by Airman 1st Class Jonathan Stefanko
7th Bomb Wing Public Affairs
4/18/2013 - DYESS, Texas -- Airmen
with the 317th Airlift Group completed the first Big Country Joint
Precision Airdrop System Capabilities Training Exercise April 11, at
Fort Hood, Texas, to test a piece of technology designed to deliver
cargo with pinpoint accuracy in even the most hostile environments.
The technology in JPADS uses global positioning satellites, steerable
parachutes and an on-board computer to steer cargo to a designated point
of impact on a drop zone, a capability similar to Joint Direct Attack
Munitions.
During the exercise, 25 JPADS bundles were dropped by C-130Js from Dyess
AFB, Texas and Keesler AFB, Miss., C-17s from Joint Base Charleston,
S.C., and Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., as well as an MC-130J from
Cannon AFB, N.M., to demonstrate the ability of the airlift community to
target fighting forces simultaneously, and drop cargo with pinpoint
accuracy.
"The unique objectives of the Big Country JPADS CAPEX highlight the
capability of re-supplying a large fighting force with precision
results," said Maj. Justin Brumley, JPADS CAPEX mission commander.
"Exercises like this demonstrate our ability to target individuals, and
or individual fighting forces simultaneously, and drop cargo with
precision."
Traditional airdrops by Air Force airlifters are at altitudes of 400 to
1,000 feet. With JPADS, those same bundles can be dropped and guided
from as high as 25,000 feet with pinpoint accuracy, allowing aircrew to
drop cargo at a safe distance while also reducing the time ground troops
are exposed to enemy fire.
"The 317th AG Airmen, over the last two years, have repeatedly displayed
the importance of precision airdrop," Brumley said. "From training like
we fight to delivering in a combat theater, we continue to push the
limits of a precision re-supply delivery platform."
The main benefits to the JPADS capability includes an increase in the
number of available drop zones and the cargo's precision. They also
increase the survivability of the aircraft and its crew by being able to
complete standoff deliveries.
"Up to this point, linear thought processes caused us to send one plane
to drop with precision to one unit," Brumley said. "This demonstration,
however, impresses upon the minds of our leaders how, as a joint-force,
we can take multiple mobility aircraft and sustain hundreds of
individual fighting positions at the same time.
"Our warfighters could literally land from a para-drop on a foreign
airfield at one moment and seconds later be fully supplied by a JPADS
bundle to bring their full fighting capacity to bear," he added. "Take
this warfighting individual and multiply him or her by hundreds or more
and you are talking about compounding effects that drive serious
strategy. That is the magnitude of response we are trying to achieve
from this CAPEX."
Exercises that test JPADS capabilities offer several opportunities to
gather data, that in turn, improves the effectiveness and accuracy of
its system.
Additionally, during the CAPEX venue, Dyess Airmen opened their doors to
host a crosstalk forum. In this forum, participants discussed the
current precision airdrop system, and what the future holds for
precision aerial re-supply of our war-fighters.
"The joint-partners who have made it a point to participate in this
exercise are nothing less than modern-day innovators," Brumley said.
"They are those who know no-limits to the element of improvement."
Friday, April 19, 2013
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