SIG SAUER - Never Settle

Archive for May, 2026

2026 SOF Week

Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

Welcome to the annual Wreck-It Ralph Convention!

Please join us as we endeavour to cover the massive Special Operations Forces Week event sponsored by the Global SOF Foundation.

B.E. Meyers & Co. Supports the Sterling Promise Foundation as a Silver Sponsor During SOF Week 2026

Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

(Tampa, FL) B.E. Meyers & Co., Inc., via The Brad and Nancy Meyers Family Fund, is proud to be a Gold Sponsor of the Sterling Promise Foundation’s annual fundraising event. The Sterling Promise Foundation Fundraiser will be held at The Westin Tampa Waterside, on May 19th from 4:30 – 7:30 p.m. during SOF Week 2026.

The Sterling Promise Foundation exists to honor the life of Staff Sergeant Scott Sterling, who passed away in April 2021 after a heroic battle with colorectal cancer. Scott served in the 75th Ranger Regimental Reconnaissance Detachment and 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment–Delta (1SFOD-D). 

Funds are being used to provide blood screening tests directly to Active-Duty personnel as well as Veterans of the SOF community to ensure early detection.

The May 19th event includes a silent auction, live music, and community. The Guardant Health Team will be on-site to conduct on-site screening, using their Shield™ Colorectal Cancer Screening blood test. Shield is a blood-based colorectal cancer screening test that can detect fragments of colorectal tumor DNA that are released, or shed, into the blood. DNA shedding is a normal process that happens as a tumor grows. By determining if signals from these DNA fragments are present in a blood sample, Shield can screen for colorectal cancer. To learn more or donate to this amazing cause, please visit 2026 Sterling Promise SOF Week Annual Event.

The Brad and Nancy Meyers Family Fund is a philanthropic entity designed to provide sponsorship to causes in support of Veterans, first responders, religious freedom, animal welfare, and nature conservancy in the US and around the world.

Salomon – Genesis Forces Mid GTX

Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

I recently picked up a pair of the new Genesis Forces Mid GTX which were released earlier this year.

They are touted as built for comfort and they deliver. The first thing I noticed after putting them on was how I felt like I was walking on a cushion of air. It makes sense as they are based on Salomon’s ultra-distance trail running shoe of the same name.

The cushioning is provided by Salomon’s mid-sole system, optiFOAM with additional support from their activeCHASSIS. The upper is ripstop fabric reinforced with over molding for durability. They’ve also incorporated puncture resistance in the sole and a medial protective pad for fast roping.

Width is a US E so there’s plenty of room in the toe box and I always appreciate the simple quickLACE system with lace pocket on the tongue for rapid donning and doffing.

Salomon footwear always performs above its weight class and the Genesis promises to be no different despite only weighing 14 ounces. Since I know longer carry a rucksack along the clay roads of Fort Bragg, I don’t beat my shoes and boots up like I used to, but I’ve been wearing these in rotation for the past few months and they remain in great shape and still as comfortable as the first time I put them on.

There are versions with or without GORE-TEX. Offered in Black and Coyote in sizes 4-15 US.

You can check out the Genesis as well as other Salomon Forces models today and tomorrow at SOF Select in Tampa, Florida. The shoe is also in display in the GORE-TEX Professional booth, #1713 on the main floor of SOF Week.

www.salomon.com/en-us/product/genesis-forces-gtx-li8786/L49132600

TTPOA Issues Statement Regarding SIG SAUER P320 Pistol

Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

There been a lot of controversy over the SIG P320 Pistol, especially after a false narrative was shared following the death of an Air Force Airman last summer at the hands of another Security Forces Defender. Rather than take responsibility for the death of his fellow service member, the perpetrator claimed the M18 Modular Handgun, a P320 variant, fired in an uncommanded discharge. Despite that being a lie, the internet went wild for it.

Quite a few instructors as well as some professional organizations and ranges joined in on the hysteria and banned use of the firearm in events and classes sponsored by them. While many revised their position after the truth came to light, some continue the ban.

This week, the Texas Tactical Police Officer Association released a statement regarding reinstatement of the P320 TTPOA-sponsored events and training. However, it should be read in full.

Here is the statement:

The Texas Tactical Police Officers Association (TTPOA) Executive Board has completed an extensive due diligence review regarding the Sig Sauer P320/M17/M18 platform and has voted to lift the prior restriction on the use of the P320/M17/M18 in TTPOA-sponsored training and events.

The original restriction was implemented in response to numerous publicly circulated incidents and videos alleging the Sig Sauer P320/M17/M18 platform were capable of firing without a trigger press, including incidents where the firearm was reportedly holstered at the time of discharge. Additional online videos and demonstrations attempted to replicate these occurrences outside of the holster environment. Due to the seriousness of these allegations and the potential risk to law enforcement personnel, the TTPOA Executive Board elected to temporarily prohibit the use of the P320/M17/M18 platform during TTPOA events pending further review.

In evaluating whether the restriction should remain in place, the Executive Board conducted a comprehensive review process that included independent testing data, consultation with subject matter experts, direct engagement with Sig Sauer leadership, and review of current litigation and industry information related to the platform.

As part of this process, the TTPOA reviewed independent testing conducted by the Texas Department of Public Safety (TXDPS) Firearms Unit. The testing involved ten Sig Sauer P320/M17/M18 pistols, including five new pistols and five pistols currently in service use. The testing was digitally recorded from multiple angles and included multiple test parameters designed to evaluate and confirm the function of the internal safety mechanisms incorporated into the P320/M17/M18 design. The TTPOA Executive Board was briefed on the findings and methodology utilized during the testing process. TXDPS currently maintains approximately 7,000 Sig Sauer P320/M17/M18 pistols in operational inventory.

Additionally, Sig Sauer leadership met with the TTPOA Executive Board during the TTPOA Annual Conference to discuss the restriction and provide detailed information regarding the design and operation of the P320/M17/M18 platform. Participants included Sig Sauer executive leadership, legal counsel, law enforcement sales representatives, and subject matter experts familiar with the internal striker assembly and safety systems of the pistol. TTPOA and Sig Sauer legal counsel participated in the discussions, and questions from the Executive Board were addressed in an open and transparent manner. Sig Sauer also offered TTPOA representatives’ direct access to company facilities and manufacturing operations for further evaluation. Subsequently, two members of the TTPOA Executive Board traveled to Sig Sauer Headquarters and manufacturing facilities to conduct an on-site review and meet further with company leadership and technical experts. The visit included discussions with Sig Sauer law enforcement and military sales leadership, legal counsel, and subject matter experts on the P320/M17/M18 design, manufacturing, testing, and quality assurance processes.

Based on the totality of information reviewed through this due diligence process, the TTPOA Executive Board determined sufficient information exists to support lifting the prior restriction on the Sig Sauer P320/M17/M18 platform for TTPOA-sponsored events and training. While TTPOA has lifted its organizational restriction on the P320/M17/M18 platform, TTPOA recognizes and respects the authority of individual contract instructors, host agencies, and host ranges to establish and enforce their own firearms policies and safety requirements. TTPOA cannot compel contract instructors, host agencies, or range operators to permit the use of the P320/M17/M18 platform during training events conducted on their facilities or under their direction. Any such restrictions imposed by those entities remain within their discretion and authority.

The TTPOA recognizes firearms safety remains a shared responsibility among manufacturers, agencies, instructors, armorers, and individual officers. TTPOA will continue to monitor developments, testing, and relevant information regarding duty weapon platforms and reserves the right to reevaluate policies should new information emerge in the future.

TTPOA Executive Board

Additional resources are available here.

How 3D Printing Supports Army Readiness, One Layer at a Time

Tuesday, May 19th, 2026

JOINT BASE LEWIS-McCHORD, Wash. — Inside a small workspace filled with printers, plastic filament and computer-aided design software, a battlefield problem can be solved with a solution and takes shape one layer at a time.

That process was the focus of the 3D printing symposium, hosted by 1st Special Forces Group (Airborne), where Soldiers across the installation received hands-on familiarization with additive manufacturing and learned how the capability can support readiness, sustainment and innovation across the force.

For Sgt. Clarissa De La Cruz — a 91E, allied trade specialist — her job is built around solving problems. Her military occupational specialty includes welding, machining and 3D printing, giving Soldiers in her field the ability to fabricate, repair and modify equipment to support mission requirements.

“The Army is starting to be more innovative… to see how much we can really fully sustain ourselves,” De La Cruz said. “3D printing gives us more opportunity to create parts and do our job.”

During the symposium, Soldiers learned the basic flow of additive manufacturing, beginning with computer-aided design and moving into slicing software used to prepare parts for printing. De La Cruz said participants worked with SolidWorks to design parts before using PrusaSlicer to adjust print settings, including temperature, speed, density and layer structure.

Those settings determine more than how a part looks. They influence how strong, flexible or durable a print becomes. De La Cruz said different filaments serve different purposes, from basic plastic used for proof-of-concept models to stronger materials capable of handling more demanding applications.

“Some of them are just very plasticky,” De La Cruz said. “They’re not meant to withhold a whole lot of strength. But many of the other ones that we have, like ABS, tend to be more strong and can be more durable.”

The goal of the symposium was not to turn every Soldier into an expert overnight. Instead, it was designed to show Soldiers what is possible and give them enough familiarity to recognize where 3D printing may help solve problems in their own formations.

“The main goal was familiarization for Soldiers post-wide,” De La Cruz said. “This allowed them to get some type of hands-on training with 3D printing.”

At the unit level, De La Cruz said 3D printing is already being used to produce a wide range of items, including radio caps, part modifications, training aids and decoys. One printed item, an M777 towed 155 mm howitzer muzzle, was produced for use as a decoy. Other products support explosive ordnance disposal training by providing accessible, readily made training aids.

“We are booked and busy,” De La Cruz said. “We are making multiple different parts so that we can turn over services for different shops.”

For Soldiers and maintainers, the value of 3D printing often comes down to time. A small vehicle part that could otherwise sit on order may be produced in-house quickly. De La Cruz said a vehicle door handle, for example, may take no more than an hour to print depending on its design and intended use. That faster turnaround can help units return equipment to service and reduce reliance on traditional supply timelines. It can also lower costs by allowing units to produce certain items in-house instead of ordering replacements for every minor fault or modification.

“It just allows more accessible, quick solutions,” De La Cruz said. “It’s all made in-house, so it’s a lot less money that we’re spending.”

The symposium also highlighted a capability that extends beyond replacement parts, recycling. De La Cruz discussed the Recreator 3D, a system that repurposes plastic bottles into usable filaments. The process allows Soldiers to heat, expand and recycle plastic into material that can be used for future prints. The goal, she said, is to eventually produce a drone made from recycled plastic filament.

“When we are deployed, we can use whatever is around us to still do our job and get our mission done,” De La Cruz said.

That concept reflects a larger shift in how Soldiers can approach sustainment in expeditionary environments. Soldiers can identify a problem, design a solution, test it and improve it. Creative freedom is one of the most important parts of this capability.

“We 100 percent want them [Soldiers] to be innovating and finding new ways of what we can fix and what we can make better,” De La Cruz said.

As 3D printing continues to develop, the Army is also looking toward more advanced applications. De La Cruz said one future capability is wire arc additive manufacturing, or WAAM, a process that uses welding principles to produce metal 3D printed parts.

“That’s where we’re going,” De La Cruz said. “Metal 3D printing.”

While technology continues to grow, challenges remain. Software approval, equipment access, training time and funding all affect how quickly units can expand their capabilities. De La Cruz said programs like SolidWorks can be expensive and require leaders to understand what the software enables before investing in it.

Still, the symposium gave Soldiers a practical look at a capability that is already changing how units think about maintenance, training and mission support. For De La Cruz, the excitement is not only in what the printers can produce, but in what Soldiers can learn to create.

“The possibilities are endless with what 3D printing can do,” De La Cruz said. “It’s really important for our Soldiers to get out there and start learning about what we can do, so that way they can also help progress themselves and their peers.”

As the Army continues to modernize, the symposium showed that innovation does not always begin with a finished product. Sometimes, it begins with a problem, a design and a Soldier willing to build the solution layer by layer.

By SSG Dwayne Bryant

Rohde & Schwarz and Quantum Systems Join Forces to Redefine EW and C-UAS-Enabled Uncrewed Operations

Monday, May 18th, 2026

Rohde & Schwarz and Quantum Systems sign strategic Memorandum of Partnership to jointly integrate advanced EW capabilities and C-UAS solutions into next-generation uncrewed-systems, delivering robust, defense solutions for evolving threat environments.

Bonn, May 12, 2026 – Rohde & Schwarz today announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Quantum Systems during AFCEA 2026. This strategic agreement marks a significant step toward advancing integrated defense capabilities through the combination of electromagnetic warfare (EW) and counter uncrewed arial systems (C-UAS) expertise and cutting-edge uncrewed systems.

Quantum Systems, a key player in the development of uncrewed and intelligent aerial systems, will collaborate closely with Rohde & Schwarz to explore the integration of the latter’s advanced EW solutions into Quantum Systems’ uncrewed platforms (UxV). The partnership also includes the joint development and deployment of C-UAS solutions, addressing the growing need for effective protection against, e.g. uncrewed aerial threats.

Under the terms of this MoU, both companies will work to enhance operational effectiveness by embedding EW capabilities directly into next-generation uncrewed systems. This collaboration aims to provide defense and security forces with robust, adaptable solutions for complex and evolving operational environments.

“This MoU represents an important milestone in our mission to deliver innovative EW solutions,” said Alexander Philipp, Managing Director, Rohde & Schwarz Vertriebs-GmbH. “By partnering with Quantum Systems, we are combining complementary strengths to create powerful, future-ready capabilities for our customers.”

“The requirements of modern armed forces are changing at a rapid pace. Today, the key is the ability to quickly transfer proven technologies onto new platforms and make them immediately usable. Together with Rohde & Schwarz we are creating a German solution for uncrewed signals intelligence in the air and electronic protection systems on the ground, thereby deliberately expanding capabilities on the battlefield,” said Martin Karkour, Chief Revenue Officer of Quantum Systems.

The agreement underscores both companies’ commitment to innovation, collaboration, and strengthening technological leadership in the defense sector.

MOHOC Introduces Optac: NDAA-Compliant, Multi-Spectrum UAV Optics

Monday, May 18th, 2026

MOHOC, Inc., world leader in tactical helmet cameras, is leveraging its first-person imaging expertise into the booming FPV drone market with the launch of Optac™ cameras.

UAV platforms in the US (and increasingly abroad) are required to install NDAA-compliant components – most critically, non-Chinese electronics. Optac™, an NDAA audited and US assembled drone camera, addresses this mandate directly.

Compliance, however, is only the baseline. Dynamic mission capability is the differentiator. The Optac™ integrates daylight, low-light, and infrared imaging into a single camera system with a removeable IR filter cap. It eliminates the need for multiple sensors or payload trade-offs while enabling continuous operation across changing light conditions.

The patent-pending Optac™ also delivers ultra-low latency video output and is compatible with existing FPV architectures, including analog VTX systems. In addition to the fully featured model, a visual-only version is available for dedicated daylight operations. Both models meet SWaP and cost objectives essential to attritable and one-way effect platforms.

“The US and our allies must lead the paradigm shift in UAV warfare,” commented Connor Duncan, CEO at MOHOC. “We are honored to support Drone Dominance and similar initiatives with Optac™, not merely NDAA compliant, but innovative FPV optics to redefine the visual edge,” added Eric Dobbie, VP US Sales. 

MOHOC is presenting Optac™ at SOF Week 2026 in Tampa, May 19-21, booth 935. Meeting requests and press inquiries can be directed to Eric Dobbie (edobbie@mohoc.com).

TacJobs – Qore Performance Seeks VP, Sales & Business Development

Monday, May 18th, 2026

VP, SALES & BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT

Status: Active Recruitment | Mission: Building A Superhuman Future.®

Preferred Location: Knoxville, TN (HQ)
Alternative Locations: DC Metro | Virginia Beach | Fayetteville | Columbus (GA) | Tampa Bay

I. THE OBJECTIVE 

Qore Performance is transitioning from Founder-led sales to a mature, VP-led capability. Your ‘North Star’ is to eliminate the biological throttles of our customers by establishing QPI as the global leader in thermoregulation for American Security and American Prosperity. You are not here to maintain a system; you are here to engineer a scalable revenue architecture from the ground up.

II. THE ARCHITECTURE (PRIORITIZED OUTCOMES) 

Immediate Revenue Lethality: Deliver verifiable P/L results within 30 days by ‘dialing for dollars’ through our existing Shopify database. Goal: as close to $100k in closed sales in Month 1.

System Engineering: Implement and own the outbound tech stack. You will integrate a new CRM with our current environment (Shopify, MRPeasy, Google Workspace/Gemini).

Contract Capture: Navigate and secure high-level contracts (SBIR, OTA, PoR, Sole-Source) from requirement shaping to final delivery and approved procurement lists.

Transition Leadership: Move the company from inbound-organic to outbound-disciplined. You will eventually recruit, train, and lead a team of Account Managers and Field Specialists.

Multi-Vertical Fluidity: Simultaneously manage DoD/Government contracts and Enterprise Safety sales (e.g., Chick-fil-A, Dutch Bros, industrial foundries).

III. THE OPERATOR (REQUIRED SPEC)

Service History: Senior Enlisted SOF Veteran (AFSOC, NSW, SF, Ranger Regiment, etc.).

Private Sector P&L: Minimum 5–10 years of private sector experience with a proven track record of closing eight figures in revenue.

Technical Rigor: An ‘AI Ninja’ capable of leveraging Gemini and other LLMs to accelerate the sales cycle and build research bots.

Communication: Executes a highly responsive customer communication cadence. Precision in language is mandatory.

Cultural Alignment: Driven by a deep, primal desire for execution excellence in every action.

IV. THE ENVIRONMENT (CULTURE & TECH)

Neatness as a Requirement: We maintain ‘set-ready’ workstations. Neatness is a physical manifestation of a disciplined mind.

No Red Tape: We are not beholden to PE or VC. We move at the speed of physics.

The Tech Stack: Proficiency in Shopify, MRPeasy, Google Workspace, and specialized contract interfaces (SupplyCentral, Singapore SOF) is required.

Assets: Access to a 2,500 sq. ft. media studio and ‘Betsy,’ our F-150 show truck, for high-fidelity presentations.

V. DEPLOYMENT (HOW TO APPLY)

Review the Careers page on our site. Email us with your best pitch. This is your first test of primary research, ability to follow directions, and decisive action.