SIG MMG 338 Program Series

Virtual Warfighter Expo – Pelican EZ-Click MOLLE Panel

October 7th, 2020

Pelican offers a EZ-Click MOLLE Panel for use with their storage cases.

These durable, rigid PALS compatible panels snap quickly into place via a cam-lock into the lid.

They will fit the following cases:
1510
1535AIR
1560
1610
1620
1650

Units and agencies can procure all products shown during Virtual Warfighter by contacting ADS Inc.

PHLster Announces Summit OWB Holster

October 7th, 2020

After a decade of making inside-the-waistband holsters, PHLster has incorporated the range of adjustment and the concealment principles present in their AIWB holsters into a brand new outside-the-waistband concealment holster.

The new Summit OWB holster, using a unique belt attachment system, allows the end-user to fine-tune their holster to reduce printing and accommodate the specifics of their body type or mission.

Each holster comes with a pair of trimmable wedges. The wedges control the relationship between the holster and the belt, allowing you to angle the gun inward, for maximum concealment, or outward, to accommodate your body shape or to clear concealable body armor.

Grip rotation, to mitigate printing, is accomplished by setting up an offset between the leading and trailing edges of the holster. Using the thick part of the wedge on the slide side, and the thin part of the wedge on the trigger guard side, tightening the belt will pull the grip inward. If you have experience with one of the many IWB holsters that have a wing or a claw, you’ll already be familiar with this principle. For maximum concealment, you can set up the Summit with the trigger-side belt loop and wedge on the face of the holster, for more aggressive grip rotation, just like your AIWB wing-equipped holster.

We’ve also improved OWB holster belt loops. Many pancake-style OWB holsters fall short in terms of concealment because they can’t accommodate a wide range of waist shapes. Our new high-strength, slim, composite polymer wings are strong enough to survive any violent physical encounter or hard use. And they’re rigid enough to transfer the necessary belt forces to accomplish concealment, while also being forgiving enough to fit your body shape like a custom holster. Like a quality leather holster, they’ll break in to fit you perfectly, but they won’t get weaker or softer.

The base of the Summit holster is an ambidextrous, compression formed, pancake holster shell, meticulously designed to give you firm, crisp, and deliberate non-adjustable retention. With an unobtrusive mid-ride body shield on both sides, the holster accommodates optics, suppressor sights, and muzzle devices.

At launch the Summit is available in two models. One for G19/17/34 and the other for G43/43x/48 (MOS compatible). Light bearing models and additional fits are forthcoming.

www.phlsterholsters.com

Virtual Warfighter Expo – TacMed R-AID Bag

October 7th, 2020

The Tactical Medical Solutions R-AID Bag worn as a backpack, hung as a panel, or slung over a shoulder like a messenger bag.

All critical intervention items are loaded in the top flap of the bag for immediate access. The second main compartment of these combat med pack bags contain items required for additional treatments and casualty packaging. The rear sleeve contains triage and casualty marking materials.

Offered in Black, Green, MultiCam, Tan and Red.

?www.tacmedsolutions.com/TacMed-R-AID-Bag

Virtual Warfighter Expo – RightEye Vision System

October 7th, 2020

Those most amazing thing I’ve run across during the Virtual Warfighter Expo is the RightEye Vision System. They focus on human performance improvement based on dynamic vision skills.

The American Optometry Association (AOA), recommends evaluation for dynamic eye focusing, eye teaming, and eye movement, in addition to static visual acuity.

The RightEye Vision System is intended for recording, analyzing, and reporting eye movements in support of identifying visual tracking impairment.

They offer graphic, computer based testing which includes:

• Nystagmus
• Smooth Pursuit Tracking
• Saccades
• Fixations
• Multi-layer Reaction Time
• Visual Speed
• Visual Processing
• Reading Gaze Trails

Their device is an FDA certified Nystagmograph that tracks the amplitude and velocity of rapid, involuntary, and oscillatory ocular movements, and measures changes in the eye as the eye moves.

They evaluate vision to identify issues and then offer exercises to improve performance.

How it works:

Units and agencies can procure all products shown during Virtual Warfighter by contacting ADS Inc.

To learn more, visit righteye.com.

Virtual Warfighter Expo – Phokus Warfighter Bundle

October 7th, 2020

The Phokus Warfighter Bundle combines three of their most popular trauma kits, two pouches, and an optional tourniquet into a single item.

1x Deployment Trauma Kit 2 (DTK2)
1x Low Visibility Deployment 2 (LVD-2)
1x Shield Trauma Kit (STK)
1x Low Visibility Pouch (FB-1)
1x Shield Pouch (FB-2)
1x Combat Application Tourniquet or SOF-T Wide (optional)

Units and agencies can procure all products shown during Virtual Warfighter by contacting ADS Inc.

www.phokusresearch.com/collections/military-trauma-kits/products/war-fighter-bundle-v1

Recognize Kindness: News from the Tango Yankee Project

October 7th, 2020

October 6, 2020 (Dallas, TX)

Contact: danielshaw0369@gmail.com

Action for the common good and an attitude of gratitude: is there really a downside to either?

The Tango Yankee Project believes in both. To that end, it has not only updated its message to include people outside the veteran community, but it has now made PVC morale patches available.

Walk around with a couple of them in your pocket or pack. Watch for someone behaving in a way that deserves to be given one. Behave in a way that’s equally deserving. It’s magical.

What’s a Tango Yankee chip? Imagine a challenge coin and a thank-you card had a baby. Use it to acknowledge someone doing the right thing, having  a good attitude, or just doing things to be a good human. It’ll make their day…might help make the world a better place.

“All you need are these: certainty of judgment in the present moment; action for the common good in the present moment; and an attitude of gratitude in the present moment for anything that comes your way.”

Marcus Aurelius, Meditations, 9.6

A lot of people in this world are assholes. Recognize the ones who aren’t. Help us put smiles on faces and pay it forward.

BE THE ONE TO RECOGNIZE KINDNESS

DS

TangoYankeeChip.com

Tango Yankee Project on Facebook: www.facebook.com/tangoyankeechip

Survival Innovations – Emergency Release Assembly

October 7th, 2020

Now available from Helix, the Survival Innovations ERA (Emergency Release Assembly) is a quick release lanyard system which allows aircrew to tether themselves to the airframe. The lanyard can be released under load and the quick release connector on lanyard can be released remotely using a pull tab.

The ERA meets the Personal Fall Arrest system requirements of ANSI Z359:1 and is rated at 22k

helixtactical.com/Products/Slings-Lanyards/Lanyards-(1)/Survival-Innovations-Emergency-Release-Assembly-(E

Augmented Reality K9 Goggles Could Help Protect Soldiers

October 7th, 2020

RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. — Military working dogs often scout areas for explosives devices and hazardous materials and assist in rescue operations, but giving dogs the necessary commands to perform these missions can put Soldiers in harm’s way. Augmented reality may change that.

Through a project funded by the Small Business Innovation Research program and managed by the Army Research Office, an element of the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command’s Army Research Laboratory, a new technology has been developed by Command Sight, Inc., to provide military working dogs with augmented reality goggles that allow a dog’s handler to give it specific directional commands while keeping the warfighter remote and out of sight.

In 2017, Dr. A.J. Peper started Command Sight, a small business based in Seattle, to bridge human and animal communication. Through conversations with current and former military operators he identified a need to increase the efficacy of communication between canine and handler. As a result, Command Sight built the first prototype of augmented reality glasses for military working dogs.

Peper said initial feedback from his proof of concept was, “the system could fundamentally change how military canines are deployed in the future.”

The augmented reality goggles are specially designed to fit each dog with a visual indictor that allows the dog to be directed to a specific spot and react to the visual cue in the goggles. The handler can see everything the dog sees to provide it commands through the glasses.

“Augmented reality works differently for dogs than for humans,” said Dr. Stephen Lee, an ARO senior scientist. “AR will be used to provide dogs with commands and cues; it’s not for the dog to interact with it like a human does. This new technology offers us a critical tool to better communicate with military working dogs.”

The initial prototype is wired, keeping the dog on a leash, but researchers are working to make it wireless in the next phase of development.

“We are still in the beginning research stages of applying this technology to dogs, but the results from our initial research are extremely promising,” Peper said. “Much of the research to date has been conducted with my rottweiler, Mater. His ability to generalize from other training to working through the AR goggles has been incredible. We still have a way to go from a basic science and development perspective before it will be ready for the wear and tear our military dogs will place on the units.”

The basic science research behind this technology focuses on understanding canine vision and cognition as this tool is developed.

“We will be able to probe canine perception and behavior in a new way with this tool,” Lee said.

Currently, military working dogs are commonly directed by hand signals, which require the handler to be within sight of the dog, or by laser pointers, which also required the handler to remain close to the dog and generates a light source, which could be a safety issue.

Audio communication, using a camera and a walkie talkie placed on the dog are also used to direct the canines and allows the handler to be further from the dog, but the verbal commands can lead to confusion for the dog, for example, a dog runs around a set of stairs rather than going up them.

Augmented reality goggles could offer Special Forces dogs and their handlers a new alternative.

“The military working dog community is very excited about the potential of this technology,” Lee said. “This technology really cuts new ground and opens up possibilities that we haven’t considered yet.”

The augmented reality system uses goggles military working dogs have already been wearing for protection in inclement conditions and aerial deployments from Rex Specs. By leveraging a product the dogs are already used to wearing, Peper said it makes the technology adoption easier for both the dogs and the handler.

“Even without the augmented reality, this technology provides one of the best camera systems for military working dogs,” Lee said. “Now, cameras are generally placed on a dog’s back, but by putting the camera in the goggles, the handler can see exactly what the dogs sees and it eliminates the bounce that comes from placing the camera on the dog’s back.”

The Command Sight team has completed the Phase I of the SBIR and was selected to continue to Phase II. The SBIR program funds research and technology development with small businesses using a three-phase process. In contrast to the basic research programs managed by ARO, the SBIR program focuses primarily on feasibility studies leading to prototype demonstration of technology for specific applications.

Additionally, the Department of Defense Rapid Reaction Technology Office has provided funding for the next phase of development. With that funding, Command Sight is now working with Navy Special Forces to build prototypes that will be tested on their military working dogs. Each of the dogs received a 3D scan to get dimensional data to understand where to place optics and electrical components, specific to each dog.

The researchers plan to spend the next two years developing a production level wireless product. Once they have a prototype they will get user feedback and revise the product for manufacturing.

“ARO has been a critical partner in making technical, training and direct user connections to build ground swell of interest and secure funding sources,” Peper said. “We’re excited about getting this into the hands of the Soldier, hopefully in just a few years.”

By US Army CCDC Army Research Laboratory Public Affairs