With growing concern about accidents during force-on-force training sessions, more and more companies are offering simulated ammunition products. One of the newest players in this market is Ultimate Training Munitions (UTM). Like its competitors, the UTM system requires conversion of the user's weapons with special barrels and other parts that prevent the weapons from chambering live rounds. UTM offers marking rounds and blanks for pistols, sub-guns, and rifles. The company says its training munitions will all cycle properly in semi-auto and full-auto weapons.
Kicking Out the Jams
Para-Ordnance has added a new wrinkle to the classic Model 1911 design. The Para 1911 now features what Para calls the Power Extractor, an attempt to engineer away what the company calls the one glaring weakness in John Browning's classic .45 autopistol design, an extractor that can sometimes cause feeding problems. Para's internal Power Extractor is bigger and tougher inside the slide, but it doesn't alter the look or feel of the pistol.
www.paraord.com
Heat Signature
It's a universal truth that high-tech equipment gets smaller and better with each new generation. For law enforcement applications, the latest high-tech gear to get smaller and better is the thermal imaging system. These high-tech optics are now so small that they can be installed in gun sights, binoculars, even helmet-worn goggles. Nivisys showed its new Thermal Acquisition Goggle. The head-mounted TAG-7 system is ruggedized for police and military operations, runs on AA batteries, and can spot the bad guys regardless of time of day, camouflage, or natural cover.
www.nivisys.com