Cubic
Developing Urban Training Instrumentation for Australia
SAN
DIEGO, Calif. – Feb. 21, 2007 -- The defense segment of Cubic
Corporation (Amex: CUB) has received a contract to supply indoor
and outdoor combat training instrumentation for Australia’s
new Urban Operations Training Facility (UOTF) planned for the Shoalwater
Bay Training Area. The flexible, expandable instrumentation is
a key component of the larger training initiative, the Joint Combined
Training Capability, which will bring together Australia and U.S.
forces for live, virtual and constructive training exercises.
The capabilities Cubic will be providing for the urban facility will include
player tracking, video recording, audio and visual effects, centralized exercise
control, virtual weapon effects and the capability to conduct multimedia after-action
reviews. The system will be interoperable with the U.S. Initial Homestation Training
System (I-HITS) and Australia’s LAND-134 Combat Training Capability for
infantry and armor forces, allowing soldiers participating in training exercises
to move seamlessly from an open terrain training range through an urban environment.
The urban environment of the UOTF includes a number of city precincts (commercial,
retail, residential, shanty, rubble) constructed from both standard buildings
and container based structures. Australian contractor Royal Wolf is providing
the UOTF container-based structures.
“ Cubic’s indoor/outdoor instrumentation is the ideal training tool
for training tasks ranging from routine collective training to joint training,
mission rehearsal and special operations,” said Ray Barker, senior vice
president in charge of Cubic’s Readiness Systems Business Unit.
Plans are for new urban training instrumentation to be installed in the first
quarter of 2007, in time for the Talisman Sabre 07 Australia-U.S. binational
training exercise. Soldiers will wear either LAND 134 or U.S. I-HITS radio/GPS
player instrumentation as they navigate the UOTF buildings, structures and tunnels.
Relay radio stations will provide real time communications to those soldiers
throughout the village. IR (Infra-Red) Trackers will “mark” individual
players with unique location ID codes as they move through doors, halls and tunnels.
In addition, the IR Tracker passes collateral threat from direct fire and/or
IED simulators to the occupants of a building.
Cubic’s GPS, IR Trackers and video cameras will capture the soldiers’ movements
in both the outdoor and urban/indoor terrain. Weapon engagements, including shooting
through walls, provide the engagement data to Cubic’s exercise control
(EXCON) subsystem for a comprehensive display of all training actions, indoors
and outdoors. Each analyst workstation will be equipped with a Cubic PC-based
Range Instrumentation System (PC-RIS) display, allowing 2D and 3D views of player
locations within their surroundings. The soldier in the field will see and hear
smoke, artillery fire, shouting and other visual and sound effects controlled
by an analyst operator.
The first major milestone in the UOTF project will take place the first quarter
of 2007, after Royal Wolf installs and Cubic instruments the containers in the
Shoalwater Bay Training Area for the Talisman Sabre 07 exercise.
“ The UOTF is a critical element of the JCTC capabilities being demonstrated
during the TS’07 exercise,” said Dianna Granum, vice president of
business development for Readiness Systems and Cubic’s Australasia Account
Manager. “The UOTF, integrated with LAND-134 CTC, IHITS and ultimately
the Air Combat Manoeuvring Instrumentation (ACMI) system, which provides for
air-ground weapons scoring capabilities, demonstrates Cubic’s unique position
in the area of live Joint Combined Training.”
Cubic Defense Applications, one of Cubic's two major segments, is a world leader
in realistic combat training systems, mission support services and defense electronics.
The corporation's other major segment, Cubic Transportation Systems, designs
and manufactures automatic fare collection systems for public mass transit authorities.
For more information about Cubic, see the company's website at www.cubic.com.