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General Dynamics awarded $3.37B for Stryker vehicle support
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington (UPI) Mar 1, 2019

General Dynamics Land Systems was awarded three contracts totaling $3.37 billion for Stryker vehicle repair, refurbishment, supplies and sustainment for the U.S. Army.

The three contracts, announced Thursday by the Department of Defense, include $1.37 billion for retrofit, damage repair and refurbishment services on Army's Stryker Family of Vehicles, $1.37 billion for wholesale supply, performance-based logistics services on the vehicles, and $66.4 million for sustainment services on them.

The two $1.37 billion contracts include completion dates of February 2024, and the $66.4 million sustainment contract runs through Feb. 29, 2020. Work locations and funding on all three contracts will be determined with each order, the Pentagon said.

The Stryker family is a series of adaptable eight-wheel-drive combat vehicles with 18 variants. Each can carry a unit of up to 12 personnel and can maneuver in urban situations, provide protection in open terrain and transport infantry quickly to critical battlefield positions. It is the first new military vehicle to enter U.S. Army service since the Abrams tank in the 1980s.

Designed to be transportable by C-130 cargo aircraft, the vehicles, known as infantry carrier vehicles, are manufactured by General Dynamics Land Systems in Canada and in Sterling Heights, Mich.

There are eight configurations in the Stryker Family used by the Army in 18 different variants, including the M1135 nuclear, biological, chemical reconnaissance vehicle, the M1134 anti-tank guided missile, M1133 medical evacuation vehicle, the M1129 mortar carrier, the M1132 engineer squad vehicle, the M1130 command vehicle, the M1131 fire support vehicle and the M1127 reconnaissance vehicle.


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MILTECH
SU engineers create rubbery 'smart' material to treat open wounds, infections and cancer
Syracuse NY (SPX) Feb 27, 2019
Researchers in the Syracuse University College of Engineering and Computer Science have developed a material - a new kind of shape memory polymer (SMP) - that could have major implications for health care. SMPs are soft, rubbery, "smart" materials that can change shape in response to external stimuli like temperature changes or exposure to light. They can hold each shape indefinitely and turn back when triggered to do so. SMPs have many potential biomedical applications. For example, they ar ... read more

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