Moscow. February 8. INTERFAX - Tests of the ROSC-1 complex, equipped with the Wolf-18 drone hunter, began in Samara under real operating conditions, the Almaz-Antey concern of East Kazakhstan Region reported on Tuesday.
"Since February 7 of this year, tests of the ROSC-1 complex, equipped with the Wolf-18 drone hunter, have begun at Kurumoch airport (Samara) in real operating conditions," the concern's press service said.
A mock-up of the ROSC-1 radar-optical facility security and neutralization system for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) will be presented at the NAIS 2022 exhibition, which will be held in Moscow from February 9 to 10.
It is reported that visitors to the concern's exposition will be able to get acquainted with the new development of the Bryansk Automobile Plant by the AA 12.5-70/100 airfield fire truck, created as part of the import substitution program and capable of replacing foreign analogues that are currently used in Russian airports.
"Azimut JSC and Instroy LLC will also act as co-exhibitors of the concern at NAIS 2022. The companies will present samples of products that Almaz-Antey comprehensively uses when equipping airports," the report says.
According to the press service, most of the exhibition samples are the result of the transfer of military technologies of the concern to civilian subjects.
"Almost all the equipment that is used in air traffic control today was originally developed for defense purposes. Within the framework of solving the tasks facing civil aviation, the concern creates promising high-tech products for the civilian sector, often through the transfer of military technologies to the civilian sphere, and here our defense developments have received a new impetus to development. Civil systems, as well as military systems, are capable of reliable operation in any conditions," said Dmitry Savitsky, Deputy General Director for products for the air navigation system and dual-use products of the Almaz-Antey Concern of East Kazakhstan Region, quoted by the press service.