OSHKOSH, Wis. (Aug. 6, 2012) —
Unmanned tactical wheeled vehicles that have the potential to serve as a
force multiplier and reduce Warfighters’ exposure to lethal attacks
continue to come closer to reality.
The U.S. Marine Corps Warfighting Lab (MCWL) and Oshkosh Defense, a
division of Oshkosh Corporation (NYSE:OSK), recently conducted the
Marines’ first-ever training of multiple unmanned ground vehicles (UGV)
in a single convoy using the Oshkosh TerraMax™ UGV technology. The
Marines then evaluated the UGVs to determine how they can be utilized to
support real-world “dull, dirty and dangerous” missions.
These most recent developments are a continuation of the MCWL’s Cargo
UGV initiative, which uses Oshkosh Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacements
(MTVR) equipped with the TerraMax UGV technology, and took place during
the MCWL’s Enhanced MAGTF Operations (EMO) Limited Objective Experiment
(LOE) 2.2, July 24 through Aug. 5 at Fort Pickett, Va. The EMO LOE 2.2
sought to evaluate technologies and capabilities being developed for
future missions.
“Seven Marines were trained on our UGVs’ operations in only three days
at the EMO LOE 2.2,” said John Beck, chief unmanned systems engineer for
Oshkosh Corporation. “That’s a testament to the TerraMax technology’s
ease of control and user-friendly design. The capabilities of our highly
sophisticated UGV systems require minimal user intervention to complete
their missions – opening the door for future logistics operations to be
conducted with fewer Warfighters, reducing cost and saving lives.”
Combat-veteran Marines were trained on the Oshkosh UGV technology for
the first time in August 2011 and also assessed it in a series of tests
in challenging terrain and environments. Following that successful
evaluation, Oshkosh delivered a second TerraMax-equipped MTVR earlier
this year, and in June the government evaluated two Oshkosh UGVs
operating in concert with a manned command-and-control vehicle.
Several key tasks were accomplished, including:
One operator supervised the operation of two unmanned MTVRs in convoy
operations Vehicles operated successfully in complete blackout mode
during night operations with no degradation in performance Vehicles
navigated a wide range of terrain, including deep sand trails, clay
roads with encroaching vegetation, two-track trails overgrown with grass
and narrow creek crossings, and adjusted speeds to maintain proper
intra-vehicle spacing
TerraMax UGV Technology
The Oshkosh TerraMax UGV technology is designed as a scalable kit. It
can be integrated on new-production vehicles, including those built by
other manufacturers, or retrofitted on existing vehicle fleets. Vehicles
using the TerraMax technology can retain original payload and
performance capabilities, and they can run planned missions in full
autonomous mode or by “shadowing” a leader vehicle.
The TerraMax technology can function in the same weather conditions and
operating environments as manned vehicles, requiring minimal human
interaction and operator training. Oshkosh is teamed with the National
Robotics Engineering Center of Carnegie Mellon University for perception
system and autonomy software development.
The Cargo UGV project is sponsored by MCWL and the Joint Ground Robotics
Enterprise Robotics Technology Consortium. Oshkosh received a contract
for the Cargo UGV initiative in June 2010.
Oshkosh executives will be on hand to discuss the Cargo UGV initiative
and the TerraMax technology at booth #4232 at AUVSI’s Unmanned Systems
North America 2012.
Asian Defence News
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