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With over 70 national and international patents, PRP Industries is a technology-based company
providing corrosion solutions through product design, process refinement and proprietary metal
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News
May 2005
PRP receives additional order for components to be coated for new generation of test vehicles
Positive test results from the original test vehicles prompted General Dynamics to request additional
parts be treated with PRP Industries' Corsol™ Advance Metal Treatment for ongoing vehicle
testing.
General Dynamics to Upgrade RST Vehicle for U.S. Marine Corps Operational Evaluation
STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. - General Dynamics Land Systems, a business unit of General Dynamics (NYSE:
GD), has received a $5.9 million agreement modification to upgrade its Reconnaissance, Surveillance
and Targeting Vehicle (RST-V). The upgrade supports continued operational evaluation of the vehicle
as a utility carrier, prime mover and electrical generator for various U.S. Marine Corps (USMC)
applications. System capabilities will be demonstrated in a relevant operational environment in
early 2006.
The original RST-V program objectives seek to exploit hybrid electric drive technology with
innovations in electric-wheel motor drive, chassis design, power management and a patented folding
suspension to provide a highly mobile, survivable, long-range reconnaissance vehicle that can be
transported inside a V-22 Osprey. In transport mode, the RST-V is narrower than a jeep and has cargo
capacity comparable to a HMMWV.
The RST-V's hybrid electric drive can provide on-board power generation as a battlefield power
source. This system could complement or replace trailer and packaged power generators in many
applications, thus improving deployability and reducing the footprint of USMC expeditionary and Joint
Forces operations.
The vehicle's hybrid power system is designed to provide modular, flexible options. It allows the
vehicle to be operated in several propulsion modes: battery, diesel electric, or hybrid. The system
can be adapted to use a full spectrum of energy storage options, from a base diesel electric with no
energy store, to ultra capacitors, to any battery chemistry. Previous USMC RST-V operational
evaluations demonstrated the system's significant potential and utility to provide or support command
and control on the move by using exportable power generated by its hybrid electric propulsion system.
General Dynamics Land Systems Advanced Programs Manager Tom Trzaska said, "The Marine Corps has asked
us to make reliability and functional changes to the vehicle, including a 30 kilowatt export power
capability, to power battlefield loads such as the Unit Operations Center and radars."
"The Marine Corps expressed interest in the potential the RST-Vs demonstrated during a recent Limited
User Evaluation at Yuma Proving Ground, Ariz., and want to take these technologies to the next step,"
he added. "We will make improvements based on feedback and lessons learned from the USMC and the U.S.
Army Special Operations command operators who used the RST-Vs at Yuma," Trzaska explained. "The
implementation of the export power feature rounds out the full suite of capabilities we originally
envisioned for the hybrid power system."
General Dynamics Land Systems is a pioneer in electric propulsion for military application, and has
partnered with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Office of Naval Research and the
USMC on the RST-V program since 1999. In this latest round of funding, DARPA contributed $5 million
of the total $5.9 million.
General Dynamics, headquartered in Falls Church, Virginia, employs approximately 70,100 people
worldwide and had 2004 revenue of $19.2 billion. The company is a market leader in mission-critical
information systems and technologies; land and expeditionary combat systems, armaments and munitions;
shipbuilding and marine systems; and business aviation.