Showing posts with label Leaner meaner cheaper better. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leaner meaner cheaper better. Show all posts

Monday, September 19, 2011

The US Navy's newest ship is akin to a sea-going P/U Truck

" Leaner,meaner, cheaper, better."

This was the strategy NASA put in place in the recent past to get things in line with where they needed to be. Let's hope that the Bureaucrats don't kill NASA off entirely.

The US NAVY has decided that the "hot rod" ships are nice, but what they really need is a "Pick up Truck". A utility vehicle that can take on whatever mission they can put into it....sounds like a winner to me.


Navy’s Newest Ship is the Pick-Up Truck of the Sea
By David Axe September 19, 2011 Wired.com

There’s not much inside the Navy’s newest ship, and that’s exactly how they like it.

338 feet long, 93 feet wide, low and blocky, USNS Spearhead is basically a thin aluminum shell wrapped around four diesel engines, rudimentary control facilities for its 40 crew plus 312 airline-style passenger seats. The rest of the $250-million, twin-hull catamaran vessel, christened this weekend, is empty space … with an expansive flight deck on top.

“The vessel is in essence a large and fast maritime ‘truck,’” Eric Wertheim, author of the definitive Combat Fleets of the World, tells Danger Room. What she carries, and where, is left to the imagination of the Pentagon’s regional commanders. “Flexibility may the best attribute of this ship,” says Capt. Douglas D. Casavant, Jr., Spearhead’s first skipper.

Spearhead and the other 22 planned Joint High Speed Vessels (JHSV), built by Austal USA in a brand-new shipyard on Alabama’s Mobile River, are a product of the Pentagon’s recent obsession with “modular” vehicles. The idea is to build basic machines, fast and cheap, and quickly modify them with new weapons, sensors and other payloads. “Our 20,000-square-foot mission bay area be reconfigured to quickly adapt to whatever mission we are tasked with,” Cassavant says.


As a design philosophy, modularity doesn’t always work. The Littoral Combat Ship, a version of which is also built by Austal, ended up being built faster than its swappable weapons and sensors, leaving the $600-million warships mostly useless empty shells, for now. But empty could work for the JHSV; it’s focused on non-combat, logistics-style missions. In fact, the swift catamarans — with a top speed of 45 knots, compared to just 30 knots for most warships — will be crewed by civilian mariners from the Navy’s Military Sealift Command instead of combat-trained sailors.

Which non-combat missions the JHSV handles could vary widely. “It could be for getting U.S. assets into a disaster relief zone quickly, or it could be for getting friendly forces evacuated out of a war zone in an emergency, or for unloading Marines and soldiers into an austere port once it’s been secured by an initial assault,” Wertheim says. “It can also play an important role moving stuff from a remote staging base at sea to wherever it’s most needed ashore.”

And that’s not all. Special Forces could use the JHSVs as a fast, low-profile staging bases for secret raids into enemy territory, though the vessels’ civilian crews and light, strictly defensive armament means they can’t get too close to a hostile shore.

And retired Rear Adm. Robert Reilly, back when he headed Military Sealift Command, talked about replacing today’s gargantuan hospital ships Comfort and Mercy, both converted from oil tankers, with JHSVs carrying portable medical equipment. Switching to smaller hospital ships would allow the Navy to bring humanitarian assistance to shallow, remote ports too small for Comfort and Mercy.

That is, if the Navy’s new pick-up truck ship can withstand the elements. Spearhead builder Austal recently caught flack for omitting a standard corrosion-protection system from a Littoral Combat Ship it built. That ship, USS Independence, began disintegrating after just a few months in the water. “The dirty little secret is that the Navy fully expects to have the same problems with the JHSV,” naval analyst Raymond Pritchett claims. Austal spokesman Craig Hooper declined to comment for this story.

Pritchett adds that the corrosion problem “is well understood, so a solution can be found.” Let’s hope so. It’d be a shame for the Navy’s new pick-up truck of the sea to rust away for lack of Tru-Kote.

Photo: Navy

Friday, August 5, 2011

Soldiers use R/C Truck to save lives....AWESOME use of the technology Dude !!!

This story needs to be directed at the people in military procurement - Are you listening ?

Basicly we put a $500 toy in the hands of a soldier (the end user) and he is able to utilize the item to ensure he and all his buddies stay alive. No need for Million dollar procurement horseshite - Just use the technology right off the shelf and IT WORKS !!

I am glad to report good news and once again, AWESOME use of the technology Dude !!!


Hobbyists' Toy Truck Saves 6 Soldiers' Lives
By NED POTTER - NedPotter - ABC NEWS
Aug. 4, 2011

Staff Sgt. Christopher Fessenden is on duty in Afghanistan now after tours with the Army in Iraq. He has traveled with standard-issue equipment -- weapons, helmet, uniform, boots and so forth -- plus a radio-controlled model truck his brother Ernie sent.

The truck is not a toy to him. He says it just saved six soldiers' lives.

"We cannot thank you enough," said Sgt. Fessenden in an email from the front that Ernie, a software engineer in Rochester, Minn., shared with ABC News.

The little truck was used by the troops to run ahead of them on patrols and look for roadside bombs. Fessenden has had it since 2007, when Ernie and Kevin Guy, the owner of the Everything Hobby shop in Rochester, rigged it with a wireless video camera and shipped it to him.

Last week, it paid off. Chris Fessenden said he had loaned the truck to a group of fellow soldiers, who used it to check the road ahead of them on a patrol. It got tangled in a trip wire connected to what Fessenden guesses could have been 500 lbs. of explosives. The bomb went off. The six soldiers controlling the truck from their Humvee were unhurt.

"Monday morning, Ernie comes running into my store and says, 'You're not going to believe this,'" said Guy, recounting the story in a telephone interview.

"I got an email from [Chris] that said, 'Hey, man, I'm sorry, but the truck is gone,'" said Ernie, admitting he still found it all pretty hard to believe. "The neat thing is that the guys in the Humvee were all right."

The military does what it can to protect its troops in Iraq and Afghanistan -- they travel in armored vehicles and are trained in how to patrol for bombs -- but IEDs, or Improvised Explosive Devices, have been a constant danger. Ernie says he once asked Chris, "Doesn't the army have ways of checking for these things?" The answer: "If it does, I don't know about them."

That was what led Ernie and Kevin to send the model truck, a brand called a Traxxis Stampede. After they added the video camera, with a small monitor Chris could mount on his rifle, Kevin guesses the total cost came to about $500.

In his email, Chris Fessenden said the little truck has successfully found four IEDs since he first got it.

"We do mounted patrols, in trucks, and dismounted by foot," he wrote. "The funny thing is the Traxxis does faster speeds than the trucks we are operating in under the governing speed limit... so the traxxis actually keeps up with us and is able to advance past us and give us eyes on target before we get there."

"Is it a toy?" he wrote. "Yeah it is...is it fun... absolutely... but the guys here take the truck very seriously when out on [a] mission."

Replacement Truck on the Way

"I've talked to my brother a number of times and he says anything they get, from a letter to a bag of peanuts, it makes them feel great," said Ernie. "And then if you send them something cool like this, that helps them do their job and keeps them safe... There's just no way of explaining that. It's such a great feeling."

Kevin joined in: "For us, that's what it's all about -- a bunch of guys over there trying to make a difference."

They had already been trying to send Chris a new truck; the Stampede was wearing out. Kevin said he will donate one through a nonprofit group he helped organize, Fuel My Brain. They had tried to raise some money over the weekend at a county fair near Rochester, but had come away with all of six dollars. That was before they had a story to tell about the six soldiers.

"That's just unreal," said Kevin. "That's six mothers that six guys are going home to.