Delivery of New Technology to Original U.S. Air Range
Writes a New Chapter in Aviation History
SAN DIEGO, California – July
27, 2010 – More than 35 years ago, Cubic Corporation (NYSE: CUB) installed
the world’s first instrumented air combat training system at the Navy Fighter
Weapons School, better known as TOPGUN. The system tracked and recorded the performance
of pilots during simulated dogfights. It took all of the guesswork out of knowing
who won the engagement by providing an electronic scoring system documenting
the outcome of each simulated weapons firing.
History has come full circle with the fielding of the fifth generation of this
system at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. Miramar was the original location
of TOPGUN before the school moved in 1996 to Naval Air Station Fallon, Nevada.
The P5 Combat Training System/Tactical Combat Training System (P5CTS/TCTS) was
installed shortly after Miramar and Fallon celebrated the 40th anniversary of
TOPGUN last year. Cubic Defense Applications, Inc., the defense systems business
of Cubic, and principal subcontractor DRS Technologies have developed the P5CTS/TCTS.
Installing TCTS, as the system is known to Navy and Marine Corps aviators, means
that this generation of Miramar fighter pilots has the capability to train anywhere,
anytime without the need for a fixed ground infrastructure. Portable airborne
and ground subsystems make the system “rangeless,” and that is changing
the scenery of training for the six F/A-18 Hornet squadrons at Miramar.
Instead of flying over mostly inland and desert airspace shared with MCAS Yuma
and Naval Air Facility El Centro, they can soar over the deep blue sea of the
Pacific, where advanced flight maneuvers can take place.
“
It has added a tremendous amount of flexibility,” said Major Paul Mackenzie,
director of safety and standardization for VMFA(AW)-121, the USMC’s venerable
Green Knights squadron.
Miramar’s TCTS notched its first joint use during a large training exercise
off the coast of San Diego in January.
“
We were working in correlation with Air Force units that were down here and a
couple of Navy units as well,” explained another Green Knight, Capt. Jonathan
Ashmore. “We were able to all fly together, then do mass debriefs where
we could replay the entire exercise using the TCTS system. It seemed very user-friendly,
and the system for us as far as debriefing worked really well.
“There were some limitations with the old system just based on range with
the ground relay system,” Ashmore added. “This one has a much better
capability further out over the water, and that enhances our training as far
as allowing us to train in different areas, not just one range specifically.
I think it would really enhance training when we are forward deployed or in other
areas.”
Cubic’s Individual Combat Aircrew Display System (ICADS™) is used
for TCTS debriefs. With ICADS, aircrews can evaluate their performance in formal
debriefing theaters or on laptops using two-dimensional, three-dimensional and
multiscreen views and high-resolution maps, zooming in and out on points of interest.
With these new technological advances, VMFA(AW)-121 and other fighter squadrons
at MCAS Miramar will write a new chapter in the history of instrumented air combat
training.
The TCTS system is due to become operational later this year at NAS Fallon, the
current home of TOPGUN.
Cubic Corporation is the parent company of three major business segments:
Defense Systems, Mission Support Services and Transportation Systems. Cubic Defense
Systems
is a leading provider of realistic combat training systems, cyber technologies,
asset tracking solutions, and defense electronics. Mission Support Services is
a leading provider of training, operations, maintenance, technical and other
support services. Cubic Transportation Systems is the world’s leading provider
of automated fare collection systems and services for public transit authorities.
For more information about Cubic, see the company's Web site at www.cubic.com.