SBIR-STTR Award

Centralized Fire Control Software
Award last edited on: 9/16/2022

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
DOD : Army
Total Award Amount
$538,288
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
A19-106
Principal Investigator
Dan Periard

Company Information

nVisti Tactical Innovation LLC (AKA: nVisti LLC~nVision Technology Inc)

2629 Sharon Copley Road
Medina, OH 44256
   (412) 254-4668
   support@nvisti.com
   www.nvisti.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 07
County: Medina

Phase I

Contract Number: W15QKN-20-P-0017
Start Date: 10/25/2019    Completed: 8/17/2020
Phase I year
2020
Phase I Amount
$110,841
One of the chief challenges on the battlefield is maintaining situational awareness across a number of Soldiers that are engaged in combat with enemy combatants across large areas, which has led to the adoption of tools like ATAK for blue and red force tracking. Also, the use of fire control systems like the Kestrel 5700 Elite Weather Meter, Sig Sauer Kilo 2400 and Picatinny’s Ballistically Optimized Sniper Scope (BOSS) has increased user accuracy against targets at longer distances. nVision proposes to leverage this ubiquity of fire control systems and networked communications to develop a collaborative fire control decision aid software that will aggregate the data from end users to a server on the network, utilize those data to compute the optimal engagements for each enemy, then push the results back to the individuals on the network.

Phase II

Contract Number: W15QKN-21-C-0040
Start Date: 11/16/2020    Completed: 7/11/2022
Phase II year
2021
Phase II Amount
$427,447
The primary objective is to is to develop a collaborative fire control decision aid – referred to as Centralized Fire Control Software (CFCS) - that will aggregate the data from end-users to a server on the network, utilize those data to compute the optimal engagements for each enemy, then push the results back to the individuals on the network. The result would be that Soldiers’ status is pulled from the very devices that they’re using to engage targets (e.g. laser rangefinders) and pushed to a central location for processing & viewing, providing the chain of command with unmatched situational awareness, without requiring any further inputs from the soldier. This organic integration with fire control devices will enhance soldier lethality by minimizing the time from enemy detection to engagement by the best-positioned friendly asset. One of the central capabilities to this approach is using a technique known as Weapon Employment Zone (WEZ) analysis to compute the expected probability of hit for a shooter on a target, based upon the shooter’s weapon, the current atmospheric conditions, the target’s dimensions and movement. WEZ has been used heavily by SOCOM, the Army, and DHS to assess the effect of different parameters on the expected performance of small arms weapons, even being used in Afghanistan to determine enemy standoff distances. When calculated for each friendly against each enemy in the centralized database, this can be utilized as an objective measure of which friendly should be engaging which enemy. One innovation for the CFCS is that this WEZ technique can be utilized in both directions of an engagement. If the enemy information includes the weaponry that the enemy possesses, nVision will utilize WEZ to compute the probability that an enemy can hit each of the friendly assets. This provides Soldiers and leaders with an objective measure of which enemy poses the greatest threat to any friendly and the leader can re-task his team members accordingly.