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US Army OOB
I as wondering about the US Army OOB. There is a lack of National Guard units listed.
The is NG Mech and Lt Mech, Tank, and Artty units but no Engineers, Cav, or Helo units. The NG 30th Heavy Brigade that left NC for the Iraq and returnd had the Engineer and Cav units. The Attack Helo unit didn't go to Iraq. Was hoping some could help fix that. I was hoping to do a campaign involing a US NG unit and its a huge difference between the Reg Cav units and the NG Armour units. |
Re: US Army OOB
I'm working on doing an Army oob covering 1990 - 2020, but it's likely to be a human user only thing. (This is my first time, I'm not good enough to make the oob AI-pick friendly). I planned on Engineer and Helo units (in fact most Army Helo units are now reserve and guard if I'm not mistaken) I can include CAV too if you like, but you'll have to tell me what the TO&E difference is.
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Re: US Army OOB
none I can see. the unit is a Cav troop and just with the NG as far as I can find out. all the 30th HSB eqipment is stored in Raeford, NC or at Bragg
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Re: US Army OOB
from defence-aerospace
Quote:
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Re: US Army OOB
In future, could we have a brief summary, and then the URL to the report?.
Cheers Andy |
Re: US Army OOB
I searched the Bell site for the press release but couldn't find it and if one posts a link to a defence-aerospace story it just takes you to the d-a main page not the story itself, something to do with frame I think?
Daniel |
Re: US Army OOB
Linka
EADS North America selected to provide U.S. Army’s Light Utility Helicopter UH-145 to be produced in Columbus, Mississippi Arlington, Virginia, June 30, 2006 — EADS North America today announced that the EADS North America today announced that the UH-145 military helicopter has been selected by the U.S. Army as its next-generation Light Utility Helicopter (LUH). The LUH requirement is for up to 352 aircraft with a potential total program life-cycle value of $3 billion. The LUH award is a continuation of EADS' 20-year heritage as a helicopter supplier to U.S. national and homeland security agencies including the Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Coast Guard, Customs and Border Protection, DEA and the FBI. The decision, announced today by the U.S. Army, marks EADS North America’s first major system win as a prime contractor for the U.S. military. "We're pleased that the UH-145 was chosen by the U.S. Army for this important mission and gratified that this selection demonstrates the service's confidence in our ability to meet the fast-paced delivery schedule and support requirements of these critical Army aircraft," said Ralph D. Crosby, Jr., EADS North America's Chairman and CEO. "We look forward to a long association with the U.S. Army.... |
Re: US Army OOB
F-35 JSF has been named the Lightning II
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Re: US Army OOB
Linka
(Snipping the full article to a short version) August 8, 2006: All future MLRS rockets will be "smart" (GPS guided), and older, unguided rockets, will be upgraded to "smart" status. ... There have been no reliability problems with the GMLRS, which has a range of 70 kilometers and, because of the GPS guidance, it has the same accuracy at any range. Unguided rockets become less accurate the farther they go. What makes the GMLRS most useful is not just its accuracy, which is about the same as air force JDAM GPS guided smart bombs, but because the 200 pound GMLRS warhead produces a smaller bang than the smallest JDAM (500 pounds). When it comes to urban fighting, smaller is better. Less collateral damage, and your troops can be closer to the target when the explosion occurs. .... In order to get more GMLRS, all new MLRS production is being switched to GMLRS, and a retrofit kit, that will turn unguided MLRS rockets into GMLRS, has been introduced. The army believes that GMLRS will remain the most useful smart weapon, even with the introduction, later this year, of the hundred pound 155mm GPS guided Excalibur artillery shell, and the U.S. Air Force's 250 pound JDAM (the SDB, or small diameter bomb). |
Re: US Army OOB
From a Defense Analyst friend: Stuart Slade
MTHEL is actually doing quite well. My understanding is that the pre-production systems are due to be deployed in 2009, only a year behind schedule. They were going to go to Korea but I guess Iraq is a better bet now. Basically, battlefield lasers will arrive pretty soon (at least for the US) This has some game engine implications for WinMBT. You can actually now shoot down artillery shells and rockets in flight; I don't know how you could represent this, except as a special "counterbattery" class which can intercept rockets, etc. |
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