In late October, the U.S. Army announced it had selected QinetiQ North America to provide more soldier-wearable gunshot detection systems to troops in Afghanistan.
On Oct. 29, the Army Research, Development and Engineering Command awarded a $35 million contract to QinetiQ North America to purchase Soldier Worn Acoustic Targeting Systems (SWATS), according to Army spokeswoman Alayne Conway. The contact will allow the Army to field 13,500 more of the systems.
The QinetiQ and BBN systems work similarly, with a wrist display that provides a clock location for the shooter after the gunshot is detected by an acoustic sensor worn on the soldier's shoulder.QinetiQ beat out Raytheon-subsidiary BBN's Boomerang Warrior X, an adaptation of the company's vehicle-mounted Boomerang system.
QinetiQ's vehicle, fixed-site and soldier kits all use the same sensor, allowing the soldier to interchange them, Mike Halas, business development manager at QinetiQ North America, said.
After an operation, the soldier can take the sensor out of the SWATS container, put it on the truck accessory and drive back to base, Halas said.
In response to soldier feedback, QinetiQ also lightened SWATS, which now weighs less than a pound, Halas said.
The Army has already fielded thousands of sniper detection systems for soldiers, vehicles and bases, but thousands more are needed and long overdue, USA Today reported in June. To meet this need, Congress approved $50 million to purchase more of them in a 2009 supplemental spending bill.
Starting two years ago, the Army began purchasing roughly 2,000 of the SWATS systems. The service's Rapid Equipping Force purchased another 2,050 for $13 million in March, according to the USA Today report. This left $37 million of the appropriated $50 million.
The Army has said that the delay was due to an evaluation of the numbers needed, but also because of the available technologies.
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