Cubic’s
Optical Combat Identification System to be Evaluated
During Major U.K.-U.S. Demonstration This Fall
O-CIDS offers solution to problem of fratricide
SAN
DIEGO, Calif. – Sept. 6, 2005 -- The defense segment
of Cubic Corporation (AMEX:CUB) has received a $3.4 million
contract from the U.S. Army Communications-Electronics
Life Cycle Management Command to integrate Cubic’s
Optical Combat Identification System (O-CIDS) into a major
field
exercise being held this month to assess the effectiveness
of several different combat identification technologies.
Cubic Defense Applications (CDA) will participate
in the Coalition Combat Identification Advanced Concepts
Technology
Demonstration field exercise from Sept. 19 to Oct. 9 at the
Salisbury Plain Training Area in the United Kingdom. The
U.S. Joint Forces Command and NATO’s Supreme Allied
Command Transformation group are conducting the exercise
to assess how laser-, radio-frequency (RF), infrared-based
combat ID and other systems perform during realistic force-on-force
engagements involving dismounted soldiers and vehicles. Cubic
is the only company demonstrating a completely laser-based
system -- O-CIDS.
Cubic’s O-CIDS is designed to reduce the incidence
of fratricide or “friendly fire” for ground troops,
vehicle crews and aircraft. The system provides the shooter
with information about the target, including if it is a known “friend,” and
also provides the range to the target with a low probability
of detection, interception or jamming. Cubic hopes to provide
air-to-ground combat ID capability in a future generation
of the system.
If the target is visible with or without
optical aids such as night-vision or thermal sights, shooters
can interrogate
the target and get a response without any perceptible time
increase to engage a target. This means that the shooter
is not in a vulnerable position while waiting for the target’s
response. Future features include point-to-point voice and
data communications to allow the shooter and the target to
talk or transmit data to each other.
“Over the years, Cubic’s laser-based combat
training systems have helped save many lives,” said
Walter J. Zable, chairman and CEO of Cubic Corporation. “O-CIDS
is a logical extension of the life-saving technology that
we already manufacture now.”
Zable noted that during the wars of the last
century, the rate of U.S. deaths that occurred as a result
of “friendly
fire” incidents ranged from 10 percent to 25 percent.
“We believe Cubic’s O-CIDS system is technologically
superior and more affordable than other combat ID systems
now proposed, including radio-based and infrared approaches,” said
Max Farrow, senior vice president of Engineering for Cubic
Defense Applications. “It offers the added benefit
of conserving bandwidth, since laser systems do not operate
in the same spectrum as most other tactical communications
technologies.”
Cubic’s O-CIDS system has been certified
eye-safe by a U.S. government testing laboratory.
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.