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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF OCTOBER 18,1996 PSA#1703CECOM Acquisition Center, Ground Support Branch, AMSEL-AC-CC, 10109
Gridley Road, Suite 200, Fort Belvoir, VA 22060-5843 A -- MARKET SURVEY FOR NON-DEVELOPMENTAL SURVIVABLE VEHICLE MOUNTED
MINE DETECTOR DUE 111296 POC Peggy A. Melanson, Contracting Officer,
703-704-2168 Kelly Sherbondy, Project Engineer, 703-704-2448. Market
Survey for a Non-Developmental Survivable Vehicle Mounted Mine
Detector. Survivable Vehicle Mounted Mine Detection System DUE 111296
POC Kelly Sherbondy, (703) 704-2448. The Countermine Division, CECOM
Night Vision Electronic Sensors Directorate, Ft. Belvoir, VA, is
seeking sources for an operationally tested, integrated sensor-vehicle
system which is field ready for survivable vehicle mounted mine
detection. Suppliers must have experience developing and manufacturing
metallic mine detectors and mine resistant vehicles. Suppliers must
have proven production processes and facilities for production of a
limited number of vehicles. This must be a non-developmental system
with availability of systems for acceptance testing 120 days after a
signed contractual agreement with the Government. A contract award is
anticipated as early as July 1997. The following elements are
requirements of the vehicle mounted system for consideration in this
survey: (1) a integrated sensor-vehicle system supporting road clearing
operations, (2) a detector with a three meter path width and
self-nulling and discriminating detection capabilities, (3) a
Probability of Detection (Pd) of .90 for buried metallic mines and
mines with low-metallic content on unpaved roads, (4) real time data
processing and data presentation which provides a display to the
operator and then marks the mine location with an integrated
mine-marking capability, mine markers shall be visible day and night,
(5) blast protection for the vehicle operator/crew against
overpressure, shock, and fragmentation from mine blasts, (6) a support
concept allowing the operator/crew to restore the vehicle and sensor
system in place to its operational capability within one hour after
sustaining a mine blast, (7) commercial technical manuals in English
enabling the operator/crew to repair and service the system, (8) an
operator/crew training plan for Career Management Field (CMF) 12B
Combat Engineer skill levels, and (9) human factors engineering and
safety features which are consistent with standard commercial practices
and which are adaptable for use by the U.S. Army through either
training, technical manuals, or labeling features. Elements 1 through
9 above must all be addressed by respondents and evidence must be
provided to demonstrate satisfaction of these requirements. The Army is
also interested in redundant capabilities, proofing and other methods
which ensure that mines which escape detection by the sensor are
neutralized. Evidence provided must include results of recent (within
the last year) independent operational testing and evaluation and
survivability testing with real mine blasts. Independent operational
testing and evaluation is defined as testing of production
representative end-items with representative soldiers in conditions
representative of the mission profile by an organization independent of
the developer which is chartered to provide such assessments. Reports
of survivability testing with real mine blasts shall be provided in a
classified annex to the formal response to this survey. Classification
procedures should follow standard industrial security practices.
(0290) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0005 19961017\A-0005.SOL)
A - Research and Development Index Page
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