G24 Mount from Wilcox Ind

HGU-56/P – The Helmet You Know and Trust, Now Better Than Ever

June 4th, 2025

The Gentex HGU-56/P Rotary Wing Helmet System has long been the trusted choice for rotary wing aircrew across U.S. and with allied forces. Originally developed to support the U.S. Army Air Soldier Program, it was engineered to reduce weight and bulk while maintaining industry-leading impact protection,allowing aircrew to stay protected during extended missions.

Now this battle-proven platform is better than ever. With the addition of the new SideKick™ ARC Rails and LockDown™ Liner Kit, the HGU-56/P receives a smart, user-driven refresh that enhances comfort, capability, and mission performance without changing the platform that aircrew already know and rely on.

SideKick™ ARC Rails

Built on the Ops-Core® developed ARC (Accessory Rail Connection) geometry, SideKick ARC Rails give crews a low-profile, breakaway-compatible mounting solution for accessories. Mounting closer to the helmet’s center of gravity improves weight distribution and reduces fatigue, while providing valuable rail real estate for lights, strobes, and more — all while maintaining crash safety and backward compatibility with most HGU-56/P variants.

Click the links below to learn more!

Gentex HGU-56/P Helmet Systems

SideKick ARC Rails

Flexboom Microphone

SureFire Response to B&T Lawsuit

June 4th, 2025

Fountain Valley, CA—SureFire, LLC, acknowledges that B&T USA and B&T AG have issued a public statement regarding a lawsuit recently filed against our company. While we disagree with the claims made in both the lawsuit and the accompanying press release, we believe the appropriate forum for resolving such matters is the court system – not the media. SureFire stands by its long history of innovation, integrity, and commitment to our customers. We will refrain from further public comment at this time.

New CMSgts Complete Chief Initial Mission Command Training

June 4th, 2025

EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (AFNS) —
Chief Master Sgt. of the Air Force David Flosi hosted more than 500 newly-selected chief master sergeants for the inaugural Chief Initial Mission Command Training May 19–23 at Fort Walton Beach and Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida.

CIMCT is not a traditional orientation, it’s a warfighting development experience built to prepare senior enlisted leaders to lead in today’s contested environment. The five-day training replaced the former Chief Orientation Course, prioritizing field immersion, mission command, and warrior ethos.

“Our Air Force exists to kill people and blow shit up — it’s always been our purpose,” said Flosi. “We exist to defend the nation and provide the president with credible options across the scale of conflict. CIMCT brings us to our first principle.”

The training began with mission briefs, leadership panels, and classified threat updates, immediately followed by a no-notice deployment exercise. Participants processed through a personnel deployment function line before moving to the Silver Flag compound at Tyndall AFB, simulating the speed and unpredictability of real-world taskings.

At Tyndall, the new chiefs established a bare base, built tents, lived in field conditions, and executed mission orders under a simulated Air Tasking Order. Chiefs worked across functional lines in mixed teams to complete combat tasks.

Participants also took part in the Mission Ready Airman Course, where they repaired spalls, covered craters with matting, loaded weapons onto an F-16 Fighting Falcon, and conducted a dignified transfer and internment. Each task reinforced core warfighting skills and emphasized the demands of operating in contested environments.

“We didn’t just talk about warfighting — we demonstrated it,” said Flosi. “Chiefs experienced what it means to operate in a contested environment, including limited communications, contested logistics, and unfamiliar terrain. They’ll take this back and apply it locally so that Airmen train and prepare together before they ever deploy.”

During the training, Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David W. Allvin also addressed the cohort, reinforcing the vital role of Airmen in today’s operating environment.

“The Airmen are our secret weapon, chiefs,” said Allvin. “The initial returns we’re seeing from younger Airmen—who are starting to do the stuff you’re experimenting with right now—they’re loving it. They no longer see themselves as just a weatherman or just a PA troop—they’re seeing themselves as, ‘I know what it takes to do this mission. I know what I can contribute.’ They feel like part of the mission.”

Participants operated in teams, structured not by Air Force Specialty Code, but by shared purpose, executing tasks under pressure and adapting to rapidly changing conditions.

One of the most powerful moments, he noted, came at sunset: hundreds of chiefs sitting together, eating MREs, preparing to sleep in the field.

“It was inspiring,” said Flosi. “They were eating together, sleeping in tents, and pushing through shared hardship. That’s where bonds are built and unity of purpose takes root. This group leaned into the mission, into each other, and into the challenge. You can’t script that, but it’s one of the most powerful outcomes of this training.”

U.S. Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Brian Haney, 732nd Air Mobility Squadron aerial port superintendent, described the experience as a powerful return to warfighting roots.

“The CIMCT course has been phenomenal. The overall hands-on training … getting out in the field, getting the sweat and experience — something we haven’t done in 10, 15 years — has been refreshing,” he said. “It’s one thing to lead and give direction, but to actually get out there with them, experience it, and know what they’re going through, it just gives you a broader perspective.”

CIMCT builds on a 2024 event where Flosi brought senior enlisted leaders to Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii; Andersen Air Force Base, Guam; and Tinian, Northern Mariana Islands, to experience operations in the Indo-Pacific. This year’s iteration marked a deliberate expansion, targeting the next generation of enlisted leaders.

“When I stepped into this role, we found gaps in how our senior enlisted leaders were being prepared,” said Flosi. “We adjusted how we train new Airmen, but we hadn’t caught up on the leadership side. CIMCT helps close the gap.”

The event delivered more than training: it fostered leadership, trust, and the culture of readiness needed to drive lethality at every echelon.

“It takes all of us to execute the mission and these chiefs are proving they’re ready to lead from the front,” Flosi said.

Via Eglin Public Affairs

Rheinmetall Resonant South Africa (Pty) Ltd Established

June 3rd, 2025

Rheinmetall has established a new subsidiary, Rheinmetall Resonant South Africa (Pty) Ltd. Upon receiving approval from the relevant authorities, Rheinmetall Waffe Munition GmbH now holds a 51% stake in the newly founded joint venture Rheinmetall Resonant South Africa (Pty) Ltd. The joint venture takes over almost all of the assets of Resonant Holding and its subsidiaries. The remaining 49% is held by the existing shareholders of Resonant Holding. The new company expects sales potential of more than €100 million per year. The parties have agreed not to disclose the purchase price.

With the establishment of the new subsidiary, Rheinmetall is further expanding its range of services to create additional production capacity. This is Rheinmetall’s response to the growing global demand for ammunition. The in-depth vertical integration positions the Group even stronger in terms of independent planning, construction and operation of production facilities for chemical precursors such as propellants and explosives.

Rheinmetall Resonant South Africa (Pty) Ltd employs around 150 people and offers proven experience and outstanding expertise in the design and construction of specialised plants. This includes production facilities for chemical and explosive products. Resonant thus complements Rheinmetall’s plant engineering business, particularly in the areas of chemical, energy and explosives technology, industrialisation and manufacturing.

Griffin Armament Releases 3D Printed Optimus 6 Suppressors

June 3rd, 2025

Watertown, WI – May 30th, 2025

Griffin Armament’s history with metal printed suppressors goes back to 2008 with prototype applications.  We felt the technology was neither developed nor cost-effective enough to be viable and publicly accepted for a long portion of that time.  The hope of more manufacturing applications in other industries being supported and costs of equipment reducing, as well as capabilities and technology increasing, were considerable factors in waiting for the technology to mature.  Griffin’s Optimus® 6 is our first printed production suppressor.  The Optimus® 6 is a powder metal additive manufactured 6mm capable suppressor optimized for the 5.56mm AR-15 platform.  Complex internal baffle geometries were painstakingly prototyped and tested to yield a suppressor with low system backpressure and exceptional flash reduction.

The Optimus® 6 is constructed entirely of 17-4 H900 Heat-Treated Stainless Steel, and is available in three mounting variations: DUAL-LOK®, Griffin Taper Mount, and an industry-standard HUB (1.375×24 TPI) interface for use with HUB mount adapters. The printed baffle stack is welded to a machined rear housing that bears the serial number making warranty and repair work performable without the need to resubmit the lengthy Form 4 process for a new serial number. This is a problem with fully printed cans that hasn’t been adequately addressed in the market.  A 1.73” outer diameter was chosen to allow increased internal volume – contributing to its sub-140 dB SPL.

Flash reduction is often seen as more important than sound reduction for military and LE applications, but both categories tend to suffer when creating suppressors with very low-restrictive baffling. The Optimus® 6 endcap was developed to address the inherent increase in flash signature coupled with LBP suppressors. This unique quad-prong end cap features complex internal and external flash-hiding geometries to bring highly competitive flash suppression to the LBP suppressor market. The Optimus® 6 is a thoughtful combination of traditional and new technologies yielding a low backpressure suppressor that is easily repairable, highly durable, at a reasonable weight, while exhibiting top of the line sound and flash reduction at a lower price than many other printed suppressors on the market.

“Making suppressors that have good acoustic performance, with a high quality to cost ratio has been important to Griffin over our 20 years in industry. We’ve seen the demand grow over the past number of years for suppressors that run more transparently to the firearm they are attached to- minimizing backpressure being one of the ideal solutions. Additive manufacturing has advantages and disadvantages that vary depending on the process.  In some aspects, it improves the ease with which a geometry is created, and in others, there are limitations like low overhang angles that are impossible depending on the method used.  We are happy to introduce the Optimus 6 to market, and to begin using additive manufacturing for some of our suppressor designs.  The Optimus 6 is one of the most-performing 5.56mm cans I have used.  One of the first customers to see the suppressor was a Law Enforcement department that liked the suppressor enough to place a large pre-order. Several of the people who I work with at Griffin were impressed with the suppressor and made the decision to make it their free suppressor for 2025, as one of our employee benefits is a free suppressor every year an employee completes with the company, if the employee wishes to take advantage of that benefit.”

Austin, Lead Design Engineer, Griffin Armament

Key Points:

Low Backpressure – Rated up to 6mm ARC

Additive Manufactured Baffle Stack, End Cap, and Tube Body

Machined Mounting Interface and external diameter

Full 17-4PH Heat-Treated Stainless Steel Construction

High-Temp Cerakote Finish (Black or FDE Available)

Choice of Mounting System: DUAL-LOK®, Taper Mount, or HUB

Full Auto Rated (60 rounds then allow to cool to ambient temperature)

High-Flow FlashKiller End Cap Provides Exceptional Flash Reduction

Perpetual Lifetime Warranty™

Specs:

Diameter: 1.73”

Mounting System: DUAL-LOK®, Taper Mount, or HUB (1.375×24 TPI)

Overall Length: 6.02” (HUB)  |  6.68” (DUAL-LOK®)  |  6.59” (Taper Mount)

Weight: 15.2 oz (HUB)  |  17.2 oz (DUAL-LOK®)  |  16.5 oz (Taper Mount)

MSRP: $699.95 (HUB)  |  $869.95 (DUAL-LOK®)  |  $809.95 (Taper Mount)

To find out more on Griffin Armament’s entire product line, please visit our website at www.GriffinArmament.com.

Introducing the Gentex LX9 Liner System, An Affordable, Drop-In Liner Upgrade for US Military Combat Helmets

June 3rd, 2025

CARBONDALE, PA, June 03, 2025 – Gentex Corporation is pleased to announce the Gentex LX9 Liner System, available now. This drop-in replacement liner is compatible with a broad range of commonly used ground combat helmets and is optimized for comfort and stability in a lightweight package. As part of its adoption, Gentex will deliver over 18,000 systems tothe US Army for use in the NG-IHPS helmet system in 2025.

“Our LX9 Liner System gives users a lightweight, high-performance upgrade to instantly increase in-use comfort,” said Kevin Reilly, Segment Director of Close Combat at Gentex Corporation. “The customizable and configurable design allows for the end user to tailor the fit to maximize airflow and reduce hotspots.”

The system is designed to provide unmatched comfort for ground combat helmets, including ACH, ECH, and NG-IHPS models. Featuring advanced breathability and absorbency, itincludes a 9-piece EPP and comfort foam pad set, which includes a redesigned brow pad for added stability. It’scustomizable, one-size-fits-all design allows for easy adjustments using existing hook-and-loop mounting locations in the helmet shell. This enhances airflow, reduces hot spotscommonly found in today’s standard issue 7-pad system, and better accommodates headband-mounted communication systems. Lightweight, durable, and adaptable, it ensures optimal fit and comfort for users in demanding environments.

At under 66 grams, the LX9 Liner System is the lightest lineroption on the market today, reducing overall head system weightwhile maintaining needed impact protection. It has been developed to provide impact protection exceeding AR/PD 10-02 in a wide variety of common helmets.

For more information or to place your order for the Gentex LX9 Liner System visit shop.gentexcorp.com/lx9-liner-system.

$20M DIU “Project GI” Challenge Will Help Services Test and Scale Next-Generation UAS Solutions Across Domains

June 3rd, 2025

Challenge to focus on three key missions and their related specific operational constraints as identified by operators

Washington, DC (June 2, 2025)  – Emerging threats from peer and near-peer uncrewed systems (UxS) have reshaped the character of war, necessitating the development of new solutions at a faster pace. Warfighters require UxS systems today to meet urgent operational needs. The Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) is using a new and agile process to evaluate new technologies, involve warfighters early in development, and advance the prototyping, iterating and fielding of technologies that can deliver operational advantage at speed.

Project G.I. will more rapidly identify, assess, iterate and then integrate “ready now” autonomous solutions at scale for participating units. Platforms of interest include Uncrewed Aerial Systems (UAS) and supporting items. 

“Today, warfighters lack the unmanned systems needed to train for combat and prevail if called upon to use them,” said Doug Beck, director of DIU. “DIU is laser focused on getting best-of-breed technology in the hands of the warfighter today and scaling it for training,adoption, and readiness. Our team continues to partner with military operators for hands on testing, evaluation, and feedback. Doing this at speed will in turn help catalyze the necessary scaling and readiness through major acquisition and training efforts across the Services that will deliver strategic impact – and will simultaneously support the flywheel of American private sector dynamism in delivering against that strategic need.”

Project G.I. improves upon current programs of record by incorporating end-user feedback and slashing delivery timelines that can stretch years into the future. The effort will tap into high Technical Readiness Level (TRL) solutions in the small and medium uncrewed system industry, with a focus on less exquisite platforms well suited for rapid adaptation to military needs. 

Project G.I. is open for submissions now through December 31, 2025. Submissions should feature mature, mission-ready capabilities that can participate in live evaluations within three months of this solicitation’s release. A prize funding pool of $20M will be awarded across the three Design Reference Missions (DRM’s) noted in the full Challenge details, pending Congressional notification.

An “Ask Me Anything” webinar will be held to interested participants on June 17, 2025 from 2-3pm ET.

Learn more and apply here.

Ghost Robotics’ Manipulator Arm Debuts at CANSEC

June 3rd, 2025

During last week’s CANSEC conference in Ottawa I had the opportunity to observe the new Manipulator Arm in action.

A payload accessory for the Vision 60 Quadraped Unmanned Ground Vehicle, it offers seamless integration with 6 Degrees of Freedom. The arm will extend up to 1 meter.

It is designed to be back-driveable, mirroring the robot’s leg robustness while enabling direct force-sensing through the motors. This allows precise manipulation and even door opening. Despite 25 lbs of gripping force, with cameras in the pincers and force feedback, it won’t crush what it’s holding unless you want it crushed.

The control system automatically coordinates the arm with the body and legs to increase the reach and force capabilities of the combined system. This integrated arm finds applications in EOD, manufacturing, disaster response, and hazardous environments, enhancing productivity and safety.

In Canada, Ghost Robotics systems are available through Millbrook Tactical.