News from Army-Guide.com Archives Index
|
Subscribe
|
|
| << May13, 2005 - News from Army-Guide.com |
May18, 2005 - News from Army-Guide.com >> |
|
U.S. to send reinforced APCs to replace vulnerable Humvees World Tribune.com The U.S. Army has plans to deliver reinforced armored personnel carriers to Iraq. Officials said the army has been overseeing a project to install add-on armor on surplus M113 and M577 APCs deployed in Iraq. They said the project was meant to bolster protection of combat troops where speed was not critical. So far, the army plans to send more than 700 reinforced APCs to Iraq in an $84 million project, Middle East Newsline reported. The use of the M113A3s and the M577s would replace the Humvee utility vehicles, which have largely failed to protect U.S. troops from improvised explosive devices, or roadside bombs, in Iraq. "These additional vehicles will provide much needed protection while we await the delivery of more modern up-armored Humvees," Rep. Ike Skelton of Missouri, the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, said. The army has set a requirement for add-on armor kits for the Humvees and other vehicles at more than 13,000. Armor Holdings produces the armor kits and has maintained a production level of 550 a month. Officials said the use of the up-armored APCs was regarded as an interim measure as the Defense Department develops medium- and long-term armor solutions. They said the army and Marine Corps have been designing armored jeeps and other combat vehicles that could support add-on armor and protect against IEDs. Congress has urged the Pentagon to replace many of the Humvees deployed in Iraq with M113s and other APCs. Officials said, however, that the up-armored M113s were deemed as being too slow to participate in combat patrols. Officials said the up-armoring of the APCs has taken place in Kuwait, with U.S. Navy and Air Force mechanics stationed to help in the effort. The Third Army, based in Kuwait, has been up-armoring about 50 Humvees and trucks per week. Officials said the attrition rate of the up-armored vehicles has been high because of the extra weight. NCDR and Pennsylvania State University`s Electro-Optics Center Launch Project to Develop Sensors for Unmanned Military Vehicles The Technology Collaboration The National Center for Defense Robotics (NCDR), an initiative of The Technology Collaborative, today announced that it has signed a $1.25 million master sub-contract with Pennsylvania State University`s Electro-Optics Center (EOC) to develop lower cost, lower weight, less power-hungry electro-optical sensors for unmanned ground vehicles and to explore methods of manufacturing and testing them more efficiently and cost-effectively. The NCDR also announced that it has begun to sub-contract with southwestern Pennsylvania-based Agile Robotics Alliance member companies and organizations to undertake a number of key projects under the EOC contract. The first two projects were awarded to Pittsburgh-based RE2, Inc. (Robotics Engineering Excellence) and SEEGRID. The results of these projects are expected to address specific unmet government needs, to drive subsequent military utilization and/or commercial productization activities, and to help generate new jobs in the growing field of agile robotics. "Developing and being able to produce electro-optical sensors and devices specific to the requirements of unmanned ground vehicles is essential to enabling their ability to operate more autonomously," said Bill Thomasmeyer, President of the NCDR and Executive Vice-President of The Technology Collaborative. "We are fortunate to have such a strong, able, and willing partner in the EOC with their growing resources and extensive expertise in electro-optic sensors and systems to help us achieve these objectives." "Penn State University has a proud history of advancing research that also creates economic opportunities for Pennsylvania," said Karl Harris, Director of the EOC. "The growing relationship between the EOC and the NCDR is certainly creating good research and exciting opportunities that will not only benefit our region but our nation as well." Pittsburgh-based RE2, a Carnegie Mellon spin-off company specializing in mobile defense robotics with an emphasis on unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) and unmanned air vehicles (UAVs), will undertake an effort to research and determine the feasibility of establishing an indoor and/or outdoor Experimentation Center for assessing the performance of various Electro-Optic sensors on unmanned vehicles and other applications. SeeGrid, Inc., a developer of automation products that enable manufacturers, warehouses and distribution centers to automate their day-to- day material handling processes, is also based in Pittsburgh and will undertake a project to develop a standardized, multi-variant methodology for measuring the effectiveness of different electro-optic sensors on various unmanned vehicle platforms and then using that methodology to objectively assess and rank various, currently available, off-the-shelf sensors and devices. |
|
| << May13, 2005 - News from Army-Guide.com |
May18, 2005 - News from Army-Guide.com >> |
News from Army-Guide.com Archives Index
|
Subscribe
|
|
|
Archives powered by Zinester's Mailing List Service
Details on News from Army-Guide.com |
Browse for more newsletters at Zinester's Ezine Directory
Managed by Zinester's Mailing List Management |