Cubic Introduces
Tetherless M-4 Training Rifle
The Cubic Corporation (AMEX: CUB) is introducing a tetherless
version of the M-4 training rifle, fitted with a gas-operated
recoil and wireless link, allowing for greater freedom of movement
and more realism during tactical simulations. The new simulator
battery operated weapons are linked to the EST via 2.4GHz wireless
connection. The recoil is gas activated by an integral compressed
CO2 cartridge housed in either the ammunition magazine or in
attachments to the simulated weapon.
The tetherless training weapons can be used either with Cubic's
EST 2000 Engagement Skills Trainer or its Warrior Skills Trainer,
an enhancement to EST 2000 that enables soldiers to move around
either on foot or in a moving vehicle in a simulation environment
that replicates the weather conditions, convoy attacks and judgment
issues that arise in certain combat situations. These trainers
are used by thousands of military personnel throughout the world
to develop marksmanship, judgmental and collective training
skills.
"There has been a growing demand for the soldier to train
as they fight, and a tethered weapon can prevent movement, restricting
motion in a collective mode," said Terry Fiest, director
of Business Development for U.S. Army Programs for Cubic's Orlando
division. "A tetherless weapon is more suited to tactical
engagements and gives the soldier more latitude. We are finding
that our customers like tethered weapons for marksmanship and
they prefer tetherless for dismounted and offensive training
scenarios."
The first tetherless system was delivered in 2007 to the Mississippi
Air National Guard at the Combat Readiness Training Center in
Gulfport. Additional systems are on contract for the Wisconsin
Air National Guard's Combat Readiness Training Center at Volk
Field later this year. More than 1,000 EST 2000 systems are
operational at Army and Air Force installations worldwide, including
the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Korea, Germany,
Afghanistan, Kuwait and Iraq. Cubic's Orlando division is now
working on converting other weapons used in EST 2000 and the
Warrior Skills Training to operate in a tetherless environment.
Cubic could potentially create tetherless technology for law
enforcement users in the future. The company's Orlando site
is used as a training venue for Central Florida law enforcement
teams who want to train with Cubic's laser-based ground combat
training instrumentation.