Sharp-Shooter Incident Report: Findings & Recommendations

Report: Sharp-Shooter — Comprehensive Field Analysis

Purpose

Provide a complete, evidence-based assessment of the Sharp-Shooter system’s field performance to inform operators, engineers, and decision-makers.

Executive summary

  • Scope: 30-day field trial across 5 sites evaluating accuracy, reliability, operator feedback, and maintenance needs.
  • Key finding: Mean target hit accuracy 87%; environmental factors (wind, temperature) accounted for most variance.
  • Primary recommendation: Firmware update to improve wind-compensation algorithm and revised operator training.

Methodology

  1. Test duration: 30 days, 5 varied environments (urban, forest, coastal, desert, indoor range).
  2. Metrics collected: hit accuracy, time-to-target, false-positive detections, system uptime, maintenance events, operator error rate.
  3. Tools: high-speed cameras, GPS-synced logs, environmental sensors, operator surveys.
  4. Data validation: cross-checks between sensor logs and video; outlier removal using 3σ rule.

Results

  • Accuracy: Mean 87% (95% CI: 84–90%).
  • Time-to-target: Median 2.4s; slower in high-wind sites (median 3.1s).
  • False positives: 1.2% of engagements, primarily due to reflective surfaces.
  • Uptime: 96% mean availability; most downtime from battery-related faults.
  • Operator errors: 9% of failed engagements traced to procedural mistakes.

Analysis

  • Wind and temperature correlated strongly with reduced accuracy (Pearson r = -0.62 for wind speed).
  • Reflectivity-induced false positives concentrated in coastal and urban sites.
  • Battery performance dropped >10% at temperatures below 0°C; recommend cold-weather battery spec.

Recommendations

  1. Implement firmware update with adaptive wind-compensation.
  2. Replace current battery with low-temperature-rated cells; add thermal management.
  3. Update operator training focusing on engagement procedures and misidentification mitigation.
  4. Add reflective-surface filtering in sensor processing.
  5. Schedule quarterly maintenance focused on power systems.

Implementation plan (90 days)

  • Weeks 1–4: Develop and test firmware; procure batteries.
  • Weeks 5–8: Field pilot updated firmware and batteries at 2 sites.
  • Weeks 9–12: Full rollout, training sessions, monitoring.

Appendices (suggested)

  • Raw data summaries and charts.
  • Firmware change log and test cases.
  • Operator survey results.
  • Maintenance checklist.

If you want, I can expand any section into a full report (data tables, charts, or a formal executive brief).

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