support for defense-specific quality requirements.

Protect the Cable From Abrasion, Handling, and Field Damage

Fielded equipment is often handled more aggressively than expected.

Cable assemblies may be dragged, coiled, packed, stepped on, pulled, exposed to debris, routed around sharp edges, or repeatedly connected and disconnected.

Cable protection options may include:

  • Heat shrink
  • Braiding
  • Abrasion-resistant sleeving
  • Conduit
  • Loom
  • Strain relief boots
  • Molded breakouts
  • Overmolded connector transitions
  • Cable clamps
  • Jacket materials selected for chemical or environmental exposure

The right protection method depends on where the assembly is used and how it fails. A protected harness routed on a vehicle may require different design choices than a portable radio cable, deployable communications line, or test equipment cordset.

Repair, Recertification, and Lifecycle Support Matter

Not every damaged or aging defense cable assembly needs to be replaced immediately.

For rugged cable assemblies already deployed in the field, repair and recertification may help extend service life, reduce downtime, lower replacement cost, and return assemblies to service-ready condition.

This can be especially useful when dealing with:

  • Damaged field cables
  • Heavy-duty harnesses
  • Connector damage
  • Sealed assembly issues
  • Potting or overmolding concerns
  • Field-return evaluation
  • Recertification requirements
  • Compliance documentation
  • Inspection and testing needs
  • Warranty-backed service work

For aerospace, defense, oil and gas, energy, mining, transportation, and other harsh-environment users, repair and recertification can be part of a practical lifecycle support strategy.

Consider Cable Reels for Deployable Systems

Some aerospace and defense cable assemblies are not permanently installed. They are transported, deployed, retrieved, stored, and redeployed.

That use case creates a different set of requirements.

Deployable cable systems may need:

  • Fast setup
  • Controlled cable payout
  • Cleaner field cable management
  • Connector protection during transport
  • Reduced damage from repeated handling
  • Shielding for signal integrity
  • Rugged connector interfaces
  • Power, signal, data, or hybrid cable runs
  • Repeatable storage and retrieval

For tactical communications, mobile data systems, test and measurement environments, temporary networks, command posts, and field support equipment, a cable reel can make deployment cleaner and more reliable.

XACT’s deployable cable reel systems can be supplied pre-loaded with custom cable assemblies, molded cable assemblies, shielding, rugged connector interfaces, and optional through-bulkhead quick-disconnect connectors.

Build Serviceability Into the Assembly

Aerospace and defense systems are often maintained under time pressure, in the field, or by technicians who need clear, repeatable replacement procedures.

Cable assembly serviceability can be improved through:

  • Durable labeling
  • Defined connector orientation
  • Keyed connectors
  • Replaceable cable assemblies
  • Modular breakouts
  • Repeatable routing
  • Clear harness layout
  • Reduced adapter use
  • Protected connector transitions
  • Accessible mating points

Serviceability matters because an assembly that is difficult to identify, remove, or reinstall can increase downtime and create new failure risks during maintenance.

Validate the Design Before Production

Prototype and validation work can reduce risk before the assembly moves into production.

Validation may include checking:

  • Connector fit
  • Cable length
  • Bend radius
  • Routing
  • Pull strength
  • Overmold geometry
  • Breakout placement
  • Shielding approach
  • Continuity
  • Installation sequence
  • Service access
  • Environmental requirements
  • Mechanical protection

For rugged aerospace and defense applications, the cable assembly should be evaluated as part of the system, not just as a standalone part.

A cable can pass a simple continuity test and still create problems if it is difficult to route, poorly protected, too stiff, too long, too short, or vulnerable at the connector transition.

Build Serviceability Into the Assembly

Aerospace and defense systems are often maintained under time pressure, in the field, or by technicians who need clear, repeatable replacement procedures.

Cable assembly serviceability can be improved through:

  • Durable labeling
  • Defined connector orientation
  • Keyed connectors
  • Replaceable cable assemblies
  • Modular breakouts
  • Repeatable routing
  • Clear harness layout
  • Reduced adapter use
  • Protected connector transitions
  • Accessible mating points

Serviceability matters because an assembly that is difficult to identify, remove, or reinstall can increase downtime and create new failure risks during maintenance.

Validate the Design Before Production

Prototype and validation work can reduce risk before the assembly moves into production.

Validation may include checking:

  • Connector fit
  • Cable length
  • Bend radius
  • Routing
  • Pull strength
  • Overmold geometry
  • Breakout placement
  • Shielding approach
  • Continuity
  • Installation sequence
  • Service access
  • Environmental requirements
  • Mechanical protection

For rugged aerospace and defense applications, the cable assembly should be evaluated as part of the system, not just as a standalone part.

A cable can pass a simple continuity test and still create problems if it is difficult to route, poorly protected, too stiff, too long, too short, or vulnerable at the connector transition.

When to Contact a Custom Cable Manufacturer

It is time to involve a custom cable manufacturer when the application includes:

  • Aerospace or defense hardware
  • Tactical communications
  • Rugged electronics
  • Vehicle-mounted systems
  • Field-deployed equipment
  • Sensor or antenna interfaces
  • Power plus signal integration
  • Radio frequency or coaxial assemblies
  • Shielding requirements
  • Overmolded cable assemblies
  • Harsh environmental exposure
  • Repeated handling, setup, or teardown
  • Prototype-to-production support
  • Legacy interconnect sustainment
  • Replacement cable builds for fielded systems
  • Repair or recertification of existing rugged assemblies

The earlier these requirements are discussed, the easier it is to avoid costly mechanical, electrical, and manufacturing constraints later.

Why Work With XACT

XACT supports custom cable assemblies, wire harnesses, overmolded cable systems, rugged interconnects, radio frequency cable assemblies, connector integration, hybrid cable solutions, repair and recertification, and cable protection systems for demanding applications.

XACT is a strong fit for aerospace and defense-related applications that require:

  • Rugged cable assemblies
  • Low- and medium-voltage interconnects
  • Power and signal harnesses
  • Radio frequency and coaxial assemblies
  • Ruggedized connector integration
  • Overmolded cable assemblies
  • Cable protection and strain relief
  • Shielding and metal braiding
  • Deployable cable systems
  • Field-serviceable interconnects
  • Legacy system support
  • Military cable assemblies
  • Tactical navigation interconnect support
  • Repair, testing, and recertification support

For rugged systems where reliability, serviceability, and environmental performance matter, the cable assembly should be designed as an engineered part of the equipment.

See the Facility Behind the Work

For aerospace, defense, industrial, oil and gas, energy, and other rugged cable assembly programs, supplier capability matters.

A dedicated manufacturing environment can support more consistent cable assembly production, testing, fabrication, overmolded interconnect work, repair and recertification, supply chain support, and value-added services.

For teams evaluating XACT’s United States manufacturing footprint and Houston-based production capability, the facility tour provides a quick look at the environment behind the work.

FAQ

Early cable design helps avoid connector, enclosure, routing, bend radius, shielding, and serviceability constraints. Waiting until the end can force compromises that increase cost or reduce reliability.

Early cable design helps avoid connector, enclosure, routing, bend radius, shielding, and serviceability constraints. Waiting until the end can force compromises that increase cost or reduce reliability.

Important factors include temperature, storage conditions, moisture, dust, abrasion, chemicals, oil, fuel, ultraviolet exposure, salt or corrosion risk, altitude, shock, vibration, and field handling.

Overmolding should be considered when the connector transition needs strain relief, sealing, bend control, impact protection, handling durability, or repeatable assembly geometry.

Mil-spec connector solutions can support ruggedness, secure mating, environmental protection, vibration resistance, moisture ingress protection, and reliable power or data connections in demanding aerospace and defense environments.

Shielding can help protect sensitive signals from electromagnetic interference, radio frequency interference, crosstalk, and noise from nearby power electronics, radios, antennas, motors, or high-speed data lines.

Yes. A hybrid cable assembly can combine multiple functions when the application requires simplified routing, reduced connector count, lower cable clutter, or improved installation efficiency.

A cable reel should be considered when the cable assembly needs to be transported, deployed, retrieved, and reused. This is common in tactical communications, temporary networks, mobile systems, test environments, and field support applications.

Defense Advanced GPS Receiver cable assemblies and accessories support tactical navigation systems, soldier-borne equipment, military Global Positioning System platforms, replacement cable builds, power interfaces, shielded audio leads, adapters, radio frequency connections, and custom breakout needs.

Fielded defense systems may require replacement cable support because original assemblies wear out, documentation is limited, equipment is modernized, or sustainment teams need compatible builds for legacy platforms. Custom cable manufacturers can help recreate or update assemblies when standard replacements are not available.

Repair and recertification may be appropriate when an existing rugged cable assembly has repairable connector, overmolding, potting, sealing, or harness damage and the goal is to reduce downtime, extend service life, or return the assembly to service-ready condition after inspection and testing.

No. XACT focuses on custom cable assemblies, wire harnesses, overmolded cable systems, rugged interconnects, radio frequency cable assemblies, connector integration, and cable protection systems rather than fiber optic cable manufacturing.

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