82nd Airborne Division tests new wheeled cargo
delivery system to support Global Response Force
by Mr. James (J.C.) Cochran, Military Test Plans
Analyst, Airborne and Special Operations Test Directorate, U.S. Army
Operational Test Command Public Affairs
Paratroopers
from the U.S. Army Advanced Airborne School develop Techniques Tactic
and Procedures prior to testing with the U.S. Army Operational Test
Command's Airborne and Special Operations Test Directorate. (Photo
Credit: Mr. Michael A. Zigmond, Airborne and Special Operations Test
Directorate, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public Affairs)
Capt. Matthew P. Carstensen (right) Commander, Headquarters &
Headquarters Co. 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 3rd
Brigade Combat Team, conducts a door check prior to exiting the first
Caster Assisted A-Series Delivery System from a U.S. Air Force C-17
aircraft. (Photo Credit: Mr. Michael A. Zigmond, Airborne and
Special Operations Test Directorate, U.S. Army Operational Test Command
Public Affairs)
Sgt. 1st Class Miguel A. Amadis of Company
A, 2nd Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat
Team, positions the Caster Assisted A-Series Delivery System in the door
of a U.S. Air Force C-17 aircraft before deployment onto Sicily Drop
Zone. (Photo Credit: Mr. Michael A. Zigmond, Airborne and Special
Operations Test Directorate, U.S. Army Operational Test Command Public
Affairs)
FORT BRAGG, North Carolina -- 82nd
Airborne Division troopers here are wrapping up testing
of the Caster Assisted A-Series Delivery System (CAADS),
which involves delivering mission essential supplies and
munitions to ground troops.
Soldiers from Company A, 2nd Battalion, 325th Airborne
Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, teamed up
with subject matter experts from the United States Army
Advanced Airborne School (USAAS).
With the Fort Bragg-based U.S. Army Operational Test
Command's (USAOTC) Airborne and Special Operations Test
Directorate (ABNSOTD), they successfully rigged,
dropped, and recovered the CAADS door bundles during
operational testing on Sicily Drop Zone.
The 82nd Airborne Division is part of the XVIII Airborne
Corps and is the Army's most strategically mobile
division.
82nd Airborne Division Commander, Maj. Gen. Erik Kurilla,
said, "The 82nd Airborne Division is the elite Airborne
infantry division of the United States Army,
specializing in parachute assault operations into denied
areas."
Kurilla wants to be able to deploy three CAADS door
bundles per paratroop door. Bundles can weigh up to 500
pounds of cargo and be airdropped from a variety of
Department of Defense (DoD) transport aircraft to
support the Global Response Force.
The current door bundle limit without CAADS is two
bundles per door per pass.
Currently, there is no standardized aerial delivery
system in the DoD inventory that
employs the dolly-assisted method, but other countries
like France employ a similar system.
CAADS is a platform built of plywood, a brake, and six
caster wheels which allow the door bundle to roll across
the aircraft floor, speeding airdrop deployment.
Testing demonstrated safe deployment of door bundles
using CAADS to improve the ability of Soldiers deploying
the bundles while reducing exit time. The increased
speed allows for additional bundles per pass.
The efficiency of the CAADS concept provides the
capability of exiting more door bundles per pass, per
aircraft -- all increasing the amount of supplies on the
ground to the paratroopers during their critical 12-hour
initial entry phase.
Sgt. 1st Class Miguel A. Amadis of Company A, 2nd
Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade
Combat Team, said, "I like the CAADS a lot. It was easy
to push, easy to set up at the door, and it will be very
useful for the upcoming missions."
One Airborne unit commander said he liked CAADS's
simplistic design and concept, which can seriously
lessen the physical wear and tear on the average
paratrooper.
"The castor's one free axle made the rotation into the
door easy but still kept two axles locked, which
maintained control as the container exited the door and
entered the slip stream," said Capt. Matthew P. Carstensen, Commander, Headquarters and Headquarters
Company, 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry
Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team.
"I felt that the concern of jarring the container in the
doorway was safely mitigated by those locked axles," he
added. "Looking at future application, a container of
this size and capacity can significantly increase the
combat power and lethality delivered onto a hostile drop
zone on the first pass."
According to Sgt. 1st Class Martin L. Ross, ABNSOTD Test
NCO, operational testing is OTC's opportunity to
contribute to Army readiness.
"Anything less compromises the Army's ability to provide
the forces that fight and win the Nation's wars," he
said.
"Operational testing is about Soldiers," said Col.
Bradley F. Mock, Director of the ABNSOTD. "It is about
making sure that the systems developed are effective in
a Soldier's hands and suitable for the environments in
which Soldiers train and fight. Operational testing is
OTC's opportunity to contribute to readiness; anything
less compromises the Army's ability to provide the
forces that fight and win the Nation's wars."
The ABNSOTD Test Division chief explained how test units
incorporate systems under test into their actual
missions and training requirements.
"Leaders of units involved in testing have the first
look at new systems, which may also drive changes to
operations and doctrine," said Lt. Col. Gregory Oquendo.
"Tests are unit-led, which translates into coordinated
control under realistic operational environment
scenarios."
Other tests underway at ABNSOTD include the Advanced
Medium Mobile Power Sources (AMMPS) 30K generator, which
will replace the relatively short-lived TQG (Tactical
Quiet Generator) program, and airdrop certification of
the Light Armored Vehicle (LAV-25A2) Mobile Protective
Firepower (MPF). Highly-instrumented test drops by
the Airborne and Special Operations Test Directorate will help test overall airdrop survivability
of the vehicles.
~~
About the U.S. Army Operational Test Command:
USAOTC is based at West Fort Hood, Texas, and its
mission is about ensuring 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
Warfighter.