Cubic and AgustaWestland integrate attack
helicopters
into U.K. combat training system
For first time ever, Apache AH Mk. 1 and Lynx helicopters
to join troops
and vehicles in force-on-force exercises
at Salisbury Plain Training Area
SAN DIEGO,
Calif. – June 15, 2005 -- Cubic Defense Applications
(CDA), the defense segment of Cubic Corporation (AMEX:CUB),
working with AgustaWestland,
has just delivered an upgrade to the United Kingdom’s Area Weapons Effects
Simulator (AWES) that will allow Apache AH Mk. 1 and Lynx attack helicopters
to participate in instrumented force-on-force training exercises. This unprecedented
combined helicopter-ground training capability is available now at the AWES
training facility at the Salisbury Plain Training Area, and will be expanded
to the AWES site in Canada later this year.
“For the first time, attack helicopters have been
instrumented to participate in force-on-force combat training
maneuvers at the battle group level,” said Gary Shrock,
vice president in charge of Cubic’s AWES program. “Before
the upgrade, AWES was already the most advanced combat training
system in operation in the world today. Integrating attack
helicopters into the AWES training environment ratchets up
the realism of AWES training to the next level, and is a
giant step toward achieving a fully integrated combat training
environment, providing helicopter position tracking and real-time
outcome.”
The AWES upgrade brings together two important
programs that Cubic has been involved with – the Apache AH Mk.
1 Collective Training System (CTS), developed by AgustaWestland,
and AWES, developed by Cubic. The integration work is being
performed under the post-design services portion of Cubic’s
$100 million contract to develop the AWES system, which went
into service at SPTA in late 2002 and a year later at the
British Army Training Unit Suffield (BATUS) in Alberta, Canada.
With its large-scale Tactical Engagement
Simulation (TES) capability, AWES provides unprecedented
realism for simulated
force-on-force battles. AWES simulates artillery, mortar
fire, smoke, nuclear, biological, chemical attacks, mines
and air-delivered munitions during the simulated battles.
Participants in the training exercises are equipped with
digital communications that indicate their position, weapons
fired and casualty status. Soldier and vehicle instrumentation
systems integrate portions of the British Army’s existing
Direct Fire Weapons Engagement System with Cubic’s
Multiple Integrated Laser Engagement System (MILES 2000).
Using range provided by the AgustaWestland Class 1 eye-safe
Training Laser System and CTS, the Apache AH Mk. 1 can engage
AWES players with its full array of weapons.
“With this new capability, helicopter crews can participate
in real-life scenarios in which they will have a chance to
employ their best tactics to strike at targets and avert
enemy defenses,” said Doug Grunewald, Cubic program
manager for the AWES Collective Training System (CTS) effort.
Up to 34 helicopters will now be able to participate in
AWES scenarios involving more than 1,200 dismounted troops
and 250 vehicles. Cubic will provide attack helicopter capability
at the AWES system at BATUS later this year.
Cubic and partner company ICE worked for
AgustaWestland on the Apache AH Mk. 1 CTS for the United
Kingdom Ministry
of Defence. The CTS entered service at the Dishforth training
site in the U.K. in mid-2003, followed by service at the
Wattisham training area. The CTS provides live helicopter
training that allows crews to practice target acquisition
and strike while defending themselves against simulated ground
threats. The system makes use of geometric pairing and digital
RF communications technology, using GPS positioning and orientation
data received from the helicopter to establish locations,
orientation and weapons-aiming angles. This positioning is
then used in conjunction with weapons simulation to determine
outcomes. The system also provides simulated threat signals
to the helicopter’s HIDAS (Helicopter Integrated Defensive
Aids Suite) technology, which is designed to recognize threats
and select and implement countermeasures during combat.
The Cubic Defense Applications group, one
of Cubic Corporation’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 Web site at www.cubic.com.