XC3 Weaponlight

Olive Drab Project – Quad NOD Lamp

November 18th, 2023

If you’re looking for something to spruce up the mancave, check out the Quad NOD Lamp from Olive Drab Project.

Specs:

Overall Height 13.8 inches
NODs Width 8.7 in
NODs thickness 4 in
NODs Depth Around 5 inches
lamp base 6.25” in diameter
lamp features LED bulbs is rechargeable

Pre-orders are up now. They are also offering Lamp themed morale patches and T-shirts.

olivedrabproject.com/shop

You Never Know Where They’ll Show Up

November 18th, 2023

I expect to see some great photos start flowing in like this one from our friends at Austria’s Claw Gear.

Grey Birch MFG Introduces La Chassis 700

November 17th, 2023

The Grey Birch MFG La Chassis 700 is the result of years of customer demand requesting a centre fire product.

Extensive R&D in the rimfire space has allowed us to design & manufacture one of the best centre fire chassis offerings in market. The 700 has the most features & customizations available on any centre fire chassis. This allows the end user to fully configure the chassis to meet their individual requirements, creating the most comfortable & versatile setup possible.

The La Chassis 700 comes in at a feathery 2lbs 11oz. Keeping the chassis low weight as a baseline allows you to customize the weight distribution however you like. La Chassis 700 also features a built in barricade stop that increases your overall stability while shooting, an adjustable magazine release, a stoppable bubble level and of course a folding stock.

www.gbmfg.co

XTech Tactical adds Easy Load Follower and 2-packs for MTX 365 for Sig Sauer P365

November 17th, 2023

November 17th, 2023

Tempe, Arizona

XTech Tactical is proud to announce its Easy Load Follower and its new MTX 365 2-packs. All products are for the standard frame Sig Sauer P365 pistol 10 round magazine.

XTech Tactical released its now very popular MTX 365 magazine extension for the Sig Sauer® P365® in 2022. All kits will now ship with XTech Tactical’s Easy Load Follower. The follower makes the loading of the 12th and 13th rounds much easier for the consumer with zero compromise of reliability or last round hold open.

MSRP is now $21.95 for the MTX 365

MSRP for the 2-packs MTX 365 is $39.95

www.xtechtactical.com/product/mtx-p365-plus-3-round-magazine-extender-with-spring

The followers can be purchased off the company’s website for $2.95. The followers are intended for use with the MTX 365 kits only.

www.xtechtactical.com/product/mtx-365-easy-load-follower

“Our company is committed to continuously improving. The fact our patents make us the only solution in the world to extend the Sig Sauer P365 10rd magazines, does not stop us from hearing our customers. Several customers had challenges in loading the 12th and 13th rounds. We have seen 100% of these customers have any loading issues solved when using our new follower”, stated Jeremy Deadman, Director of Sales and Marketing.

About the MTX 365:

With the MTX 365 installed, the user can easily maintain a complete grip on firearm, a full purchase of the palm area and a proper high grip on the pistol frame. The aesthetics of the extender match the P365 frame with a functional texture on the side panels for rapid extraction if needed. The MTX 365 +3 extender includes an extended 17-7 stainless steel spring. The MTX 365 provides flawless function and last round hold open while being incredibly durable made of a high impact glass filled Nylon 6. Introductory MSRP is an unbelievable $19.95 USD, and all components are 100% made in the USA.

The product uses both of the company’s now issued US utility patents for magazine extensions, US11408697B2 and US11168954B1. The MTX© line up now includes options for:

Sig Sauer P365 9mm 10rd Magazines

Smith & Wesson M&P Shield 1.0 & 2.0 in both 9mm and .40 S&W

Smith & Wesson M&P9 Full Size 1.0 & 2.0 in 9mm

Heckler & Koch VP9/P30 Full Size in both 9mm & .40 S&W

Heckler & Koch VP9sk/P30sk in both 9mm and .40 S&W

Coming Soon:

Sig Sauer P365 380 10rd Magazines

Sig Sauer P365 9mm 12rd Magazines

Sig Sauer P365 9mm 10rd Magazine +0

The company is in active development to continue the expansion of its MTX© line up.

www.xtechtactical.com/product/mtx-p365-plus-3-round-magazine-extender-with-spring

S.O.Tech Gentleman’s Tactical Travel Case

November 17th, 2023

The GTTC is a travel case designed for your EDC / travel accessories. Front zip compartment accommodates various documents such as passports, wallets, cash, etc. while the interior 5 elastic loops accommodate various accessories such as knives, lights and watches.

GTTC is padded with a soft interior lid. The interior slash pocket also accommodates various documents. Back of the GTTC has hook Velcro that includes a cover when not in use. Most S.O.Tech bags are loop lined so you can securely attach the GTTC inside without worrying about it falling out when the bag is opened. Pals webbing is also present if you wish to attach to a belt or outside of a bag.

Bags go live today, Friday 11/17 12pm PST. Ships immediately.

sotechtactical.com

Integris Composites Launches Rapid Don/Doff Body Armor at Milipol Paris

November 17th, 2023

Integris seeks feedback from military and law enforcement on its new soft armor vests

PARIS—Integris Composites, the global leader in armor protection for the world’s elite military and law-enforcement units, invites active military and law enforcement people attending Milipol Paris 2023 to visit Stand 5 F009 and review prototypes of the company’s new Rapid Don/Doff body-armor vests, making their debut at the event.

New Integris Composites Soft Body Armor

Soft body-armor vests, carriers and tactical gear constitute a new category of personal protection from Integris Composites, the new name for TenCate Advanced Armour.

“For more than 25 years the company has been the go-to producer of ballistic plates that slide into the pockets of vests and carriers made by body armor manufacturers and used by the world’s leading military and law enforcement teams,” said Jan Grimberg, the senior vice president of marketing and sales EMEA at Integris.

“Moving one step further in the value chain, we are developing a new system of ballistic vest gear for law-enforcement and military units. Milipol marks the first public presentation of equipment that dramatically reduces time for donning and doffing one’s body armor rig—by 50 percent or more,” said Stephen Jackson, regional director Turkey, Middle East & Africa.

Public debut of the Integris Rapid Don/Doff vests is taking place at Integris Composites Stand 5 F009 during Milipol Paris 2023, Nov. 14–17 at the Paris-Nord Villepinte Exhibition Centre.

Early versions of Integris Rapid Don/Doff vests/carriers have been tested in recent months by law enforcement groups in Eastern Europe and the Asia-Pacific region, as well as by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).

During Milipol, military and police visitors in active service will be invited to test three prototype vests, each featuring a different magnetic latch and Rapid Don/Doff one-side or two-side opening system.

Message to Police and Military Users

“Our message to users? ‘Put it on and take it off as many times as you want. We want to hear your questions.’ We are not telling people, ‘This is what you need.’ We are saying, ‘Tell us what you need, and we will deliver. We are committed to making the gear you want and need,’” said Jackson.

Integris Composites Magnetic Buckle System

“Using our magnetic buckle system, they can take it off, put it on in two seconds —much faster than traditional gear with only hook-and-loop Velcro® fasteners. Even more, it enables us to create a personalized fit the first time it is set up. Users are now able to rapidly don and doff vests repeatedly without losing their settings,” added Jackson.

Integris is also displaying standard vests, custom-designed plate carriers and shields that are also part of the personal protection portfolio.

New Focus for Integris

“Integris began a pivot from a standalone supplier of ballistic plates into the role of an end-to-end solution integrator in early 2022 and we are continuing to build momentum following the announcement of our name change in September,” explained Grimberg.

Integris Composites Facility in France

“The company is becoming a full-spectrum supplier of the highest level of personal protection for military forces and law enforcement. “We want to position Integris as a holistic protection company—the resource for whatever protection you need,” Grimberg added.

Integris is an engineering company and the manufacturer of composite armor for land vehicles, aircraft, naval craft, protective housing for optronics and other sensitive technology in addition to personal protection gear. The company’s scope includes the design, development, production, sales, and services of composite armor solutions. Integris’ product portfolio consists of panels or ready-to-install kits made from high-strength materials like HDPE, aramids and ceramics. For more information go to: www.integriscomposites.com.

FirstSpear Friday Focus – Fight Panel Sneak Peek

November 17th, 2023

A search for panels, placards and chest rigs these days will reveal linear products that function well in one or two of these realms. What if a chest rig could go beyond the shoulder straps? What if a placard could go beyond the hook and loop? What if all of these could be wrapped into a modular and functional kit… with Tubes?

FirstSpear didn’t have to ask what if, those at the Tip of The Spear asked this of us… we answered the call. Coming December 2023.

Visit FirstSpear to find American Made kit and accessories, Built For The X.

Army Test and Evaluation Command Hosts Multi-domain Operations Test Demonstration

November 17th, 2023

ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. — The U.S. Army Test and Evaluation Command executed its first Multi-Domain Operations Distributed Live, Virtual, Constructive Initial Operational Capability Demonstration across ATEC’s geographically diverse sites on Oct. 19.

This demonstration was the culmination of an ATEC enterprise modernization project, comprised of eight ATEC subordinate organizations on a distributed network, to establish an MDO scale distributed LVC test environment.

“The key focus of this event was to tie the ATEC subordinate organizations across the country on a distributed test network,” said Dr. Ken LeSueur, lead technical coordinator of the event supporting the U.S. Army Redstone Test Center. “We wanted to exercise a mixture of live, virtual and constructive elements operating on an MDO scale test scenario across that environment, collect data in that environment and push toward real-time visualization and analysis of that data.”

The event executed seven MDO land, air, space and cyberspace scenarios, that consisted of more than 60 live military systems, virtual assets and constructive simulations. Transformative data collection, real-time display and cloud-based data analytics on the representative tactical and simulated systems were executed in the event.

Mason Rowe, who served as the data collection, reduction, analysis and visualization lead for the event with the U.S. Army Evaluation Center, provided insight on the importance of near real-time analytics. “The significance of what we demonstrated today with our near real-time data analytics is proving that by embedding analysts and evaluators into the test itself, we can provide in-stride, data-driven insights using data dashboards and visualizations throughout test execution. Rather than waiting weeks after a test to have analysis ready datasets on-hand, we were able to shorten the data collection-reduction-analysis timeline to less than 60 seconds using automated, cloud-based processes.”

“This is beneficial for everyone,” said Rowe. “The testers will know what’s going on during the test allowing gaps to be identified so they can be immediately addressed rather than needing to schedule a follow-on test. The system owners will know what’s going on with their system allowing deep dives into the data to troubleshoot any errors or problems that can be fixed on the spot. And leadership will be provided the up-to-date insights and the health status of how a test is running through ongoing assessment of the data that was collected … ‘Is it the right data, does it answer your learning demands that you have for this test and is it going to be worthy for use in evaluation after the fact.’”

Paul Weimer, division chief for the cyber and electromagnetic affects division with ATC, explained that given where the Army is headed with MDO, the only way to get there is by learning how systems interoperate at scale, and that capability was highlighted in this demonstration. “This occurred in an environment where you’ve got live systems interacting with virtual systems cooperatively at scale. Innovative networks, constructive simulations and a talented workforce made that possible. If you embrace and invest in modeling and simulation early in the acquisition process, it will pay dividends throughout the life cycle of a system.”

“This exercise brought a lot of firsts for ATEC. Even though the concept of doing distributed testing isn’t new, it really hasn’t been done at the scale and complexity that we touched on today. This is a significant step in the right direction, but we are not at the end goal. We were able show the test and evaluation community what is in the realm of possible, but this effort also helped us identify our strengths, weaknesses, and gaps so we can take the right steps to achieve full operational capability to support the Army experimentation and testing.”

Although all the ATEC subordinate organizations were involved in the demonstration, ATC and RTC were the backbone behind this effort. According to LeSueur, RTC has had an extensive history of LVC distributed testing and ATC has the chamber, resources and infrastructure. “Each organization was essential in bringing this together. I think we moved all ATEC up a significant notch being able to perform this type of testing and methodology. We accomplished a lot of training across the command doing this.”

The Test Resource Management Center’s Joint Mission Environment Test Capability Multiple Independent Levels of Security Network served as the foundation for the demonstration. It was managed and supported by TRMC’s National Cyber Range Complex, and the network was tailored for this event. “From project initiation through execution, TRMC’s NCRC project planners and network designers worked closely with ATEC to establish new network nodes at several ATEC sites as well as configure, test and tune the network for the application,” said Weimer.

James Amato, ATEC’s executive technical director/deputy to the commander, stated that leveraging TRMC’s capabilities will enable us to link our capability with other services and allies so we can literally test like we fight, as a joint and combined force.

ATEC Commanding General, Maj. Gen. James J. Gallivan, concluded the demonstration by stating, “this capability gives the Army an environment to support distributed user involved developmental and operational system-of-systems experimentation and testing at scale.”

The MDO Distributed LVC IOC falls under the digital transformation line of effort within the ATEC Next Campaign Plan, with an end goal to have systems and processes in place to perpetually modernize the people, equipment and infrastructure to remain trusted by senior leaders for decisions.

Brian Kelly, ATEC’s chief data officer, said that ATEC is leading test and evaluation for the Army through an enterprise-wide digital transformation that leverages a hybrid cloud environment to develop a data mesh. The ATEC data mesh leverages various Army enterprise cloud services to expose and control access to data for DoD and its partners. “ATEC’s digital transformation is well underway and will serve as a shining example of an Army Business Mission Area organization meeting the intent of HQDA CIO and G6 data and cloud strategies.”

By Lindsey Grubb