"IDD.DOG"
improvised explosive device detection.
Our Best Friend, the enemies Worst Nightmare.
Government and local law enforcement agencies have employed canines — and their superpower snouts — for decades. The TSA, for instance, uses dogs to inspect cargo, aircraft, parked cars, abandoned bags and other stationary objects found in and around airports.
Dogs are currently being trained to identify a wide variety of ingredients that could be used to make bombs. Dogs used by the Marines had a difficult time finding roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Future IDD's not only have to detect whether explosive ingredients are present, they also have to determine if the agents they smell could combine to form an explosive mixture.
United States research agencies spent billions over the last 15 years trying to create a technical replacement for the nose of the dog, and at the end of all that they just had to admit ‘No, we cannot get close.’”
The Future of bomb sniffing dogs that can detect IED’s at a fraction of the price is on its Way!
.
Dogs are currently being trained to identify a wide variety of ingredients that could be used to make bombs. Dogs used by the Marines had a difficult time finding roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Future IDD's not only have to detect whether explosive ingredients are present, they also have to determine if the agents they smell could combine to form an explosive mixture.
United States research agencies spent billions over the last 15 years trying to create a technical replacement for the nose of the dog, and at the end of all that they just had to admit ‘No, we cannot get close.’”
The Future of bomb sniffing dogs that can detect IED’s at a fraction of the price is on its Way!
.