Project Origin
RCV Joins JRTC Rotation by U.S. Army Dan Heaton Next Generation Combat Vehicles Cross-Functional Team (NGCV CFT)
October 26, 2021
In an historic first, U.S. Army Soldiers
integrated a Robotic Combat Vehicle (RCV) surrogate into the
opposing force during a recent rotation at the Joint Readiness
Training Center at Fort Polk, Louisiana in September 2021. This
event enabled the Army to gain valuable insight in how best to
utilize robotic vehicles in combat and furthered its ongoing
Campaign of Learning around RCV development.
The Project Origin vehicle, a surrogate for Army Robotic Combat Vehicles, at the Joint Readiness Training Center at Fort Polk, Louisiana in September 2021. (U.S. Army photo by Dan Heaton, NGCV CFT)
|
During the exercise, Soldiers from the 1st
Battalion (Airborne), 509th Infantry, known as Geronimo, used two
Project Origin vehicles (RCV surrogates) in a simulated battle with
the 3/101st (Air Assault). The Origin vehicles are an Army
Development Command (DEVCOM) Ground Vehicle Systems Center (GVSC)
prototyping effort and provides the Army with the ability to conduct
rapid technology and autonomous behavior integration that Soldiers
assess during multiple touchpoints each year.
While on-site
engineers and technicians collected technical data, the Soldiers in
the field further validated the combat benefits of adding robots to
a manned-unmanned teamed formation and identified new capabilities
desired for the next Project Origin Soldier operational experiment.
“With these
units, the human survivability rate increases significantly,”
explained Sergeant First Class Eugene Lackey (Pathfinder Company).
“This system allowed us to close with and destroy the enemy safely
from a distance. It [also enabled] us to the find the enemy before
he could find us. It is a great tool and I wish we could have it for
little bit longer to really see how we can change the way wars are
fought.”
The feedback from Geronimo Soldiers adds to the
Army’s growing library of information on the use of robots.
“Project Origin’s key competency is its ability to collect Soldier
feedback and technical data, use this information to rapidly iterate
both its software and physical payloads, and evaluate the changes in
relevant tactical environments,” said Todd Willert, Project Origin
project manager at GVSC. “The lessons learned during Project Origin
experiments directly support the development of the Robotic Combat
Vehicle and the Army’s forthcoming Ground Autonomy Software, user
interfaces (Warrior Machine Interface), and modular architectures.”
GVSC and the Army’s Next Generation Combat Vehicles Cross
Functional team, both based at the Detroit Arsenal in Michigan, and
the Army Capability Manager-Infantry Brigade Combat Team (ACM-I),
based in Georgia, worked together to integrate the Project Origin
platforms into the JRTC rotation.
“JRTC stressed the systems
to their breaking points, allowing us to identify problems that
would undoubtedly arise in the future,” said MAJ Cory Wallace, RCV
lead for NGCV CFT.
During the exercise, the Soldiers and the
robots also endured a tropical storm, further adding to its
complexity.
Among the highlights of the exercise, the
Geronimo force used the Project Origin platform to block a key
intersection for 36 hours, an effort that benefitted from Origin’s
low heat signature while conducting long hours of battery-powered
“silent watch.” In addition, Geronimo used the project Origin
vehicles to deny helicopter landing zones and conduct route
reconnaissance. Using the robots to conduct these operations – the
two platforms were controlled by four operators and an NCO – allowed
the Soldiers who would have been assigned those tasks to be assigned
different missions.
“This validated the notion that if we
assign the dumb, dirty, dangerous missions to the robots, we can
re-assign our Soldiers to the high-priority complex missions and
tasks,” Wallace said.
The Army has additional Soldier
Touchpoints, with Project Origin and other RCV platforms, scheduled
throughout 2022 as it prepares to make future decisions on the
potential acquisition of RCVs.
Our Valiant Troops |
I Am The One |
Veterans |
Citizens Like Us
U.S. Army Gifts |
U.S. Army
| Army
National Guard |
U.S. Department
of Defense
|
|