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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF APRIL 23,1997 PSA#1830R&D Contracting Directorate, Bldg 7, 2530 C Street, WPAFB, OH
45433-7607 A -- ENHANCED RECOGNITION AND SENSING LADAR (ERASER) FLIGHT
DEMONSTRATION SOL PRDA #97-17-AAK DUE 060697 POC Contact Edward J.
Caulfield, Contract Negotiator, (937) 255-2976 or Nancy F.I. Stormer,
Contracting Officer at (937) 255-3379 INTRODUCTION: ENHANCED
RECOGNITION AND SENSING LADAR (ERASER) FLIGHT DEMONSTRATION. Wright
Laboratory (WL) is interested in receiving proposals (technical and
cost) on the research effort described in Section B. Proposals in
response to this PRDA shall be received by 9 Jun 97, 1500 hours Eastern
Standard Time, addressed to Attn: Mr. Edward Caulfield, WL/AAKE,
Building 7, 2530 C Street, Wright-Patterson AFB, OH 45433-7607.
Proposals shall not be submitted via facsimile transmission. This is an
unrestricted solicitation. Small businesses are encouraged to propose
on all or any part of this solicitation. Proposals submitted shall be
in accordance with this announcement. Proposal receipt after the cutoff
date and time specified herein shall be treated in accordance with
restrictions of FAR 52.215-10; a copy of this provision may be obtained
from the contracting point of contact cited in Section F. There will be
no other solicitation issued in regard to this requirement. Offerors
should be alert for any amendments to this solicitation that may be
published. This PRDA may be amended to allow subsequent submission of
proposal dates. Offerors should obtain a copy of the WL Guide entitled,
"PRDA and BAA Guide for Industry". This guide was specifically designed
to assist offerors in understanding the PRDA/BAA proposal process.
Copies may be requested from the contracting point of contact or
obtained via the world wide web site: www.wl.wpafb.af.mil/contract. B
-- Requirements: (1) Technical Description: (a) SCOPE/BACKGROUND -- The
United States Air Force wishes to develop and flight demonstrate a
Non-Cooperative Target Identification (NCTI) ERASER Combat
Identification (CID) system. The primary objective is to provide the
pilot with positive, timely, and reliable target identification (ID).
An ERASER system will consist of a designator laser modified to perform
an area floodlight illumination function and a gated short-wave
infrared (SWIR) camera system (sensitive from 1.0 to 1.6 microns) to
generate a high resolution laser reflectivity image. This image is then
displayed to the pilot for unaided visual ID and/or transmitted to an
automatic target recognition (ATR) system. The modified laser
designator may illuminate at the conventional designation wavelength of
1.06 microns, but it is desired that the laser system operate at both
1.06 microns and eyesafe (greater than 1.4 microns). However, the
modified laser must always maintain the conventional designator
function at 1.06 microns. The ERASER system is intended to operate from
a manned platform, and as such, must have the necessary performance to
enhance targeting capability and increase aircrew/aircraft
survivability while reducing lifecycle costs. A program performance
goal is that the ERASER system accomplish target ID at the same
standoff range operational Forward Looking Infrared systems (FLIRs)
provide target detection. The range performance of the system should be
commensurate with conventional munition systems as well as new
generations of standoff weapons currently under development. The ERASER
sensor will be used for the final target recognition/identification
function in an NCTI mode. Non-Cooperative implies no communications or
"handshaking" occurs between the airborne platform and the potential
target. This is distinguished from Identification Friend or Foe (IFF)
modes where the aircraft interrogates the potential target and the
target responds appropriately (if friendly). Wide area search, target
detection, cueing, tracking, and accepting target coordinate handoff
from outside sources are not ERASER functions. The ERASER hardware
would be integrated with existing or emerging common aperture
FLIR/designator targeting systems. In an operational configuration and
concept of operation, a potential target is detected by radar, FLIR,
or other source, and the FLIR tracker is engaged. The laser designator
is boresighted to the center of the FLIR field-of-view, ensuring a
constant laser lock on the potential target being tracked. The ERASER
system fires a ranging pulse to set the appropriate range gates,
followed by illumination pulse(s) to generate a magnified high
resolution image of the central portion of the FLIR narrow
field-of-view. Positive target ID is made by the pilot and/or an ATR
subsystem. The target set under consideration includes tactical and/or
strategic targets both unobscured and camouflaged/obscured, theater
ballistic missile launch systems and their support vehicles, and
surface-to-air missile systems. This PRDA effort will develop a
non-cooperative ERASER Combat ID system which will culminate in an
airborne demonstration on a contractor-furnished aircraft. It will
explore sensor design trades to quantify the effects of design
decisions on sensor performance, cost, complexity, and risk. This PRDA
will define the performance requirements necessary for ERASER to
accomplish the highest confidence target recognition/identification
with the lowest false alarm rates feasible. The cockpit display
requirements to fully exploit ERASER imagery will be defined. Existing
ATR algorithm/processors will be investigated to determine their
compatibility, applicability, and potential ID performance enhancements
to overall mission performance. Lowering system life cycle cost will be
emphasized throughout the program. (b)TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS -- The
contractor shall relate United States Air Force requirements and
mission needs to the contractor's proposed demonstration
concept/hardware and define a prioritized list of platforms, mission
applications, transition paths, and program tasking. System, sensor,
and subsystem level tradeoffs shall be accomplished to define and
execute a technical program to accomplish a flight test demonstrating
long range, high confidence target ID utilizing ERASER hardware
integrated into a FLIR/designator targeting system. Areas of
consideration include, but are not limited to: rules of engagement,
weapon systems, threat laydown, standoff ranges, timelines, laser
wavelength, laser power, new laser development options, aperture size,
contrast assessment, probability of correct ID, probability of false
alarms, system stabilization and pointing requirements, fields-of-view,
camera sensitivity, pilot interface, automatic target recognition
techniques, and system reliability and maintainability (R&M) goals.
Critical technologies, long lead items, and high risk components shall
be identified in a timely manner and a plan shall be developed to
mitigate associated program risk. Possible commercial applications
shall be identified as the ERASER sensor capabilities mature and are
specifically defined. Due to the funding constraints and compressed
time period of this effort, it would be expected that existing
equipment would be used with modifications to demonstrate ERASER. The
contractor shall generate and execute a plan to integrate newly
developed ERASER hardware into their existing testbed. The plan shall
address integration, ground testing, and flight demonstration of the
ERASER system. An ERASER system shall be flight tested on a
contractor-furnished aircraft. Realtime pilot-in-the-loop assessment of
ERASER ID capability shall be accomplished. An off-line automatic
target recognition (ATR) analysis shall be accomplished to quantify ID
performance and potential performance improvements. The ERASER Flight
Demonstration sensor shall be integrated with flight-ready
contractor-owned hardware. This hardware shall include as a minimum a
target detection FLIR, FLIR tracker, and laser designator/illuminator
integrated into a rugged configuration. The hardware will incorporate
common aperture active/passive receiver paths. The ERASER system shall
perform target illumination and imagery collection at altitudes from
5,000 to 20,000 feet with 15 to 20 kilometer slant paths. A program
goal of a 25 kilometer slant range is desired. (2) Deliverable Items:
(a) The following deliverable data items shall be proposed: (i) Status
Report, DI-MGMT-80368/T, monthly; (ii) Funds and Man-hour Expenditure
Report, DI-FNCL-80331/T, monthly; (iii) Project Planning Chart,
DI-MGMT-80507A/T, monthly; (iv) Contract Funds Status Report (CFSR),
DI-MGMT-81468, quarterly; (v) Presentation Material, DI-ADMIN-81373/T,
as required; (vi) Scientific and Technical Reports, Contractor's
Billing Voucher, DI-MISC-80711/T, monthly; (vii) Scientific and
Technical Reports, DI-MISC-80711/T, (Draft and Reproducible Final);
(viii) Data Accession List (DAL), DI-MGMT-81543/T, semi-annually; (ix)
Test Procedure, Lab and Field Demo, DI-NDTI-80603/T, as required; and,
(x) Test Plan, Field Demo, DI-NDTI-80566/T. (b) The following
additional deliverable items shall be proposed: None. (3) Security
Requirements: A DD254 shall be accomplished at contract award. It is
anticipated that work performed under this contract will be classified
up to and including the SECRET level. Wright Laboratory's
"Electro-Optical Targeting Sensors Security Classification Guide",
dated 1 Sep 96 is the overall classification authority of these
efforts. (4) Other Special Requirements: International Trade in Arms
Restrictions apply. Public Law 98-94 applies to this acquisition.
Offerors must submit approved DD Form 2345, Militarily Critical
Technical Data Agreement with their proposals. C -- ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION: (1) Anticipated Period of Performance: The total length of
the technical effort is estimated to be 48 months. The contractor shall
also provide for an additional 4 months for processing and completion
of the final report. (2) Expected Award Date: 1997 August 21. (3) Air
Force Estimate: The Air Force funding profile is: FY97/39K, FY98/681K,
FY99/2240K, FY00/1850K, FY01/1000K. This funding profile is an
estimate only and is not a promise for funding as all funding is
subject to change due to Air Force discretion and availability. (4)
Type of Instrument: Contract -- Cost Plus Fixed Fee (Completion). (5)
Government Furnished Property: Government will provide access to White
Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, in the Feb -- May 2001 time period.
(6) Size Status: For the purpose of this acquisition, the size standard
is 500 employees (SIC 8731). (7) Notice to Foreign-Owned Firms: Such
firms are not eligible to propose as prime contractors for this PRDA
announcement. Such firms are asked to immediately notify the
contracting point of contact if their intent is to support a U.S.-owned
firm as a subcontractor. Foreign contractors should be aware that
restrictions may apply which could preclude their participation in this
acquisition. D-PROPOSAL PREPARATION INSTRUCTIONS: (1) General
Instructions: Offerors should apply the restrictive notice prescribed
in the provision at FAR 52.215-12, Restriction on Disclosure and Use of
Data, to trade secrets or privileged commercial and financial
information contained in their proposals. Proposal questions should be
directed to one of the points of contact listed below. Offerors should
refer to the instructions contained in the WL "PRDA and BAA Guide for
Industry" referenced in Section A of this announcement. Separate
technical and cost proposal volumes are required and must be valid for
180 days. Proposals must reference the above PRDA number. Proposals
shall be submitted in an original and five (5) copies. All responsible
sources may submit a proposal which shall be evaluated against the
criteria set forth below in Section E -- Basis of Award. Offerors are
advised that only contracting officers are legally authorized to
contractually bind or otherwise commit the Air Force. (2) Technical
Proposal: The technical proposal shall include a discussion of the
nature and scope of the research and the technical approach. Specific
instructions regarding the content and page count of the technical
proposal are provided below Section (4) -- Page Limitations. The
technical proposal shall include a Statement of Work (SOW) detailing
the technical tasks/phases proposed to be accomplished under the
proposed effort and be suitable for instrument incorporation. Offerors
should refer to the WL Guide to assist in SOW preparation. Any
questions concerning the technical proposal or SOW preparation should
be referred tothe technical point of contact cited below. (3) Cost
Proposal: Adequate price competition is anticipated. Therefore, to
permit a cost realism analysis, the submission of a SF1448, available
from the contracting point of contact, is required in lieu of a SF1411.
A suggested format for submission of cost information is available from
the contracting point of contact. Contractors are urged to use this
format (which may be tailored as needed) in the submission of cost
proposals. The accompanying cost proposal/price breakdown shall be
furnished with supporting schedules and shall contain a person-hour
breakdown per task. (4) Page Limitations: The technical proposal shall
be differentiated from the appendix to the technical proposal. The
technical proposal shall be limited to ninety (90) pages, (12 pitch or
larger type), double-spaced, single-sided, 8.5 by 11 inches page size.
This ninety (90) page limitation includes all information, i.e.,
indexes, photographs, fold-outs, graphs, schedule charts, etc., other
thanthe specific exceptions stated below, which are included in the
appendix. The appendix shall contain additional information on prior
work in this area, descriptions of available equipment, data and
facilities, and resumes of personnel who will be participating in this
effort. This appendix is limited to twenty-five (25) pages and is
subject to the identical page format conditions stated above. It is not
a separate document. Pages in excess of either of these limitations
will be removed from the proposal and will not be evaluated by the Air
Force. Cost proposals have no page limitation, however, offerors are
requested to limit cost proposals to 30 pages as a goal. (5)
Preparation Cost: This announcement does not commit the Air Force to
pay for any proposal preparation cost. The cost of preparing proposals
in response to this is not an allowable direct charge to any resulting
award, or any other procurement instrument. However, it may be an
allowable expense to the normal bid and proposal indirect cost as
specified in FAR 31.205-18. E -- BASIS FOR AWARD: The selection of one
or more sources for award will be based on an evaluation of an
offeror's proposal (both technical and cost) to determine the overall
merit of the proposal in response to the announcement. The technical
aspect, which is ranked as the first order of priority, shall be
evaluated based on the following criteria which are ranked of equal
importance: (a) new and creative methods to reduce life cycle cost and
program risks of integrating ERASER sensor hardware into
FLIR/designator systems; (b) the offeror's understanding of the
scientific and technical objectives of the effort; (c) soundness,
reliability, and simplicity of the offeror's approach to accomplish the
scientific and technical objectives; (d) the availability of qualified
technical personnel and their experience with applicable technologies;
(e) the offeror's past experience with active, gated camera systems,
passive thermal imaging systems, automatic target cueing/recognition
techniques, hardware integration, and airframe integration; and (f)
organization, clarity, and thoroughness of the proposed SOW. Cost
and/or price, which includes consideration of proposed budgets and
funding profiles is a substantial factor, but, ranked as the second
order of priority. No other evaluation criteria will be used. The
technical and cost proposals will be evaluated at the same time. The
Air Force reserves the right to select for award any, all, part, or
none of the proposal(s) received. F -- POINTS OF CONTACT: (1) An
Ombudsman has been appointed to hear concerns from offerors and
potential offerors during the proposal development phase of this
acquisition. The purpose of the Ombudsman is not to diminish the
authority of the contracting officer, but to communicate contractor
concerns, issues, disagreements and recommendations to the appropriate
Air Force personnel. All potential offerors should use established
channels to voice concerns before resorting to use the Ombudsman. When
requested, the Ombudsman will maintain strict confidentiality as to
the source of the concern. The Ombudsman does not participate in the
evaluation of proposals or in the source selection. The Ombudsman
should only be contacted with issues or problems that have been
previously brought to the attention of the contracting officer and
could not be satisfactorily resolved at that level. These serious
concerns only may be directed to the Ombudsman, Mr. Mike S. Coalson,
ASC/SYI, Bldg. 52, Room 136, 2475 K Street, Wright- Patterson AFB, OH
45433-7642, E-Mail: coalsoms@sy.wpafb.af.mil, phone (937) 255-5535x232.
(2) Technical Point of Contact: Mr. Robert M. Zumrick, WL/AAJS,
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base OH 45433-7700, (937) 255-9614, ext
241.(3) Contracting/Cost Point of Contact: Mr. Edward Caulfield,
WL/AAKE, Bldg 7, 2530 C Street, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH
45433-7607, (937) 255-3379. See note Number 26. (0111) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0003 19970423\A-0003.SOL)
A - Research and Development Index Page
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