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Tag "DSEI"
FIST Contract Announcement

Members of the British Army's Irish Guard sport weapons featuring the Surveillance and Target Acquisition portion of the Future Integrated Soldier Technology program.

The UK government has signed a £150 million contract with Thales for a spinout of its Future Integrated Soldier Technology program, Quentin Davies, UK Defense Equipment and Support minister said on September 8.

The contract covers around 11,000 sets of weapons sights, observation equipment and target acquisition equipment, which will serve about 95 companies of dismounted soldiers.

Entry into service expected in late 2010, industry and defense officials said at an event marking the signing of the contract at the DSEi 2009 show in London.

Full delivery on the contract is expected by June 2014, said Thales, which is acting as prime contractor on the FIST program.

Known as Strand 1A of the FIST contract, the newly contracted tranche will be followed by 1B, covering C4I equipment. That contract will be signed “within a small number of months,” said Davies. An industry official added that the 1B contract, which would have a value similar to 1A, would be signed by year end.

The Strand 1A package includes thermal sights from UK firm Qioptiq, close quarter battle sights from UK firm Shield, lightweight day sights from Canadian firm Elcan, underslung grenade launcher sights from UK firm Istec, underslung grenade launcher fire control systems and Commanders’ Target Locating Systems from Vectronix, digital cameras from UK firm Olympus and infantry periscopes from Israel’s Uniscope.
While putting together a package of largely off the shelf products, officials said that integration work had been undertaken to ensure minimal total weight and power consumption.

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ITE with PRRSelex Communication has just released a radio headset that promises hearing protection, situational awareness (SA), and communication system compatibility.

Hearing protection on the battlefield has always been a compromise between situational awareness and effective sound attenuation. Bone conduction speakers and mics, frequency filtration, active noise reduction and occlusive enclosures have all been used with varying degrees of success.

The new system, called ITE (In The Ear), is made of three components; an in-the-ear stereo headset, a replacement Personal Role Radio (PRR) switch pack and the CTX triple input push-to-talk input. The earpieces are used with either the switch pack or the CTX module depending on which radio system you have at hand.

The headset looks like a pair of foam tipped, in-the-ear iPod headphones. The foam alone provides 29db of passive noise attenuation. But, inside each side is a set of microphones, facing fore and aft, that enables frequency-specific active noise reduction while passing safe sound levels of ambient noise to the wearer.

The combination of foam and electronics provide a cumulative noise reduction rating of up to 40db, depending on the frequency of the sound. The fore and aft facing earpiece mounted mics serve two purposes. First, they provide SA by passing through spatially accurate representations of surrounding noise so the wearer can tell where a sound came from. For this SA mode, the mics combine with digital signal processors (DSPs) encapsulated in either the replacement PRR switch pack or the CTX controller. Second, the mics use a form of bone conduction to relay the wearers voice into the attached radio without a boom mic.

Photo: Courtesy Selex

Photo: Courtesy Selex

The PRR switch pack is modular and can be swapped out in the field with the twist of a few screws and is compatible with single or dual radio PRRs. The low power system has a negligible effect on the PRRs 24 hour battery life. A selector switch lets the wearer disable the SA system so no ambient sound is retransmitted through the earphones

The second interface is the CTX. It allows the headset to be simultaneously connected to two separate radios and an intercom system. It also sports an auxiliary headset connector for use with a secondary head/handset and an internal backup battery to keep the SA system running when disconnected from the host radios.

Actual pricing depends on many factors but the ballpark is about 400 GBP for the ITE PRR switch pack upgrade kit and 650 GBPs for the ITE CTX triple interface kit. The system is available now from Selex Communication.

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Jeep J8 Light Patrol Vehicle

Chrysler has partnered with the Jankel Group to bring new tactical versions of the once iconic Jeep back to the battlefield. The Jeep J8, named because it’s the 8th version of the Wrangler, will soon be available only on the foreign and domestic military/government market.

“What the J8 is, really, is a tremendously capable and flexible platform for modifications,” Jack Robinson, Jeep Government & Military Sales General Manager says. “Our business model is to have Jankel, JGMS’s parent company, work with Jeep engineering to create a family of vehicles.”

The J8 is based on the commercially available Jeep Unlimited and has been extensively modified for military operations. The common, long-wheelbase, drivetrain is available in 12 configurations that include a three- or five-door light patrol vehicle variant, pickup truck variant, personnel carrier variant, armored variant, cargo variant and ambulance variant.

Chrysler began with the Jeep Unlimited gave it a VM Motori 2.8L, four-cylinder turbo diesel engine then reinforced the frame, added heavy-duty brakes, engine cooling and suspension systems, a upgraded axles and an enhanced air filtration system that is designed to keep the vehicle running for 5 hours in a desert sandstorm. Many of the upgrade parts came from the Dodge truck line.

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