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Home » Tactical Development » Busy Days at Aberdeen

Busy Days at Aberdeen

Aberdeen.jpg

ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md., March 14, 2007 — As the Defense Department hur­ries to get the lat­est weapons sys­tems and pro­tec­tive equip­ment to deployed troops, the Aberdeen Test Center here is oper­at­ing at what its com­man­der calls a “fast and furi­ous rate” to ensure effec­tive­ness and safety remain top priorities.

The cen­ter, on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay, is the most diverse of seven DoD test facil­i­ties and is a crit­i­cal part­ner in the Army’s Rapid Fielding Initiative, Army Col. John Rooney, cen­ter com­man­der, said.

During the past two years, the center’s sci­en­tists, tech­ni­cians and engi­neers have tested about 30 rapid field­ing ini­tia­tives a week, with more than 1,400 tests con­ducted last year alone. There’s been an 87 per­cent increase in range activ­ity here since fis­cal 2001.

“That’s all being dri­ven by tech­nolo­gies to sup­port the warfighter in the global war on ter­ror,” Rooney said.

Technologies under­go­ing test­ing here range from enhance­ments to improve the way vehi­cles oper­ate in com­bat to pro­tec­tive gear that helps troops sur­vive enemy attacks.

“Our focus is on iden­ti­fy­ing the best tech­nol­ogy avail­able now, get­ting that capa­bil­ity to the warfighter today, and then improv­ing on it,” Rooney said.

This con­cept, referred to as “spi­ral devel­op­ment,” turns the military’s tra­di­tional field­ing method on its head. Rather than devel­op­ing, test­ing, then fine-​​tuning sys­tems before send­ing them to the field, the pri­or­ity now is to get new tech­nolo­gies to the troops quickly as pos­si­ble, while con­tin­u­ing to improve on them, Rooney explained.

“We’re insert­ing them into the war with­out the breadth and depth of test­ing that we would go through in peace­time,” he said. “There’s a whole dif­fer­ent dynamic of sup­port­ing an Army at war that’s dif­fer­ent that in peace­time. You have to make sure you do an ade­quate job (of test­ing), but not at the expense of with­hold­ing capabilities.”

Even with the big push to get new sys­tems to deployed forces, Rooney said the mil­i­tary holds the line when it comes to safety. “We always do safety test­ing up front,” he said. “But once we’ve done that, the big ques­tion becomes, ‘What’s enough test­ing to under­stand how (the sys­tem is) going to work (in combat)?’”

Evidence of this bal­anc­ing act is preva­lent through­out the com­bat the­ater. The Aberdeen Test Center staff tested for elec­tro­mag­netic inter­fer­ence in Blue Force Tracker, a satellite-​​based Force XXI Battle Command, Brigade and Below com­mu­ni­ca­tions sys­tem, as well as for addi­tional radios placed on M1A1 Abrams com­mand vehicles.

They tested new soft­ware for the M1A2 tank’s nuclear, bio­log­i­cal and chem­i­cal pro­tec­tive sys­tem, and a vari­ety of bridg­ing sys­tems so deployed forces could cross gul­lies and low spots through­out the Iraqi desert.

But few exam­ples demon­strate the empha­sis on expe­di­ent field­ing more clearly than how the mil­i­tary gets new vehi­cle pro­tec­tion to deployed troops.

As DoD’s pri­mary ground-​​vehicle tester, the Aberdeen Test Center started explor­ing ways to pro­tect troops against road­side bombs in August 2003, as soon as these weapons began appear­ing in Iraq.

Rooney described the moti­va­tion that drove testers here to move quickly to eval­u­ate the first add-​​on armor pro­to­types. “We knew that every day we didn’t get the test fin­ished was another day that we weren’t get­ting these kits to the field, and that it could have a direct impact on someone’s life,” he said.

The ear­li­est add-​​on armor kits sent to the com­bat the­ater had lim­i­ta­tions, he acknowl­edged, but still offered far more pro­tec­tion than no addi­tional armor. Even as these kits were being sent to the field, the Aberdeen Test Center staff con­tin­ued to look into new sys­tems to improve on them.

Since the start of the GWOT, the cen­ter staff has sub­jected more than 500 poten­tial solu­tions to the rig­or­ous test­ing that takes place here every day, Rooney said. These pro­to­types have been fired at to test their bal­lis­tic pro­tec­tion and run through sim­u­la­tors, com­puter mod­els and out­door tracks to see how they stand up to real-​​world road con­di­tions like they’ll encounter in Iraq and Afghanistan.

A drive around the test ranges here — nine miles of inter­con­nect­ing roads and 25 per­ma­nently con­structed courses — shows some of the armor enhance­ments under­go­ing test­ing now. They range from a new add-​​on armor kit for Humvees that includes 450 pounds of armor to the front door alone and extra base­board armor to a one-​​piece door assem­bly for the 5-​​ton M977 heavy expanded mobil­ity tac­ti­cal truck to an improved slat armor kit for the Stryker light armored vehicle.

The staff here devel­oped the ini­tial pro­to­type for the Stryker’s slat armor-​​a cage-​​like appa­ra­tus bolted to the Stryker to pro­tect it from rocket-​​propelled grenades — and Rooney calls it one of the staff’s proud­est achieve­ments. Although the first users didn’t nec­es­sar­ily like the slat armor’s looks, they quickly grew to love its pro­tec­tive qual­i­ties, he said.

While con­tin­u­ing to seek out newer, more effec­tive bal­lis­tic pro­tec­tions, the staff here rec­og­nizes the impact of these improve­ments on over­all vehi­cle per­for­mance, Rooney said. Putting addi­tional armor on vehi­cles affects every­thing from the way they han­dle, to their tip-​​over point, to the life cycle of their shocks and sus­pen­sion sys­tems to their over­all reliability.

“Every time some­thing gets added or placed on a vehi­cle, you have to look at the whole range of effects,” Rooney said. “When you eval­u­ate pro­tec­tive armors, you have to work hand-​​in-​​glove with the auto­mo­tive side, because even if a vehi­cle stops every­thing (in terms of bal­lis­tics), if it can’t drive, it’s of no value.”

So eval­u­a­tors here put vehi­cles through the paces in both out­door courses and indoor sim­u­la­tions to repli­cate the worst of real-​​world con­di­tions. Vehicles get exposed to bumps, ditches, slopes, mud and sand courses, ford­ing basins and other dif­fi­cult con­di­tions sim­i­lar to what deployed troops expe­ri­ence regularly.

“We’re try­ing to cre­ate the cir­cum­stances that might cause fail­ures so we can learn from it and address those issues here,” Rooney said. “The whole intent is to fully under­stand the vehicle’s capability.”

Once a vehi­cle passes through the rig­ors imposed here, Rooney said he’s con­fi­dent they’ll be ready for the demands warfight­ers will sub­ject them to.

That’s the mind­set at the Aberdeen Test Center that Rooney said has con­tin­ued to turn ideas into solu­tions for com­bat troops. “Our end prod­uct is a bet­ter equipped, bet­ter pro­tected warfighter,” he said.

As the Aberdeen Test Center sup­ports today’s warfight­ers, it’s car­ry­ing on a tra­di­tion that began in 1917, when it helped pre­pare the mil­i­tary for World War I.

Today, the cen­ter con­tin­ues test­ing a broad spec­trum of mil­i­tary weapons sys­tems and equip­ment: vehi­cles, weapon sys­tems, ammu­ni­tion, portable bridges, gen­er­a­tors, night-​​vision devices, indi­vid­ual equip­ment rang­ing from boots and uni­forms to hel­mets, and even sur­face and under­wa­ter naval systems.

As it con­ducts this test­ing, Rooney said the staff here never loses sight of the men and women on the front lines whose lives are at stake.

“We are a very busy, very diverse and very rel­e­vant test cen­ter, doing things that peo­ple know mat­ters,” he said. “We are help­ing the warfighter tremen­dously. And because peo­ple here rec­og­nize the direct impact of what they’re con­tribut­ing, job sat­is­fac­tion is pretty easy to come by here.”

(Gouge: AFPS)

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