Collins Aerospace showcases air combat training system in live exercise for senior US Air Force and US Navy officers

Cedar Rapids, Iowa April 17, 2019 Photo(s): By Collins Aerospace
  • Production-ready live, virtual and constructive air combat training system available today
  • Certified for Multiple Independent Levels of Security (MILS) Type-1 encryption
Collins Aerospace leading the way in production-ready live, virtual and constructive training solutions as demonstrated in a recent Secure Live Air-to-Air Mission for senior US Air Force and US Navy officers.

Collins Aerospace Systems, in collaboration with the University of Iowa's Operator Performance Laboratory (OPL), recently held a Secure Live Air-to-Air Mission (SLAAM) demonstration to showcase how armed forces can quickly adopt secure live, virtual and constructive (LVC) air combat training solutions. Over twenty senior officers from the US Air Force and US Navy attended. Collins Aerospace is a unit of United Technologies Corp. (NYSE: UTX).

"The success of project SLAAM proves that LVC-enabled training systems are real, mature and available in the marketplace today," said Nick Gibbs, vice president and general manager, Simulation and Training Solutions at Collins Aerospace. "Customers don't need to wait for the development of new technologies to achieve next-generation LVC training."

During the demonstration, the company's Joint Secure Air Combat Training System (JSAS) interfaced with ground systems running US Department of Defense (DoD)-approved Next Generation Threat System (NGTS) and a Modern Air Combat Environment (MACE) software. Spectators watched the LVC event unfold on displays in a 'mission room', which showed a combination of live, simulated, and synthetic aircraft assets performing the mission in a Multiple Independent Levels of Security (MILS) Type-1 encrypted environment.

As the only certified, blended training system operating on ranges today, JSAS features proven security and data-link technologies that help overcome limitations in traditional training scenarios. Customers also benefit from an open architecture that simplifies obsolescence management and accommodates new technologies.