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Archive for February, 2024

Reptilia – MG-Plate for GLOCK 43 and SIG ROMEOZERO Elite

Tuesday, February 6th, 2024

Exciting news for Glock 43 and Sig ROMEOZero Elite users! We are thrilled to introduce an exclusive contract over-run of our G-Plate, specifically designed to enhance your shooting experience without the need for any slide modifications.

WHY THE G-PLATE

Our G-Plate enables the seamless mounting of the Sig ROMEOZero ELITE optic atop your Glock 43, creating an optimal setup for low visibility environments. This unique product replaces the rear sight, fitting perfectly into the Glock slide’s dovetail. What’s more, it features an integrated “front” sight post that works in tandem with the ROMEO Zero ELITE’s rear backup sight, ensuring you always have fixed/backup sights when needed.

KEY FEATURES

•Precision machined from billet 17-4 Stainless Steel for unparalleled durability.

•Finished with FNC (Nitride) for the ultimate in corrosion resistance.

•Weighs just 24 grams, adding minimal weight to your setup.

•Includes a nylok patched Stainless Steel set screw for enhanced security.

•Compatible with other Glock models thanks to the universal dovetail cut profile.

Proudly made in the USA, guaranteeing top-quality craftsmanship.

reptiliacorp.com

US Aviation Forum Highlights Warfighting, Transformation, ‘Sacred Trust’ with Ground Force

Tuesday, February 6th, 2024

FORT NOVOSEL, Ala. — More than 200 U.S. Army Aviation leaders from across all Army components gathered at the home of Army aviation to discuss warfighting issues facing the branch, Jan. 23-25, 2024.

With a theme of “Transforming Aviation Warfighting, Strengthening the Sacred Trust”, the 2024 Aviation Senior Leader Forum’s three days of guest speaker and breakout sessions focused on current and future operations, training and leader development.

Event host Maj. Gen. Michael C. McCurry, the U.S. Army Aviation Branch chief, welcomed attendees and provided a branch update.

“Welcome, everybody, to the Aviation Senior Leader Forum, the only branch forum mandated in regulation,” he said, referencing Army Regulation 95-1.

He lauded the former branch leaders in the crowd and encouraged current leaders to seize the opportunity to learn from them.

“I wouldn’t be here today without a lot of these folks over here, and neither would a lot of the people sitting in the front row,” McCurry said.

“The dialogue is more important than what’s on the slides. The challenges we face in Army aviation every day out there in your [combat aviation brigades] and formations have been seen before, we have been here before. These warfighters over here, these warriors — some say gray beards — they have been there and had to fight their way through friction, and so your job is to be a sponge and glean from these warfighters everything.”

He also lauded the vital role of the branch’s enlisted corps as he recognized Command Sgt. Maj. Stephen H. Helton, U.S. Army Combined Arms Center and Fort Leavenworth command sergeant major.

“We’re a pretty tight family in Army aviation. We all know none of us would be here without our enlisted Soldiers. Back in (the early 1990s), 1st Lt. McCurry and Pfc. Helton were in the same platoon. And for the last few years we have been the beneficiaries of his leadership at the Combined Arms Center as the command sergeant major. I want to make sure we recognize him, as a branch.”

McCurry explained his own responsibilities as a leader as three functions: Fort Novosel senior commander, force modernization proponent for aviation and senior trainer for Army aviation.

In Army aviation, “nothing’s really changed in what we do, we have the same set of core competencies,” which he condensed into the categories of see/sense, strike, move and extend.

“We increase the lethality and survivability of the combined arms team,” McCurry said.

In the future fight, first contact should be made with unmanned systems, he said.

“When the explosion of (unmanned aircraft systems) happened in the COIN fight, when many of us were battalion commanders, it was really about seeing, it was about persistence, it was about watching one IED engagement zone or one building looking for a high value target. Today with the explosion of unmanned systems, we’re using them in every function,” he said.

The branch is looking at future changes to medical evacuation, including extended casualty care and buddy care on the battlefield, and potentially employing UAS for blood transport.

The branch is also looking at aviation’s role in providing robust capabilities to extend the Army’s ability to command and control its forces.

“Let us never be mistaken (to think) that army aviation exists for itself,” McCurry said, explaining that the branch’s sole purpose is to support the Soldier on the ground.

McCurry also discussed the data solicited last year in the wake of aviation mishaps.

“Many of you that had meetings scheduled with me saw those cancelled on the last day of [the aviation association forum] last year because I was with Gen. McConville and we were working a plan on the aviation standdown as we looked at the series of accidents we had,” McCurry said.

“We collected data … all of you held standdowns … and you fed comments up. We tallied every comment, how many times certain things came up. We took all that collected data that bubbled up from the CABs and briefed the vice who is now our chief. We had every division and corps commander on the net,” he said.

“We identified with division and corps commanders the follow-on actions for the enterprise to take in the near, mid and far-term to get after increasing safety,” as he explained the data chart.

“For CAB commanders, the outcome was more engagement and ownership by your division commanders. They are engaged, they are reading what’s coming out, their DCG’s are getting the action items to follow up, so that’s a positive. We have to keep that momentum going,” he said.

He emphasized that the branch will not compromise on standards and called upon leaders to continue to focus on the fundamentals and understanding and managing risk, as the branch transforms to support the joint force in large-scale combat operations of the future.

Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Randy A. George, who joined the forum through video conference, called for readiness at every echelon.

“As a leader, I have been dealing with, or being supported by aviation formations my entire career. I’m always proud of our aviation branch. I think it’s one of the strongest aspects of our Army, it always has been,” George said.

“There’s so many things that we can learn from aviation. I always use maintenance as a perfect example of that … a formation that is disciplined and knows how to get after that, so appreciate all of your leadership,” he said.

He described the volatile current world situation that people can readily see on the news daily.

“What’s different about where we’re at right now is just all the regional conflicts that we have going on around the world, in eastern Europe, in the Middle East, what’s happening out in the Pacific, and everywhere else,” and how quickly those could flare up into global conflict, he explained.

George described four focus areas for the force, including warfighting, delivering ready combat formations, continuous transformation and strengthening the Army profession.

“I want to make sure your formations understand that one of the things that you are going to be laser focused on is how you can make your formation more lethal, and your teams more cohesive,” he said.

George said he prefers the word transformation rather than modernization, because it indicates changes with people and tactics, techniques and procedures that have to change just as much as materiel, he explained.

He also said it’s critical that formations maintain discipline and standards that have been the “hallmark of effective units on the battlefield since the beginning of time.”

Gen. Gary Brito, who commands the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, also joined the event virtually. He emphasized support to Army-level imperatives, including warfighting, delivering combat ready formations and continuous Army transformation.

Brito said the onus is on leaders to help eradicate harmful behaviors and strengthen the profession.

“In everything you do as a leader, help us continue to keep our Army strong,” he said. “We as leaders own this — to reinforce the commitment, the competence, the candor, the character, the whole bit that makes our Army strong.”

He called for leaders to put everything they can into quality training.

“All echelons, all systems, all staffs, must work towards being adaptive, innovative, lethal in this new [multidomain operations/large-scale combat operations] environment,” he said.

What TRADOC owes the Army is trained and ready Soldiers and leaders who are brilliant at the basics, educated on the threat, who fight as a team, are resilient and adaptive and trusted by America, he explained.

“I’m very comfortable with the leaders that are represented in the room to make this happen, regardless of the patch that you have on,” Brito said. “We are all professionals. We all have responsibility … to build that bench before us and help our chief and the secretary of the Army with their priorities in the future.”

Gen. Daniel R. Hokanson, National Guard Bureau chief, who had just returned from a trip to Poland, joined to provide an update.

“The Guard has got to look exactly like the Army,” Hokanson said. “For those outside the military that may not be familiar I constantly have to remind them that the reason the National Guard exists is to fight and win our nation’s wars. That is our sole mission. But because we are manned, trained and equipped to fight wars, we can do just about anything else. You see this in aviation literally every day.”

To make sure Guard aviation is on par and in the same modernization process as the active Army, every unit needs to directly support a division or corps, Hokanson explained.

The lineup of speaker sessions included updates from the Aviation Branch command sergeant major and chief warrant officer, as well as various members of the aviation enterprise such as the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command, the director of Army Aviation – Army G-3/5/7, Future Vertical Lift Cross Functional Team/Army Futures Command and Program Executive Office-Aviation.

The event also provided updates from U.S. Army North, the U.S. Army Combat Readiness Center, Human Resources Command and Army Reserve Aviation Command, as well as the Directorate of Evaluation and Standardization and Directorate of Training and Doctrine at the U.S. Army Aviation Center of Excellence.

By Kelly Morris

Bundeswehr Awards Rheinmetall Contracts for Production and Supply of 40mm Automatic Grenade Launcher Ammunition – Order Worth Around €30 million

Monday, February 5th, 2024

The German Bundeswehr has placed two separate orders with Rheinmetall for production and supply of 40mm ammunition for automatic grenade launchers. Rheinmetall will thus be supplying tens of thousands of programmable 40mm x 53 Airburst Munition (ABM) DM131 service cartridges. This order is worth around €29.5 million, including value added tax. The Bundeswehr has also placed an order for around 200,000 rounds of 40mm x 53 Üb DM158 practice ammunition, worth around €7.18 million, once again including VAT. Delivery of the ammunition is to be complete in 2024. 

A one-stop shop for 40mm systems, Rheinmetall is one of the world’s leading suppliers of ammunition, weapon systems and fire control and aiming technology. Rheinmetall’s 40mm x 53 high-velocity ammunition can be fired from any standard 40mm automatic grenade launcher. The rounds attain a maximum velocity of more than 240 m/s and have a maximum effective range of 2,200 metres. The Group’s wide assortment of cartridges in this segment includes the just-ordered programmable 40mm x 53 ABM. Because the rounds can be timed to detonate in the air, it is possible to engage troops taking cover behind walls, etc. The 40mm x 53 ABM, which the Bundeswehr refers to as the DM131, is qualified for use by the German armed forces. Other NATO armed forces have this advanced munition in their inventories as well. 

Developed and qualified in accordance with the latest standards, the ammunition types now on order are unequalled worldwide in terms of combat effectiveness and precision. Moreover, the design status of the two cartridges fully corresponds to the stipulations contained in the European directive covering the Registration, Evaluation, Authorization and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH). 

Heather K. Armentrout Appointed Head of Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace Inc in the US

Monday, February 5th, 2024

Experienced industry executive Heather K. Armentrout has been appointed US President and General Manager of Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace Inc., representing the Norwegian defence contractor’s activities in the United States. Ms Armentrout joins Kongsberg from Northrop Grumman, where she has held several senior leadership positions.

She also brings to KDA knowledge of how think tanks inform US policy from her time as the intelligence fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, and more than a decade of experience at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

“I am very pleased to have recruited such a strong leader to head up our US company,” said Eirik Lie, president of Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace. “Heather has had a unique career, combining experiences from Northrop Grumman, academia, and the CIA to make her an accomplished international affairs executive as well as a strategic, global defense industry leader.”

Heather joined Northrop Grumman in a government relations role, leveraging her experience from a joint-duty assignment in the US Senate during her tenure at the CIA. Heather has extensive knowledge of military acquisition and the global security environment. Her subsequent assignments have involved strategic investment in technology to align Northrop Grumman’s solutions with the Department of Defense’s future needs. Most of her assignments have involved strategy to expand Northrop Grumman’s presence in international markets.

“I am very excited to join Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace at a critical time for the global defence industry. I know the company as a strong niche player that has been traditionally focused on its home market, but with growing international success in recent years,” said Heather K. Armentrout. “The portfolio of products is well-suited outside Norway, which forms a good platform for future growth. The innovation Kongsberg represents is welcomed by US authorities and armed forces, and I look forward to building on that,” she added.

In her new role, she will deploy her vast experience from one of the world’s leading defence contractors, but she also sees commonalities with her work at the CIA. “There are many relevant experiences from my old assignments. The ability to consume vast amounts of information, evaluate and condense it, and then make it actionable, is one example. There is also commonality in the mission – which is to secure the US and its allies with the best tools available,” she adds.

“We really look forward to welcoming Heather to lead the strong KDA US team. Heather will build the organization to support our rapidly growing ambitions in the US,” said Kjetil Reiten Myhra, executive vice president, Integrated Defence Systems and chairman of the US entity.

Heather K. Armentrout has a Master’s degree in Security Studies and a Bachelor’s degree in Foreign Service, both from Georgetown University. She assumes her role on February 5, and is based in Alexandria, VA.

PWS and Lone Wolf Arms Welcome Justin Raney as New Director of Sales

Monday, February 5th, 2024

Justin Raney joins Primary Weapons Systems and Lone Wolf Arms as new Director of Sales, bringing years of industry experience and passion for the brands.

BOISE, Id. February 2, 2024 – Vigilant Gear Holdings is proud to welcome Justin Raney as new Director of Sales for both Primary Weapons Systems (PWS) and Lone Wolf Arms. Justin brings with him 16 years of experience within the firearms industry, with a primary focus on the tactical side of the market. Justin has been involved in sales, manufacturing and purchasing throughout his years of experience, bringing with him a diverse background of skills. After spending 6 years with Vertx as both a territory sales representative and Regional Sales Manager, Justin went on to join Big Daddy Unlimited as their Director of Purchasing. From there, he joined Zev Technologies as their Director of Sales before joining the Vigilant Gear team. His extreme passion for hunting, shooting and the outdoor industry make him a perfect fit for this position. “I am thrilled to be part of such a dynamic and innovative company,” says Justin, “PWS and Lone Wolf have always been renowned for pushing the limits of innovation in our industry and I look forward to playing a part in what will be an extremely promising future.”

For more information on PWS, head to primaryweapons.com. For more information on Lone Wolf Arms, head to lonewolfarms.com.

Exciting News from 1947LLC, a Division of Ocean State Innovations

Monday, February 5th, 2024

We will be attending the 2024 ENFORCETAC Show in Nuremberg, Germany, and we’re eager to connect with industry leaders, partners, and innovators.  February 26th- 28th, 2024

At 1947LLC, we’re passionate about cutting-edge technology and innovative solutions.

INVISTA™ CORDURA® Stock Program (we ship globally) in 500D and 1000D in Solution Dyed colors.
Iron Grip™ CORDURA® Hard Armor/SAPI Plate PSA Cover Fabrics
Curv® Tactical – Innovative Thermoplastic Composites
BattleStretch Pro™ Stretch Fabrics – Solids & Prints
Velcro® Brand – Hook 89 & Loop 1100 + Printed Loop in MultiCam®
ITW® Plastic Hardware – Military Products
OSI Printing Services – Fabric & Loop/ Webbing Components

MultiCam® Fabric Collection

Set your meeting now to see how these items can benefit your business. See you at ENFORCETAC.
DM or send your email to:
geoff@osinnovate.com
peter@osinnovate.com

Forward Controls and Rooftop Defense Collaborate on New Sling Mounts

Monday, February 5th, 2024

At Forward Controls, we have always valued simplicity and believe that any added complexities to a system should offer benefits rather than liabilities. While Sling QDs have their advantages, they can also add bulk and liability if used unnecessarily. The fore-end of the AR is one area where we see redundancy. Although we appreciate QD functionality, not everyone requires or desires quick detach capability, especially on both ends of the sling. For those who don’t need or want QD, it’s best to avoid adding a QD swivel that only increases the weight and bulk of the rifle. Additionally, the quality of QD swivels can vary, so it doesn’t make sense to include QD where it’s not necessary and risks introducing a potential point of failure. Forward Controls is happy to Introduce the RSA-H, and in collaboration with Rooftop Defense, the MFH. Both of these sling adapters are designed to be attached to the handguard of your carbine. They both feature a curved 1.25 wide sling loop that does away with a QD swivel and places the sling closer to the bore.

The RSA-H (Rail mounted Sling Adapter, Heavy) is a fixed loop sling adapter designed for Picatinny railed handguards. It is machined from a solid 4140 block of steel. The bolt is partially threaded and also serves as a recoil lug. The clamp dovetails into the RSA-H body. The Picatinny bolt clamp has a unique shape that allows it to be installed only one way, ensuring correct installation. When connected to the RSA-H, they fit together seamlessly. The RSA-H is compatible with BFG’s ULoop, but not with HK hooks. It is designed with a curved loop that allows the sling to pass through without the need for additional attachments.

The loop of the RSA-H can accommodate sling widths of up to 1.25″. Additionally, it serves as an equipment tethering point for high-value scopes, CNVDs, and thermal optics. The recommended torque value for the RSA-H Picatinny bolt is 40 in lb.

MFH is a collaboration between Sol Lehnerd at Rooftop Defense and Forward Controls, it was an idea Sol brought up in the summer of 2022 and wanted to bring to reality. “As a shooter, I have found that QD swivels at the front of the gun like to meet Mr. Murphy and sometimes detach themselves at the most inopportune times. By removing the QD swivel and QD socket, we achieve a simpler setup that’s more robust and better retains the weapon.” -Sol stated during development.

Sol has found the optimal setup for him to be a fixed loop at the front of the gun using MFH and a QD sling swivel mounted on the buttstock. This allows the user to reap the benefits of fixed sling retention on the gun’s forend, but still able to quickly remove the weapon when wearing full kit or fully separate an AR upper and lower for maintenance purposes. MFH is also made from 4140. Recommended torque value is 35in/lbs for attaching to metal hand guards, and 15in/lbs for attaching to polymer hand guards.

RSA-H can be purchased from

Forward Controls

Revival Defense

MFH Can be purchased from

Rooftop Defense

Forward Controls

Revival Defense

Sneak Peek – MedSled by Spiritus Systems

Monday, February 5th, 2024

Diring SHOT Show, Spiritus Systems showed us something they had developed. Instead of introducing a whole IFAK pouch, they decided to make a new insert for existing pouches like their Medium GP pouch. But they tell us, it can be stored other places like in vehicles.

The construction has a little bit of stretch to keep everything secure inside the pouch and the ripcord can be configured for vertical or horizontal pull.

It was designed to fit most items except for a tourniquet and EMT shears but they’ve found most people keep those handy, outside their IFAKs.

At any rate, it makes a nice tray that holds equipment. It comes with a grid and dot system along with shock cords and tabs to set it up however you want.