Picatinny Power – Rifle Integrated Power Rail (RIPR)

Reset Inc. has a new product out that uses a standard style picatinny rail to distribute power to weapon accessories:

As you can see in the first picture, it appears that their powered picatinny rail piggybacks your existing picitainny rail, and delivers power via that 20 round magazine looking battery on the left.

There is very little information on their website, so naturally I have some questions and concerns:

  1. How are the accessories getting power from the “Gold plated contact pads” that are along the rail?
  2. Would users need to purchase some sort of adapters from you, in order to use their current weapon accessories?  If so, what is the cost?
  3. It says the rail is powered by a “standard AA” batery pack. Does that mean there is a handfull of replacable AA batteries inside that larger pictured unit?
  4. Can the weapon accessories still be powered with regular batteries in case of a catastrophic failure?
  5. Are batteries able to be kept within the weapon accessories while being powered by your rail?
  6. What is the weight of the entire system including the battery?
  7. What is the MSRP?

I wrote an email to Reset Inc. and will post the answers as soon as I hear back from them.

Reset Inc. RIPR product webpage – HERE


Comments

7 responses to “Picatinny Power – Rifle Integrated Power Rail (RIPR)”

  1. Yea, Ill go with the usual, “solution desperately looking for a problem” again. Another innovations where the amount of things that could malfunction far outweigh any benefits.

    One power source. Lose it, and all your electronics go down, Red Dot, Light, Lazer, etc etc. Id rather run seperate power sources and have the option of one going bad and still able to use the others.

  2. Why is that gigantic box, which I’m assuming is for the batteries, right in the way of the bolt release?

    1. Admin (Mike) Avatar
      Admin (Mike)

      My guess is that it sits slightly in front of the bolt release.

  3. Howard Kent RESET Avatar
    Howard Kent RESET

    Dear ENDO:

    I am the originator of the concept and one of the inventors, also a big fan of the blog…here’s some answers:

    1.How are the accessories getting power from the “Gold plated contact pads” that are along the rail?

    The RIPR has an internal bus design drawn from our computer industry experience which provides power and data similarly to the popular USB accessories we all carry now. The entire system is armored with hard anodized Aluminum channels and then solid potted with 700+ degree compound. Pretty tough…it swims live, works frozen, et cetera.

    2.Would users need to purchase some sort of adapters from you, in order to use their current weapon accessories? If so, what is the cost?

    We offer a number of ways to adapt what you already have; battery door conversions and kits with dummy cells that can be restored to original function instantly, direct rail interfaces that MIL-STD heads and tailcaps screw into that eliminate the “stick light tube”…plus more; if there is a demand for a particular product, we’ll make it happen. I have to add that the “Purpose Built RIPR Accessories” are VERY small and powerful…stand by for the Nov. 1st kickoff.

    3.It says the rail is powered by a “standard AA” batery pack. Does that mean there is a handfull of replacable AA batteries inside that larger pictured unit?

    The Army suggested using the world class “L-91” battery and being a “Yes, Sir!” operation we complied. The pack is Delrin with (8) L-91 (or any AA battery) and it is rated at 6v./6,000 mAh. For your techies, the Energizer manual paraphrased says: “At high load the CR-123 lasted 7 minutes, while the L-91s @3v. lasted 80 minutes…at -20 degrees the new CR-123s would not function at all, when L-91s would operate for up to 20 minutes”. So in summary; you carry fewer batteries on a mission, they last up to 8x longer in total, you have only one kind of battery, they are available worldwide, they cost a fraction of the price, et cetera…but fear not, we have Aerospace quality rechargeable battery technology, too. For a civilian version…you can’t beat never looking for CR anything ever again.

    4.Can the weapon accessories still be powered with regular batteries in case of a catastrophic failure?

    On the issue of catastrophic failure, the RIPR basically changes nothing on MIL-STD equipment since to do so would require extensive requal. For example, our DBAL and ATPIAL adapters replace the battery door and battery. The wise troop would keep his backup options open by dropping the original cap in his pack and taking the CRs off dead enemy soldiers who are not equipped with RIPR in the highly unlikely event of damage to the armored, electrically isolated RIPr chassis and battery holder. If the RIPR pack is damaged, you take another out of your MOLLE and toss the old one…but to ease your concerns, it takes more to damage a RIPR than the majority of accessories can stand.

    5.Are batteries able to be kept within the weapon accessories while being powered by your rail?

    The RIPR military developments keep all of the devices powered even when changing packs so you don’t lose night vision and other functionality. You can keep your original items (maybe a one set per squad would be enough) as mentioned above, but the hottest thing since sliced bread is the EOTech with an internal rechargeable battery…

    6.What is the weight of the entire system including the battery?

    Fully loaded it weighs less than a pound…the idea of SWAP-C (Improved Size, Weight, Performance & Cost) being to redistribute the weight away from the forend with purpose built devices (LDI, SureFire, Insight) and between your hands in the only dead spot on the weapon. The Rangers used to like Redi-Mags for the latter reason. As an example of weight reduction; a stick light and tube laser with mounts weigh 20-28 oz., RIPR with a 350% more powerful light and green laser weighs 20.5 ounces…already breaking even and aiding the “feel” of the weapon, plus it adds a quick change battery and powers the other accessories as well.

    7.What is the MSRP?

    They will kill me if I talk out of school…but it should street for less than a well known grip light people all seem to have.

    Keep up the good work and we’ll send all the latest as it happens…right now we’re the only rail going to AEWE.

    -HK

    Howard Kent
    VP, RESET

  4. I think it would have been better if the battery pack were put at a different location. Perhaps in the stock? or clipped ahead of the magazine well? I like the idea though.

  5. […] my initial post ( Picatinny Power ) , I raised some questions I had about the […]

  6. Found this rail. It doesn’t have a cool name like this one, but the location of the battery pack and the overall design seem better thought out. The battery is in the buttstock and then you can add an additional battery in the pistol grip. The buttstock features a bettery level indicator (may not like that depending on how bright it is and/or how you check it), says it works with any powered and non-powered device that fits STANAG or or MIL 1913 rails. I looks like it would cost more than this one though.

    http://tworxventures.com/images/pdfs/tpr_brochure_web.pdf