- £3.7 million deal equips the Army’s next generation armoured vehicle – Ajax – with the latest in automated threat warning systems.
- The Ajax Shot Detection System will be manufactured at Thales in Templecombe, Somerset
- Each Ajax will be fitted with three Acusonic sensors, giving the crew a 360-degree threat-detection capability.
Published 15th March 2018.
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DE&S have signed a £3.7 million deal to equip the Army’s next generation armoured vehicle – Ajax – with the latest in automated threat warning systems.
Thales UK has signed a contract with General Dynamics Land Systems–UK for the installation of its Acusonic sensor, a vehicle-mounted acoustic shot detection system, on the £4.5 billion Ajax family of armoured fighting vehicles.
The Ajax Shot Detection System will be manufactured at Thales in Templecombe in Somerset, which employs more than 700 people in highly-skilled manufacturing and technical roles.
Video
Watch the Ajax vehicle put through its paces at a recent beach trial.
Designed to accurately sense and report the direction of incoming enemy fire, the system will give the vehicle’s crew the critical situational awareness to react to the threat. Its innovative sensing system is based on Thales’s world-class sonar technology that provides the ‘ears’ for ships and submarines around the world.
Each Ajax will be fitted with three Acusonic sensors, giving the crew a 360-degree threat-detection capability.
Major General Colin McLean, Director Land Equipment for DE&S said:
Ajax will deliver a step-change in versatility, agility and protection for our soldiers. Integrating this new sensor on to our family of Ajax vehicles, which will provide critical situational awareness, is another innovation we are investing in to ensure that British soldiers have the very best equipment to maintain their competitive advantage on the battlefields of today and the future.
Under the terms of the contract, 735 Acusonic systems are now on order for integration onto Ajax. Thales is already on contract to supply the primary and secondary sighting systems on the vehicle.
The six variants in the Ajax programme – Athena, Ajax, Ares, Apollo, Atlas and Argus – are due to come into service in 2020, providing a full suite of medium armoured vehicles and capabilities.
They will be the ‘eyes and ears’ of the British Army on the battlefields of the future. The new vehicle will give the army enhanced intelligence, surveillance, protection, target acquisition and reconnaissance capabilities.
Defence Secretary, Gavin Williamson, said:
I am pleased to announce today that we will be spending almost £4million with Thales and General Dynamics Land Systems-UK to deliver the Ajax Shot Detection System, which can sense enemy gunfire and protect troops using our next generation armoured vehicles.
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