USSOCOM Camp Roberts: Where Engineers and Operators Meet to View New Technology
Four weeks ago I attended a USSOCOM and Navy Post Graduate School event known simply as Camp Roberts TNT. Located in a remote part of the California Central Valley near the town of Paso Robles, the best way to describe Camp Roberts is that it’s like a Boy Scout Jamboree for engineers, scientists, and military operators. However, Camp Roberts focuses on the serious business of Special Operations that was made even more somber by the loss of 30 Navy SEALS the day before the start of the event.
Sunday, as I was packing to go to Camp Roberts, I couldn’t help but reflect on the loss of the Special Operations team that day. I knew that throughout the country there were 30 Navy and Marine Corps officers putting on their dress uniforms to personally deliver the most horrific news a family can get. Each officer held a message that would turn into a dagger which would penetrate and twist in the heart of a mother, wife, or children. At Camp Roberts many attendees had personal connections to the lost troops but everyone hunkered down to the business at hand.
The USSOCOM Camp Roberts TNT (Tactical Network Testbed) was well attended with more than 850 registered attendees. Camp Roberts is about 15 miles from the charming wine country town of Paso Robles. The camp is mostly dirt roads and gravel, 42 degrees in the morning up to 98 by noon. There are two primary buildings (double wides): a large briefing room that was designed for about 80 but packed with 200, and the TOC (Tactical Operations Center) with numerous flat screens showing different displays depending on who was demonstrating.
Unlike trade shows, TNT is mostly live equipment demos, outside, in the dirt with very informal discussions. But unlike contract delivery testing, perfection was not expected since some of the equipment was still in the development stage. Uniform of the day was khakis, jeans, T-shirts, polo shirts, caps and water bottles. Lunch was a vendor tent with hot dogs, chips and drinks. TNT has become so popular, that other COCOMs are looking to start their own.
Every morning there was a group meeting led by Dr. Buettner (NPS, retired Navy) who heads up the TNT effort. The staff reviews the plan of the day, demos, weather, safety (heat, snakes, foxes, elk, moving equipment, etc.) and logistics. Each participant quickly explains their demo, time, and location. I highlighted my 30-minute lunch time session on oblique imagery. Dr. Buettner, who has a dry sense of humor, interjected that I may or may not be there in November with a live aircraft demo if the audience gives me a thumbs down. I had good attendance at my presentation and closed by asking for a show of hands if we should come back in November for a live aircraft capture demo. Fortunately all hands went up, which I was quick to point out to Dr. Buettner. He muttered something about old Navy guys being mission focused.
The majority of demonstrations focused on communications equipment ranging from very secure high bandwidth line of sight to satellite up and down links. Although there was a schedule, the schedule was done primarily to prevent frequency interference so demonstrators had a clean hour or two. Most of the demos went on all day as attendees walked from one tent to another or to remote locations on the base.
Ball Aerospace highlighted geospatial technology. Ball had helicopter flying overhead carrying its Flash liDAR system downloading imagery and 3D data.
For those of you not familiar with Flash LiDAR, it is what the name implies. Rather than a raster point scan the Flash LiDAR shoot all points at once. That permits the union of other data such as full-motion video with the 3D data of the Flash LiDAR. Therefore, 3D video on the fly. Their field of view is was a relatively narrow but engineers are working to widen it.
Outside the two main buildings were numerous companies set up under pop-up canopies ranging from Lockheed Martin and Harris with high-end communications gear.
Shown here are two battery powered UA’s. The helos with installed video cameras have loiter times of up to 45 minutes. There were many examples of wireless handheld com gear and high bandwidth Line of Sight transmission devices such as the example below.
There was a demonstration of paint-on antennas that turn trees or wall into an antenna and very compact fuel cells shown here.
ITT had a field demonstration of a two-way audio/video link designed for corpsman operating in remote locations. The corpsman wore a vest that contained mics, earphones and a video camera (the white device on this man’s vest). The entire system was very light and unobtrusive. It permitted multiple corpsmen to communicate directly with mobile field locations or even a specialist in a hospital. The doctor could see exactly what the corpsman was seeing and give the corpsman directions real time and hands free. This also permitted the doctor to make advance preparations to receive the patient when he was medevaced.
All during the field exercise each corpsman was tracked via GIS on an image base map. The tracking and communications were never lost even though the corpsmen were traveling behind hills with no line of sight to the mobile bases. This was accomplished through a system of local and satellite communications that reached back to Reston, Virginia. I could see that this would be beneficial for domestic first responders as well as the military. The quality of the video being sent from the corpsman was extremely good and the GIS display at the mobile base station tracked their movements very accurately.
Camp Roberts is unique in that it’s not a “sound clip” marketing bombardment like most trade shows. Since attendance is by invitation only, marketing is discouraged. What does happen are informal and in-depth discussions between field operators and engineers. Attendees get a chance to see equipment in action and exchange ideas freely. I felt lucky to be invited and hope that I can do some small part to help our troops accomplish their missions.
Photos: Art Kalinski
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