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Oct 27, 2009
By
Nate D. Herring
WASHINGTON (Army News Service, Oct. 27, 2009) -- Two new lightweight
machine guns, the Land Warrior System and an improved oxygen device for
aviators were among equipment displayed Tuesday at the Pentagon.
Officials from Program Executive Office Soldier met with members of the
media at the Pentagon to discuss the latest equipment fielded to
Soldiers. Four program managers from PEO Soldier talked about advances
in weapons, personal gear, and lasers and sights that Soldiers use on
the battlefield.
"We act as quickly as we can and get equipment to Soldiers and
commanders in the field that have the operational need," said Col. Doug
Tamilio, program manager for Soldier weapons.
One major improvement, according to Tamilio, is the development of
lighter weapon systems such as the MK-48, which weighs 18.6 pounds and
the M-240L, which weighs 22.3 pounds. These weapons are lighter than
the M-240B machine gun which weighs 27.3 pounds and they have similar
capabilities to their heavier counterpart.
About 500 of the MK-48 weapons are currently being fielded in Afghanistan, PEO Soldier officials said.
The M-240L receiver is made out of titanium, which is one of the
reasons it's lighter, Tamillo said. A Soldier that is fully equipped
with the M-240B carries the equivalent of about four gallons of milk,
he said. But giving him the M-240L instead is like taking one of the
gallons away, and Tamillo added the weapon is the number-one rated
system by Soldiers who recently deployed.
In addition to weapon systems, PEO Soldier is working to improve other
equipment used by Soldiers on the battlefield. Col. Will Riggins is
program manager for Soldier Warrior and says he tries to find ways to
allow Soldiers to gather real-time information that increases
situational awareness on the battlefield.
"We try to integrate Soldiers into the warfighting environment and one
of the ways we do that is to begin looking at the Soldier as a system,"
he said. "We don't just give the Soldier a piece of equipment and just
add and add and add to them. We try to give them integrated
capabilities and we try to make sure that capability is wider, is more
effective, more efficient and works together so we can do multiple
things with the same piece of equipment."
Soldier Warrior works with three different kinds of Soldiers, the air
soldier, the mounted soldier and the ground soldier, Riggins said.
One piece of equipment that Riggins said is particularly useful to
aviation Soldiers is the Portable Helicopter Oxygen Delivery System.
The PHODS is a lightweight, wearable product that provides oxygen to
Soldiers without restricting their movements in and around their
aircraft. The system allows aircrew members to operate at high
altitudes in excess of 10,000 feet, which is common in Afghanistan.
The PHODS weight about five pounds and replaces the 100-pound
Helicopter Oxygen System. The system uses a regulation that meters
oxygen flow based on respiration rate and altitude and can provide
oxygen to a Soldier for two to three hours.
"You turn it on before you take off, it knows what altitude you're at
and it automatically senses when you get to an altitude where you need
oxygen and then it senses for your breathing rhythm," Riggins said.
"Based on that breathing rhythm, instead of a continuous flow of
oxygen, it releases a puff of air timed with the intake of your
respiration. So that enables for more efficient operations and a more
efficient use of oxygen."
A new "Ground Soldier System" will be developed by PEO Soldier out of
lessons learned from the current Land Warrior System, which is being
fielded now, Riggins said.
There is a brigade-sized element of Land Warrior Systems currently
fielded and there are plans for a battalion-sized element of Special
Forces Soldiers with this capability, he said.
The Ground Soldier System will be one of the first systems to go
through the new OSD process of competition in prototype. Unlike the
past, instead of awarding one contract to develop the system, three
contracts were awarded. Limited-user tests are planned for the systems
in fall 2010.
"One of the things we want to be able to do is not necessarily compare
the systems against each other but measure each individual system on
its own merits," Riggins said.
After the limited-user tests are complete, one or two developers will
be chosen and the system will go into low rate initial production and
then do another operational test. The system is planned for fielding in
2012 to infantry brigade combat teams, he said.
Col. Bill Cole, program manager for Soldier Protection and Individual
Equipment, works with developers to improve personal protective
equipment that Soldiers wear on the battlefield including the Improved
Outer Tactical Vest.
The IOTV has undergone significant improvements because it was not as
comfortable to smaller stature soldiers as it should be, said Cole.
Refinements were made to the design and the shoulders were made more
comfortable, particularly for Soldiers wearing rucksacks because the
quick release dug into shoulders of Soldiers. That has now been
corrected, he said.
The biggest improvement was on the side plates which are now more
easily adjusted to fit slimmer Soldiers more comfortably, he said.
Two new patterns of camouflage are being fielded to Soldiers in
Afghanistan, the Multi-Cam pattern and the Universal Camouflage
Pattern-Delta. Each pattern has been fielded to a battalion and
feedback will be collected in January and given to Army leadership,
Cole said.
Col. Stephanie Foster, program manager for Soldier Sensors and Lasers,
stressed the key concept of see, acquire and target and the ability for
sensors and lasers to be integrated into other systems.
"We want to see always, acquire first and target once," she said. "That
means I have the responsibility for providing products that will give
our warfighters increased survivability, mobility and lethality as we
look at the integration into the rest of our portfolio."
Sensors and lasers can be integrated into personal equipment, land
warrior equipment and weapon systems providing the Soldier as a system
the tools needed on the battlefield, she said.
Separate capabilities such as thermal weapons systems and enhanced
night vision are being developed as integrated systems, she said.
"The fusion of our thermal imagery and also the image intensification
that we get with our night vision devices so that our warfighters have
even heightened situational awareness," Foster said. "My work is just a
reflection of what the PEO does as a whole: integrated support and
delivery of products to the warfighter so that they have increased
situational awareness, mobility and lethality."
Source and credits : http://www.army.mil/-news/2009/10/27/29410-peo-soldier-displays-new-equipment/
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