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Dec 21, 2021
Download full-text PDF. Blondin, S., Kasen, D., R¨opke, F. K., Kirshner, R. P., & Mandel, K. S. 2011,. 6000 7000 8000 9000 10000.
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Category:Buildings and structures in Charlottesville, Virginia
Category:1926 establishments in VirginiaOn Monday, the head of the Marine Corps announced that the service will spend up to $20 million on a new small arms trainer vehicle that uses a 3D printer to print the parts needed for the tactical trainer.
Lieutenant General Robert T. Rudder said the Marine Corps has more than doubled its fleet of the V-150 trainer in recent years. But there’s a problem with the current models, which are “obsolete” and incapable of being maintained, he said.
“We need something to train our Marines in the next decade, not last decade,” Rudder said in a news release. “We need new, more accurate, more capable targets that can be quickly replaced when destroyed. We need a trainer that not only is battle-ready, but that also presents the operational concepts we need to train our forces to win.”
Rudder first called for the design of the vehicle at the Aspen Security Forum in October, when he said he believed 3D printing could provide “some kind of innovation” in the Marine Corps.
As part of that, he said, the service needed a “more affordable” tactical trainer than the current model, which he called “a $9 million target.”
The machine will be capable of “printing metal, plastic and composite material in small increments to form a component for the trainer,” according to Rudder. “You can put together the parts, assemble the trainer and then test it on the range.”
The prototype will be used to validate the new design. “We’ll go through every aspect of the vehicle,” Rudder said, “but when it’s done, we’ll start to order trainers.”
He said a firm has been selected to build the first prototypes and said the goal is for the program to be completed and ready to go for the fiscal year 2021 budget.
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