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Keyword: miltech

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  • Army recalls 44,000 combat helmets

    05/15/2010 8:44:07 PM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 39 replies · 1,256+ views
    Associated Press via The State ^ | 4/15/2010 | Associated Press via The State
    The Army says it is recalling 44,000 advanced combat helmets that have been issued to soldiers worldwide because they do not meet military specifications. The Army said in a statement Friday that the risk to soldiers wearing the helmets is still being determined. New helmets are being issued to anyone who has a defective one. The recall amounts to 4 percent of all advanced combat helmets issued by the Army. The helmets are made by ArmorSource LLC. The company, based in Hebron, Ohio, is a leading maker of combat headgear for the military and police. The army said tests showed...
  • USMC Looks Ahead to New Generation of Expeditionary Fighting Vehicles

    05/07/2010 4:58:45 AM PDT · by decimon · 24 replies · 597+ views
    Daily Tech ^ | May 7, 2010 | Michael Barkoviak
    Marines have high hopes for new EFVs, even if they've been met with criticismThe United States Marine Corps hopes to usher in a new era of multi-million dollar vehicles with its recent unveiling of the Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle (EFV) earlier in the week. Military officials expect the faster, more dynamic EFV will replace the USMC's older amphibious assault vehicles. The EFV can travel more than 40 mph on land and 23 to 29 mph while in the water. It also has a 30mm day/night weapons system and better design to pinpoint IEDs and RPGs, which is "vitally important," according to...
  • Prompt Global Strike - A missile to hit anywhere in 1 hr

    05/01/2010 2:12:03 AM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 1 replies · 417+ views
    Brahmand.com ^ | 4/28/2010 | Brahmand.com
    Prompt Global Strike (PGS) is an initiative of the United States military to develop a system capable of a conventional weapon strike anywhere in the world within an hour. The system is designed for time-critical strike in emergency situation, or to counter terrorist activities like attacking a terrorist leader based on inputs of his location, or against a rogue state preparing to launch an attack by localised destruction of his weapon assets. Need for Conventional Prompt Global Strike (CPGS) can be described in a given scenario where the United States has learned of a terrorist group’s plan to transport a...
  • The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Returns to Its Innovative Roots

    04/18/2010 11:17:58 PM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 7 replies · 384+ views
    Wharton Aerospace ^ | 4/16/2010 | Wharton Aerospace
    Regina Dugan last summer took over as chief of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). In a profile of the 47-year-old PhD in mechanical engineering from the California Institute of Technology, The New York Times noted that in recent years DARPA has lost some of the luster it gained over decades as an agency that develops cutting edge military technologies that also filter into the consumer and civilian arena. The agency has been criticized in recent years for shifting its focus too closely to tools and technologies that could have an immediate impact for U.S. soldiers on the front...
  • U.S. Military Supply of Rare Earth Elements Not Secure

    04/18/2010 1:06:04 AM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 9 replies · 750+ views
    Tech News Daily ^ | 4/14/2010 | Jeremy Hsu
    U.S. military technologies such as guided bombs and night vision rely heavily upon rare earth elements supplied by China, and rebuilding an independent U.S. supply chain to wean the country off that foreign dependency could take up to 15 years, according to a new report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO). Both "light" and "heavy" rare earth elements represent a family of minerals found in commercial products ranging from TV displays to cell phones, as well as green technologies such as hybrid electric motors and wind turbines. For example, the rare earth element neodymium is very magnetic and is...
  • What’s Next for Airborne Laser?

    04/02/2010 10:03:23 PM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 7 replies · 519+ views
    Air Force Magazine ^ | 4/2/2010 | Thomas Duffy
    The ABL did everything it was supposed to do. Now, the Pentagon wants to call it quits. On the night of Feb. 11, off the coast of Southern California, the Missile Defense Agency scored a major achievement by destroying a liquid-fueled ballistic missile target in flight. The important part was that it did so using a laser weapon carried onboard a Boeing 747-400 aircraft. This milestone event constituted the first publicly announced test success for the Airborne Laser (ABL). However, the success was actually the second of its kind within an eight-day period. On Feb. 3, the ABL aircraft was...
  • Boeing Completes Preliminary Design of Free Electron Laser Weapon System

    03/18/2010 8:28:22 PM PDT · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 17 replies · 648+ views
    Boeing ^ | 3/18/2010 | Boeing
    The Boeing Company has successfully completed the preliminary design of the U.S. Navy's Free Electron Laser (FEL) weapon system, a key step toward building a FEL prototype for realistic tests at sea. During the preliminary design review held March 9 to March 11 at a Boeing facility in Arlington, Va., the company presented its design to more than 30 U.S. government and National Laboratory representatives. This electric laser will operate by passing a beam of high-energy electrons through a series of powerful magnetic fields, generating an intense emission of laser light that can disable or destroy targets. "The Free Electron...
  • Grumman EO DAS F35 Radar Systems

    03/17/2010 8:37:43 PM PDT · by Marine_Uncle · 17 replies · 530+ views
    Northrop Grumman ^ | 3/15/10 | Northrop Grumman
    EO DAS and Related Information: AN/AAQ-37 EO DAS AN/APG-81 AESA Radar for the F-35 F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. Looks like we have a real winner. I will soon be hitting the rack. Please just enjoy the video and do understand if all they claim is true we still have the edge in dog fights, and air to ground elimination of potential AA defenses. And as some have seen today here and elsewhere, it appears the production F-35 can demonstrate safe hovering. Don't blast me please. I as some are still angry the F22 was dropped. I cannot offer any educated...
  • Through a Glass, Darkly: Night Vision Gives US Troops Edge

    02/24/2010 11:03:41 PM PST · by myknowledge · 11 replies · 555+ views
    Defense Industry Daily ^ | February 24, 2010
    It was Christmas Eve 2007 and US Army Rangers were searching for suspected Al-Qaeda members in Mosul, Iraq. They were using their night vision goggles so they would have the element of surprise on their side. The story, detailed in a USA Today article, dramatically demonstrates the advantage night vision capabilities provide to US troops on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Rangers found 2 Al-Qaeda suspects who were holding an 11-year-old Iraqi boy hostage. Using their night vision capabilities, they were able to shoot the suspects without harming the boy. After that encounter, a firefight erupted between the...
  • Boeing Connects First F-22 MTC To USAF Network

    02/13/2010 12:18:39 AM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 3 replies · 246+ views
    Boeing connected the F-22 Mission Training Center (MTC) at Langley Air Force Base, Va., to the U.S. Air Force's Distributed Mission Operations Network (DMON) in November, allowing F-22 pilots at the base to train virtually with pilots in other aircraft platforms for the first time. The MTC at Langley is the first of four F-22 training centers that Boeing will link to the network over the next three years. The Air Force's Distributed Mission Operations (DMO) configuration enables MTC sites to connect with one another via the DMON, increasing the scale and improving the accuracy of training operations. Connecting the...
  • X-51A WaveRider Gets First Ride Aboard B-52

    02/09/2010 9:43:06 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 11 replies · 806+ views
    Space War ^ | 1/10/2010 | Derek Kaufman/Air Base Wing Public Affairs
    In a flight test reminiscent of the early days of the historic X-15 program 50 years earlier, the X-51A Waverider was carried aloft for the first time over Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., Wednesday, Dec. 9 by an Air Force Flight Test Center B-52H Stratofortress. The "captive carry" test was a key milestone in preparation for the X-51 to light its supersonic combustion ramjet engine and propel the WaverRider at hypersonic speed for about 5 minutes, before plunging into the Pacific Ocean. That flight test is currently planned in about two months, said Charlie Brink, X-51A program manager with the...
  • Darpa Eyes SM-3 For Hypersonic Strike

    02/04/2010 8:50:46 PM PST · by sukhoi-30mki · 2 replies · 593+ views
    AviationWeek.com ^ | Feb 4, 2010 | Graham Warwick
    By Graham Warwick The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) is seeking funding in Fiscal 2011 for ArcLight, a program to flight-test a long-range, high-speed strike weapon based on the Raytheon SM-3 ballistic-missile interceptor. ArcLight will be based on an SM-3 Block II booster stack and a hypersonic glider, and designed to carry a 100-200 pound payload more than 2,000 nautical miles. The weapon will be compatible with the Mark 41 vertical launch system and capable of launch from U.S. Navy warships and submarines as well as Air Force assets. The program is getting under way in Fiscal 2010...
  • US plans crewless automated ghost-frigates

    02/03/2010 10:15:38 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 41 replies · 988+ views
    theregister.co.uk ^ | 1/2/2010 | Lewis Page
    Those splendid brainboxes at DARPA - the Pentagon's in-house bazaar of the bizarre - have outdone themselves this time. They now plan an entirely uncrewed, automated ghost frigate able to cruise the oceans of the world for months or years on end without human input. The new project is called Anti-submarine warfare Continuous Trail Unmanned Vessel (ACTUV), and is intended to produce "an X-ship founded on the assumption that no person steps aboard at any point in its operating cycle". The uncrewed frigate would have enough range and endurance for "global, months long deployments with no underway human maintenance", being...
  • Handheld X-Ray Vision

    01/27/2010 3:49:18 AM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 12 replies · 852+ views
    The Strategy page ^ | 1/27/2010 | The Strategy Page
    The U.S. Army is sending the troops a new generation of "see-through-the-wall" devices. The Eagle series of sensors use low power ultra-wideband radio waves to detect what is behind walls (except metal ones). These devices weigh 3.5-6 pounds (there are three versions) and all are handheld. The M model can detect motion, of people or animals who are up to six meters behind a 20cm concrete wall. The P model can see into the ground (3-4 meters down) and detect objects, as well as tunnels. The V model produces sharper images, but at shorter ranges. All these devices use rechargeable...
  • BAE Systems unveils new howitzer

    01/26/2010 9:57:16 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 10 replies · 846+ views
    Space War ^ | 1/21/2010 | UPI via Space War
    BAE Systems has unveiled its brand new howitzer for deployment in the U.S. Army and eventually for military customers elsewhere. The next-generation howitzer is an upgraded Paladin Integrated Management vehicle in the M-109 Paladin family of vehicles, a combat-proven weapon system manufactured by BAE Systems in York, Pa. It was not immediately clear when the weapon would be marketed outside the United States, currently its major user. Previous PIM models are known to be operational with the Israeli army, and usage has been reported in Kuwait and Taiwan. Congressional representatives, community leaders and BAE employees attended a ceremony at the...
  • Army Tests IED-Killer Laser

    01/23/2010 9:13:11 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 13 replies · 808+ views
    DoD Buzz ^ | 1/22/2010 | Colin Clark
    You spot an IED from a Predator or the guy on point spots it. An armored vehicle rolls up and zaps it with a laser, blowing the sucker up. No one has to don a suit or get out of a vehicle. Neat, huh? It’s not often that we’ll respond to a plain old company press release but Boeing has tested just such a laser system that looks as if it could really make a difference to troops in the field today. If it’s far enough along to actually rumble over broken terrain, fire and be maintained in the field...
  • New Radar Detection Lab Will Enhance U.S. Navy's Ability to Protect Nation

    01/21/2010 1:01:49 AM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 12 replies · 641+ views
    Defense Professionals ^ | 01/21/2010 | Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jay C. Pugh
    PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE BARKING SANDS, Hawaii | On January 19, the Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) Barking Sands, Kauai, Hawaii began construction of an Advanced Radar Detection Laboratory (ARDEL) facility. The ARDEL project will test and evaluate a new radar system planned for the next generation of surface combatant vessels strengthening the U.S. Navy's ability to detect, track, and provide information required to engage ballistic missiles at greater distances than current systems in use as well as more elusive long-range air threats. The advanced technologies of the new radar incorporate various aspects of ballistic missile defense (BMD), air defense (AD),...
  • U.S. to develop missile that could eject micro-UAV in mid-flight

    01/19/2010 8:44:42 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 3 replies · 414+ views
    Geostrategy Direct ^ | 1/18/2010 | Geostrategy Direct
    The U.S. military plans to develop a missile that would transport an unmanned aerial vehicle to enemy territory. The U.S. Army has drafted plans to produce a missile that could rapidly transport a micro-UAV for reconnaissance missions. Under the design, the missile would contain the UAV and eject the intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, or ISR, platform in mid-flight. "This information is particularly valuable since it is so current," the army said. In a Request for Proposal, the army envisioned the use of UAV missile transporters for counter-insurgency missions. Officials said the research could fulfill a need in the current U.S....
  • Space systems and missile defense in 2010

    01/18/2010 9:33:22 PM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 2 replies · 478+ views
    The Space Review ^ | 1/18/2010 | Taylor Dinerman
    The recent Chinese missile defense test is just one of many signs that anti-ballistic missile systems are the “must have” military fashion accessory of 2010. For China the need for such weapons is obvious: the only neighbors they have who lack a real or potential short- to medium-range missile capability are Laos, Burma, and perhaps Mongolia. All of their other neighbors, especially Russia, North Korea. and India, have been building up their rocket forces at a rapid rate. For both Europe and China, any effective BMD requires space-based early warning sensors similar to the US Defense Support Program satellites based...
  • Poisoned PDF pill used to attack US military contractors-- Yet more cyber-espionage shenanigans

    01/18/2010 12:42:25 PM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 4 replies · 419+ views
    The Register ^ | 18th January 2010 16:45 GMT | John Leyden
    Unidentified hackers are running an ongoing cyber-espionage attack targeting US military contractors Booby-trapped PDF files, posing as messages from the US Department of Defense, were emailed to US defence contractors last week. The document refers to a real conference due to be held in Las Vegas in March. Opening the malicious PDF file attached to the spoofed emails triggers an attempt to exploit an Adobe Reader vulnerability only patched by the software firm last Tuesday (12 January). The infection of vulnerable systems opens up a backdoor that connects to a server hosted in Taiwan, though the hackers who set up...