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Cymat Technologies Ltd V.CYM

Alternate Symbol(s):  CYMHF

Cymat Technologies Ltd. is a manufacturing company. The Company holds licenses and related patents to manufacture and sell Stabilized Aluminum Foam (SAF), a cellular metallic material. SAF is produced utilizing a process in which gas is bubbled into molten alloyed aluminum containing a dispersion of fine ceramic particles to create foam, which is then cast into strong, lightweight panels and shapes. The Company is manufacturing SAF for use in architectural, blast mitigation and energy absorption applications. It develops applications for use in the automotive and industrial markets. Its divisions include SmartMetal and Alusion. Its SmartMetal stabilized aluminum foam products are effective at absorbing an amount of energy in a lightweight and recyclable package. SAF is used in such industries as architectural design, military and automotive. It markets its architectural SAF under the Alusion brand and its automotive and military SAF under the SmartMetal brand.


TSXV:CYM - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by red_baronon May 02, 2011 7:20am
275 Views
Post# 18516398

Can the U.S. Army Fix Its Broken Acquisition Syste

Can the U.S. Army Fix Its Broken Acquisition SysteIn a recent speech, Army Under Secretary Joseph Westphal made public one of Washington’s worst kept secrets: the U.S. Army's acquisition system is broken. Over the past two decades, the Army has experienced a continuous record of failure in major acquisition programs. This has been particularly true for ground combat vehicles. Other than the Stryker, which was originally an "interim" solution on the way to the Future Combat System (FCS), the Army has not had a successful vehicle program in some twenty years.

https://www.defpro.com/news/details/24072/?SID=d66f8468260864a0db5dbe8dbe377d7f

https://www.defpro.com/data/gfx/news/b21f8e1b857aaa180d6bddcf2d3323989281040c_big.jpg
Generic representation of a combat vehicle only. The final Army Ground Combat Vehicle may bear little to no resemblance.

This record of failure is all the more striking in view of the Army's relative success with rapid acquisition of a variety of platforms and systems. The best known are the MRAP and M-ATV protected vehicles. But in many ways the acquisition of soldier clothing and individual equipment has been even more successful. PEO Soldier has demonstrated the ability to rapidly develop and deploy a range of new capabilities including remote weapons stations, enhanced low light/night vision goggles, man-portable robots, laser designators and cold weather clothing. Collaboration with third-party product integrators has resulted in an ability to rapidly meet a wide range of urgent operational needs for clothing and equipment at relatively low cost.

The question still unanswered is whether the broken peacetime acquisition system can be fixed. The Army has two major procurements coming soon. The first is the Ground Combat Vehicle (GCV), the successor to the Future Combat System. The second is the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) intended as the replacement for the lighter and less well protected Humvee. The GCV program has already been halted and restarted once. There are recent reports that the JLTV may be afflicted with that dreaded disease which has killed many Army programs in the recent past: changing requirements. The cost of the individual GCVs and JLTVs may also be a “killer.”

What appears at the heart of the problem with Army acquisition is an inability to clearly connect system requirements to doctrine and tactics. There is no driving concept of future conflict which results in a vision of a future force and, from there, a definition of what kinds of systems are needed.

In addition, the Army has a habit of funding way more R&D programs than it can ever successfully bring to procurement. As a result, there are always better ideas in the laboratory than whatever is being procured today.

The keys to the success of the rapid fielding activities have been speed, simplicity and a reliance on the private sector to get things done. Fewer requirements are better. The Army applied this approach in the GCV request for proposal. We will see whether it will be the first example of a new Army acquisition system or merely the latest casualty of the old one.
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