The U.S. Army has released a request for proposals, or RFPs, to procure
additional rifleman radios using full and open competition.
The RFP, which was posted Jan. 5 to the Federal Business Opportunities
website, moves the Army toward full-rate production, or FRP, for the
rifleman radio, part of the Handheld, Manpack and Small-form Fit, known
as HMS, program. Contract awards are expected in Fiscal Year 2015, and
initial radios provided in Fiscal Year 2015 will be used for
qualification testing. FRP will begin in Fiscal Year 2017.
Under the full and open competition approach, the Army will award
contracts to multiple vendors, creating a "radio marketplace" where
vendors will compete for delivery orders as needed, after they achieve
technical and operational requirements.
"The full and open competition gives all vendors the opportunity to
participate as we work together to deliver the most
technologically-advanced and user-friendly radios for Soldiers," said
Col. James P. Ross, project manager for Tactical Radios. "Our goal is to
field radios that not only consistently improve their capabilities, but
also get simpler for Soldiers to operate."
The indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity, or IDIQ, contract will be
awarded to multiple vendors who meet the technical requirements. The
contract will have a five year base ordering period with an optional
five year ordering period. This structure enables the Army to choose
from numerous technologies, and release a new contract if radio
technology changes significantly.
The competitive non-developmental item, or NDI, acquisition strategy is
expected to reduce radio procurement costs as the Army continues to
modernize the tactical communications network amid fiscal constraints.
The Army plans to award contracts to multiple qualified vendors. Once
the contracts are awarded, each radio will undergo laboratory tests to
determine if threshold requirements have been met. Vendors that do not
meet their contract requirements will be off-ramped. Vendors that do
meet the qualifications may move to the next phase, an operational test
to be performed at one of the Army's Network Integration Evaluations,
known as NIEs. The acquisition strategy includes on-ramp opportunities
for vendors whose technologies mature after the initial competition and
operational tests.
With each new generation, the Army plans to procure radios with better
capabilities, including faster processors, increased power and battery
life and decreased weight.
In response to comments from industry day events, the Army added
additional objective requirements including a two channel hand-held
rifleman radio. This will give the Army the flexibility to procure this
radio under this contract vehicle if the requirement is leveraged on the
HMS program. By using the Single Channel Ground and Airborne Radio
System, or SINCGARS, waveform and the Soldier Radio Waveform, known as
SRW, the rifleman radio will enable communication on both channels
simultaneously. The range, however, will not be as strong as its sister
radio, the Manpack.
"As an objective requirement, vendors do not have to provide a
two-channel hand-held rifleman radio to get a contract," said Lt. Col.
Rayfus Gary, product manager for HMS. "We look forward to seeing what
vendors have to offer in both single-channel and two-channel solutions."
The rifleman radio is a lightweight, rugged, hand-held radio that
transmits voice and data past terrain obstacles and beyond line of sight
via the SRW. Carried by Soldiers at the platoon, squad and team levels,
the rifleman radio uses SRW to transmit information up and down the
chain of command, as well as into the network backbone provided by the
Warfighter Information Network-Tactical, or WIN-T.
The rifleman radio can also be linked to Nett Warrior, using a secure
Android phone type device that enables Soldiers to send messages, access
mission-related applications and track one another's locations with GPS
technology.
Through low rate initial production, the Army has already purchased
21,379 rifleman radios. The radios, fielded as part of the integrated
Capability Set, known as CS, 13 network package, are supporting
dismounted operations in support of the advise-and-assist mission in
Afghanistan. Fielding is underway to additional BCTs as part of CS 14,
with eventual fielding planned across the entire force.
http://www.army.mil/article/140731/Army_releases_RFP_for_competitive_radio_marketplace/
By U.S. Army PEO C3T
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