'Black Falcons' test advanced
modular, all-weather targeting system
by Leon Price, Test Officer, Airborne and Special
Operations Test Directorate, U.S. Army Operational Test Command
During
operational testing at Fort Bragg, N.C.,
"Black Falcon" Soldiers of Headquarters
and Headquarters Battery, 2nd Battalion,
319th Field Artillery Regiment, perform
a combat equipment jump with the new
Joint Effects Targeting System (JETS). (Photo
Credit: U.S. Army photo)
During
Airborne operational testing at Fort
Bragg, N.C., "Black Falcon" Soldiers of
Headquarters and Headquarters Battery,
2nd Battalion, 319th Field Artillery
Regiment, get ready to push a Joint
Effects Targeting System (JETS) door
bundle out of an airplane. After
landing, they will test to make sure
JETS still functions after the jump.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army photo)
Pvt. 1st
Class Preshelemiah Hitgano, of
Headquarters and Headquarters Battery,
2nd Battalion, 319th Field Artillery
Regiment, sets up the Joint Effects
Targeting System (JETS), to check that
it functions after airdrop testing at
Fort Bragg, N.C. JETS testing will
continue into 2018 at several military
installations.
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army photo)
FORT BRAGG, N.C. -- Forward
observers, who are experts in directing artillery and
mortar fire onto enemy targets, hit the mark in testing
a new piece of targeting equipment here recently.
"Black Falcon" Soldiers of Headquarters and Headquarters
Battery, 2nd Battalion, 319th Field Artillery Regiment,
put their hands on the Joint Effects Targeting System
(JETS) -- a modular, portable, hand-held, day/night,
all-weather, target observation, location, and
designation system.
Components of the JETS include a Handheld Target
Location Module (HTLM); a Laser Marker Module (LMM); and
a Precision Azimuth Vertical Angle Module, all atop a
tripod.
Sgt. 1st Class Ryan Orouke, a test non-commissioned
officer with the U.S. Army Operational Test Command's
Airborne and Special Operations Test Directorate
(ABNSOTD), said JETS testing collects data to determine
its suitability, reliability, and survivability when
conducting static line airborne operations, in a door
bundle configuration for airdrops.
Headquarters and Headquarters Battery troopers spent
four days in New Equipment Training (NET) from the
Program Manager Soldier Precision Targeting Devices
office out of Fort Belvoir, Virginia.
Sgt. 1st Class Juan Cruz, ABNSOTD assistant JETS test
NCO, said that NET places the Soldiers in practical
exercises which validate their ability to use the
equipment in their missions.
After NET validation, Orouke said the "Black Falcons"
put JETS through its paces by performing seven combat
equipment jumps and several door bundle drops, making
sure that JETS still functions when it hits the ground
after the jump.
After each airborne operation, the "Black Falcon"
forward observers assembled the equipment, then began
identifying and designating enemy personnel and vehicle
targets in day and night conditions. Targets were
arrayed over rolling terrain from 800 meters to over
2,500 meters away.
The test data was then gathered to prepare a test report
so senior Army leaders can make procurement decisions on
JETS.
"Operational testing provides Soldiers the opportunity
to use, work with, and offer up their own suggestions on
pieces of equipment that can impact development of
systems that future Soldiers will use in combat," said
Col. Brad Mock, the director of all the Army's airborne
testing.
Upon completion of testing, JETS could potentially be
issued to Army Light and Airborne Artillery forces
worldwide, signaling the first steps in upgrading the
target acquisition of artillerymen.
JETS testing will continue into 2018 at several military
installations.
~~
The U.S. Army Operational Test Command is based at West
Fort Hood, Texas, and its mission is to make sure that
systems developed are effective in a Soldier's hands and
suitable for the environments in which Soldiers train
and fight. Test units and their Soldiers provide
feedback by offering input to improve upon existing and
future systems with which Soldiers will ultimately use
to train and fight.
The Fort Bragg, North Carolina-based ABNSOTD plans,
executes, and reports on operational tests and field
experiments of Airborne and Special Operations Forces
equipment, procedures, aerial delivery, and air
transportation systems in order to provide key
operational data for the continued development and
fielding of doctrine, systems, or equipment to the
Soldier.