 All right, so let's get into this weapon. We're going to kind of go through this schedule. What they did was they took the information from us in here. And that percussion cap is what will be struck by the fire 6-2 sub-calf training round out of the sub-calf adapter. We have you shoot from each one of those positions. So everybody will shoot a live round. It's felt like the flying claymore round. It has 800 steel balls inside it. Not for the Venturi, but they don't work up front. They won't cover that. But inside your case, you have your knee just to cover the tube itself. And you can put one in the rear. And that will keep it. All right, so let's talk about the gun. So push the safety from left to right. Now it's on safe. And you cock it and safe it. Lock and lever, push it forward and rotate it over. And now I can check to make sure it's on safe. From left to right, open up your Venturi. And you're in, rotate it back to its scope position and lock it up. All the way back to the control box here, or this control unit. And then it continues all the way back to the Venturi. And then if you open it up, that wiring harness finishes with that cartridge-based guide. And you'll see those little brass buttons on the back. Those are connectors for future smart products. You'll see, you pick the gun up. You'll see these little screws here. You would take those out, loosen it, and then you can slide it down on the door. Little black dots on the door. You guys are not manipulating the gun. Let the engine pull the gun. All you want to do is push the left right up. Hey, I'm caroled. I like it. I got four dots. All right. I'm Captain Christopher Adzit. I'm the project officer for anti-armor systems at Marine Corps Systems Command. Yeah, so the MAS is the multi-role anti-armor, anti-personnel weapon system. It's an 84-millimeter recoilless rifle with an integrated fire control system that includes laser range finding. It comes with a suite of ammunition to provide a bunch of different capabilities. Standard HE, that would be provided by current AT-4 law, as well as some of the things provided by the small. It has other rounds to include illumination, smoke, anti-armor, anti-structure, as well as a bunker-buster type. It varies based on the rounds. Based on the different rounds that I just talked through, squad illumination, it can provide smoke and obscuration via the smoke round. It can provide high explosives for destruction of targets, of course, field fortifications and things like that through some of the other rounds. Depending on which round you're talking about, the ranges can vary between 50 meters close in up to 1,300 meters. Yeah, so right now we're out here doing what we call new equipment training. SOI East is the first unit that's getting fielded in the MAS. So we're out here making sure that they understand the capability, understand how to employ it safely, and that's what we'll be doing today through the rest of this week, culminating with live fire on Thursday. We're going to train them how to do this safely in training, and then of course also, that always applies to how we train to do it safely in combat. So as we go through the course of training today and then through live fire, Marines will learn how to effectively and safely use the weapon and then how they can do that in combat as well. So I think for the MAS, what this is is it's a squad level capability, right? So this is going to every squad in the Marine Corps. So this fits in with the standard squad missions and it provides another capability for them to do mission planning. So being able to integrate this effectively for the squads is just going to increase their capability to do the mission sets that they're already tasked to do. I'm not sure it'll be able to... So the MAS is the M3A1, which builds on the current M3. You'll often hear this referred to as the Carl Gustaf, right? The Marine Corps designation for it is the multi-role, is the MAS, as we discussed earlier. So some of the soft community currently uses the M3 that is currently fielded. We're replacing it with the M3A1 as a shorter, lighter version and has this integrated fire control. But this is the first time that it's going to the Marine Corps as a whole. To the M3. Well, it shoots the same round. So it shoots the same round as the M3, but the actual rifle has been upgraded, right? Like John was saying. So we've got the Venturi is safer, the whole thing is lighter, and then it's got a new fire control on it. Whereas the previous used a telescopic sight, this is a fire control integrated laser rangefinder. Calculates a ballistic solution for you based on things like the altitude you're at, the temperature you're repellent, range to your target, and all of that into the ballistic solution is designed to improve accuracy. Yeah, so yeah, the AT4 would be one that could be similar. Another 84 millimeter. Single use though, so this is reusable. And then this, given the fire control and then some of the round suites, I think provides extended range and then additional capability. Some of those things that I already mentioned as far as illumination and smoke that you wouldn't get within an AT4 and then also the ability to choose different rounds. So with all the different rounds for the cargo stuff, you can select rounds based on your mission profile that you wouldn't be able to with a disposable AT4.