15 octobre 2020 | International, Terrestre, Sécurité

The Army’s SAW and M4 replacement is headed to troops by 2022

The gun that will replace both the M249 Squad Automatic Weapon and the M16/M4 rifle/carbine weapons — and add a new, widely distributed caliber to the U.S. military inventory for the first time in decades — is less than two years away.

The Next Generation Squad Weapon finished its first prototype test event in September. The three previously selected offerings came from Sig Sauer, Textron Systems and General Dynamics Ordnance.

Brig. Gen. David Hodne, Infantry School commandant and Soldier Lethality Cross Functional Team director, along with Brig. Gen. Anthony Potts, head of Program Executive Office Soldier, gave updates to Army Times ahead of the Association of the U.S. Army Annual Meeting and Exposition.

Concurrently, the Army in April has also selected two companies, L3 Technologies and Vortex Optics, to compete for the fire control for the weapons system.

Sig Sauer's design looks much like a conventional assault rifle while GD is using a bullpup design, which shortens the length by building the magazine feed into the weapon stock. Textron has built its weapon around the cartridge, which is unique to them, a cased telescope item that has the projectile inside of the casing to reduce weight.

Back in April, each of the companies provided 15 rifles, 15 automatic rifles and 180,000 cartridges using the government-developed 6.8mm projectile.

The 6.8mm projectile was chosen after decades of testing and evaluation showed that 5.56mm lethality at mid-ranges on the battlefield was inadequate and existing 7.62mm could be outperformed by the 6.8mm round and save weight for the soldier.

The new caliber also gives the soldier both a rifle and automatic rifle firing the same round, both effective past the 600m mark of existing light calibers.

Following the September testing, the companies will have six months until their next prototype test, scheduled to begin in February.

During the annual Maneuver Warfighter Conference at Fort Benning in Georgia, Maj. Wyatt Ottmar, project officer over NGSW for the Soldier Lethality CFT, laid out some of the recent developments and next steps for the weapons system.

Ottmar noted that Sig Sauer provided a combined steel lower and brass upper ammunition cartridge to reduce weight. A contract is expected to be awarded to one of the three companies this coming fiscal year with fielding to start in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2022, or sometime between August and October 2022, to Infantry, Stryker and Armor Brigade Combat Teams.

Ultimately, the weapon will be fielded to all close combat forces, including special operations forces, infantry, combat engineers and scouts.

The fire control is expected to field six months ahead of the weapon, Potts said. That will allow the NGSW producer to better integrate the optic with the weapon.

https://www.defensenews.com/news/your-army/2020/10/14/the-armys-saw-and-m4-replacement-is-headed-to-troops-by-2022/

Sur le même sujet

  • Safran va fournir des antennes Sparte 700 de télémesure à l'US Air Force

    3 février 2022 | International, C4ISR

    Safran va fournir des antennes Sparte 700 de télémesure à l'US Air Force

    DÉFENSE Safran va fournir des antennes Sparte 700 de télémesure à l'US Air Force Safran Data Systems a été sélectionné par l'US Air Force pour la fourniture d'antennes de poursuite de télémesure de 7 mètres 30. Ces antennes seront installées à partir du second trimestre 2023 sur un site de l'US Air Force situé en Floride. Depuis 2017, plus de 40 antennes ont été livrées aux industriels du secteur aérospatial et aux organismes de la défense américaine par l'entreprise. « Gr'ce à ces antennes de télémesure, Safran démontre sa capacité à fournir des équipements innovants qui participent à l'amélioration et à la modernisation des capacités de tests de l'armée pour soutenir des scénarios d'essais en vol toujours plus nombreux et plus complexes » commente Ray Munoz, président de Safran Data Systems. « Ces dernières années, nous avons considérablement développé nos activités aux États-Unis et nous sommes très fiers de livrer des antennes de télémesure construites, assemblées et testées depuis notre site américain ». Basé en Géorgie (Etats-Unis), Safran Data Systems est un leader dans l'instrumentation d'essais, la télémesure et les communications spatiales. L'entreprise propose notamment des solutions complètes d'acquisition, d'enregistrement et d'exploitation des données pour les essais en vol ainsi que des équipements et solutions pour le suivi des satellites. Zonebourse du 2 février

  • Cybercriminals Use Excel Exploit to Spread Fileless Remcos RAT Malware

    11 novembre 2024 | International, Sécurité

    Cybercriminals Use Excel Exploit to Spread Fileless Remcos RAT Malware

    Fileless Remcos RAT spreads through Excel phishing, exploiting remote code flaws to steal data undetected.

  • DIU awards $45M contract for weapon systems cybersecurity

    13 mai 2020 | International, C4ISR, Sécurité

    DIU awards $45M contract for weapon systems cybersecurity

    Andrew Eversden The Defense Innovation Unit awarded a $45 million to a Silicon Valley-based tech startup to perform cybersecurity testing on Defense Department weapon systems' applications, the company announced May 11. The company, ForAllSecure, has been prototyping its cybersecurity testing platform, known as Mayhem, with DoD components for more than three years. DIU made the award on the five-year contract April 23, a ForAllSecure spokesperson said. ForAllSecure is working with the Air Force 96th Cyberspace Test Group, the Air Force 90th Cyberspace Operations Squadron, the Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) and the U.S. Army Command, Control, Communication, Computers, Cyber, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Center (C5ISR). The same DoD users have worked with ForAllSecure throughout the prototyping process for the company's platform, which finds bugs in applications and shows the user how they can be triggered. The platform will allow for a continuous testing for vulnerabilities in weapons systems. “One of the problems that [the department] run[s] into is this idea that there's a point in time when you're done" with cybersecurity," said David Brumley, chief executive officer of ForAllSecure. "It all comes down to how quickly can you test and retest.” In the last few years of prototyping, the company went through 10 iterations of Mayhem. One significant piece the company added to those iterations were cybersecurity tutorials for users. ForAllSecure's work on Mayhem started before a troubling report from the Government Accountability Office that highlighted several cybersecurity challenges and shortfalls that the Defense Department's weapons systems faced in light of potential advanced cyberattacks. “If you look at the GAO report, they simply weren't embedding cybersecurity testing in the process at all," Brumley said. “So this is adding this common sense measure and it's automating it.” In 2016, the company's Mayhem platform won the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Cyber Grand Challenge, an automated defensive cybersecurity competition. That victory came with a $2 million prize. Since that victory, Brumley said that the company has run into a few unique challenges working with other DoD components, particularly around installing the platform. “When DARPA has their contest, it really only has to work for the developers,” Brumley said. “When you go to a product, you have to go to an unknown site, you have to install. You have to repeatedly do that.” https://www.fifthdomain.com/dod/2020/05/12/diu-awards-45m-contract-for-weapon-systems-cybersecurity/

Toutes les nouvelles