Feral Jundi

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Jobs: Aerial Gunner, Rotary Wing (UH1-HII)

   Cool gig, and I hope some lucky FJ reader gets it.  By the way, please do not send me a resume/CV for this, because I am not the point of contact or recruiter.  I find this stuff, and post it for the job seekers out there as a nice little benefit of the blog only.  If I ever do recruit for a company, I will let you guys know, and you can send me resumes until the cows come home.

    Also, please refrain from posting a resume in the comments section, because I will just delete it.  That is for your guy’s protection and I just don’t understand why folks do that.  If you have a question, and I have stated that I am a point of contact for the job in the post, then contact me via emails.  Other than that, happy job hunting guys and gals. –Matt

—————————————————————–

Aerial Gunner, Rotary Wing (UH1-HII)

Job ID: 2009-118A

Location: Kabul, Afghanistan

Category: Security

Position Type: Contract

Contract Name: International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (INL)

Contract Length: 1 Year With an Option to Renew

Salary: Competitive Salary (DOE/DOQ)

Security Clearance: Secret

Status (definition): Vacant

Company Description

Global Platform Support Solutions

Position Description

Principle Responsibilities:

Perform duties as an aerial gunner on helicopter missions flown in support of the U.S. Department of State, Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement and the ground eradication effort in Afghanistan. Individual will perform all other duties as directed.

Education Required:

High School diploma required.

Experience Required:

Military crewmember with experience and knowledge of helicopter mounted weapons systems and their employment in a high-threat environment. Combat experience is desired. Weapons training and previous exposure to operations in Afghanistan is desired.

Special Knowledge/ Skills Required:

Experience on the GAU-17 mini-gun and M240 or similar crew served weapon desired.

Prior military experience as a helicopter crew chief and gunner desired.

Knowledge of U.S. Military aircrew training programs desired.

Experience as a UH-1H crew chief or gunner is desired.

Experience as a non-rated crewmember instructor is desired.

Must complete and pass a Class III Flying Duty Medical Examination.

Must successfully complete weapons qualification (M-4, M-9, M240, and Minigun/Gau-17), security training,

(more…)

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Cool Stuff: Carnivorous Robots — The Fly Stealing Robot

     I would love to have a few of these for contracts. lol  It seems everywhere you go for a deployment, there are usually flies or mosquitos.  So I applaud any devilish and ingenious ways of eradicating the things. I think this contraption takes the cake. –Matt

—————————————————————-

Fly Stealing Robot

Carnivorous Robots Eager to Eat Your Pests

UK-based designers James Auger and Jimmy Loizeau believe that, if robots are ever to be welcomed into people’s homes, they’ll need to fit in with the rest of the furniture, and earn their keep. Their prototypes trap and digest (microbial fuel cell) pests like flies and mice to gain energy – see video demonstrating how they work.

*****

Fly-stealing robot

This robot is meant to appeal to people with a dark sense of humour.

Its design is intended to encourage spiders to build webs between the pegs on the backboard.

Any flies trapped in the web are tracked by a camera (right).

After no movement has been sensed for 10 minutes, the robotic arm (left) picks out the dead fly and drops it into the fuel cell, generating electricity to partially power the camera and robotic arm.

The robot gets the rest of its energy from a fuel cell housed underneath a conventional ultraviolet fly killer.

(Image: Auger-Loizeau)

Link here.

 

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Cool Stuff: Small Wars Journal $8,000 Writing Competition

    This is great and I hope to see some FJ readers submit a paper.  Good luck. –Matt

——————————————————————

Small Wars Journal $8,000 Writing Competition – Warning Order

July 17, 2009

Papers are sought on the topics below. Winning entries and select others will be published in future special volumes of Small Wars Journal. For each of the two topics, a $3,000 Grand Prize and two $500 Honorable Mentions will be awarded. Hence $8,000 total purse.

Papers should be 3,000 to 5,000 words in length. Papers will be blind reviewed and judged primarily for clarity of presentation, relevant insights to the question asked, and overall significance of the key points made to the practice of small wars. No extra points awarded for length, name dropping, or how epic the incidents discussed were as distinct from the weight of the insights. Papers need not be OIF- / OEF-centric. Papers must resonate beyond a single silo, i.e. they must touch on at least some aspect of joint, coalition, interagency, multi-disciplinary, or cross-cultural significance.

Papers are to be submitted by midnight on November 10, 2009, with winners to be announced in January, 2010. One entry per author per question. Standard writing competition mumbo jumbo will apply, we will publish a final announcement shortly with those gruesome details, including detailed submission instructions.

We will not answer questions about this competition submitted in individual emails. Submit any good questions publicly in the comments below, but let’s not split hairs. The topics are what they are.

We greatly respect the works and insights of the usual suspects from the many DoD-centric writing competitions and anticipate some great and hard-to-beat entries from them. We would really like to see some stiff competition from fresh new voices and experience sets not often heard. Please spread the good word about this competition to the far reaches of the empire of important participants in the vastly broad and complex field of small wars. This is a level playing field, and let’s get all the players on it.

The topics are:

1. Security vs. [Jobs & Services & etc.] — horse and cart, or chicken and egg?

The “security is the military’s job” camp at an extreme expects more order than can be obtained by kinetic measures without a scorched earth approach. Alternately, it demands that the armed forces exceed their organizational mandate in early phases and then obediently (and wastefully?) hop back into their military box until things go awry again. Other camps may err by expecting too much from non-military actors in non-permissive environments, understating the risks they already do or should accept, or tinkering with building massive non-lethal expeditionary capabilities that may be unsustainable.

What does security really mean in a small war, how much is needed when, and how do you make meaningful security gains through the pragmatic application of affordable capabilities? How does security relate as an intermediate objective or an end state? Include examples of real successes and failures.

2. Postcards From The Edge – the practical application of the Whole of Government approach.

Organizational issues are being discussed from Goldwater-Nichols II to unity of effort and simple handshake-con. Whatever the structure on high, people from different walks of life and different functional expertise need to work together on the ground at the pointy end of the spear to deliver effects that matter. Discuss real experiences (personal, known firsthand, or researched and documented) of real people facing real challenges that offer relevant insights into the conduct of a small war.

Consider any, all, or none of the following:- Discuss what worked and/or what didn’t, and why.- How did participants from different agencies, branches, nations, etc. look at problems differently, and how were those views eventually reconciled (or not)?- Discuss personal challenges.- Discuss the moral and ethical challenges of small wars.- Approach as a turnover guide to a successor.- Inform operational approaches and “grand” tactics, techniques, and procedures.- Inform human resourcing / manpower / training & education.- Relevance for national resource strategy.- Relevance for go-to-war decisions and conflict strategy.

Story here.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Technology: Upcoming Military Robot Could Feed on Dead Bodies

Filed under: Cool Stuff,Technology — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 8:49 PM

   This has to rank as one of the top technology posts here.  Robots feeding on dead bodies in war zones?  Interesting to say the least. Doug found this one by the way. –Matt

——————————————————————

Upcoming Military Robot Could Feed on Dead Bodies

Tuesday , July 14, 2009

It could be a combination of 19th-century mechanics, 21st-century technology — and a 20th-century horror movie.

A Maryland company under contract to the Pentagon is working on a steam-powered robot that would fuel itself by gobbling up whatever organic material it can find — grass, wood, old furniture, even dead bodies.

Robotic Technology Inc.’s Energetically Autonomous Tactical Robot — that’s right, “EATR” — “can find, ingest, and extract energy from biomass in the environment (and other organically-based energy sources), as well as use conventional and alternative fuels (such as gasoline, heavy fuel, kerosene, diesel, propane, coal, cooking oil, and solar) when suitable,” reads the company’s Web site.

That “biomass” and “other organically-based energy sources” wouldn’t necessarily be limited to plant material — animal and human corpses contain plenty of energy, and they’d be plentiful in a war zone.

EATR will be powered by the Waste Heat Engine developed by Cyclone Power Technology of Pompano Beach, Fla., which uses an “external combustion chamber” burning up fuel to heat up water in a closed loop, generating electricity.

The advantages to the military are that the robot would be extremely flexible in fuel sources and could roam on its own for months, even years, without having to be refueled or serviced.

Upon the EATR platform, the Pentagon could build all sorts of things — a transport, an ambulance, a communications center, even a mobile gunship.

In press materials, Robotic Technology presents EATR as an essentially benign artificial creature that fills its belly through “foraging,” despite the obvious military purpose.

Story here.

• Click here for a brief description of EATR at the Robotic Technology Web site.

• Click here for a much longer overview of the project in PDF format.

• Click here to read about the Cyclone Waste Heat Engine.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Cool Stuff: Slinging.org

Filed under: Cool Stuff,Weapons — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 9:14 PM

   This is a fun one, and thanks to Doug for sending me this.  I guess the one thing that is cool about slings, is that you could potentially use a sling as a less than lethal option for crowd control.  Thats all depending on the type of projectile you use. (please note the Israeli using the sling below).  Or if you are bored at some outpost and want something to do on your downtime, build a sling out of paracord and see if you can hit a tin can with it.  It’s cheap fun, but it is also cool to get a feel for how this weapon could have been used back when it was a weapon of war.  With the right projectile and some skill, a sling can certainly be deadly. –Matt

—————————————————————–

An Israeli soldier uses a sling shot to stone demonstrators and workers dismantling the area in front of the Fatima Gate on the Israeli-Lebanese border, at Kfarkila, southern Lebanon, Tuesday Oct. 10, 2000. The area was liberated after the Israeli’s troops withdrew from southern Lebanon in May.

Welcome to Slinging.org!

When I first became interested in this fascinating weapon, I could find little information on the web or in published material. I hope this website can be the definitive source for slinging related information and news. Of course, it needs a community of slingers to experiment and pass on their knowledge. With your help, I hope we can rekindle the interest in this truly simple, effective, and historically significant weapon.

Sling Ranges

The range of the sling has always been a point of contention among enthusiasts and scholars. Present literature generally underestimates the sling’s range. Consider this snippet of text from Thom Richardson’s “The Ballistics of The Sling”, which provides an overview of some of these statistics:

“The more conservative estimates are around the 200 m mark (Ferrill 1985: 25), Connolly suggests 350 m (1981: 49), Korfmann estimates 400 m (1973: 37) while Demmin and Hogg go to 500 m (1893: 876; 1968: 30). The few accurately recorded observations are rather different. Reid records 55 m with a 227 g stone, and 91 m with 85 and 113 g balls (1976: 21). Burgess threw stones with his reconstructed Lahun sling between 50 and 100 yds, but admits to being unskilled at the art (1958: 230). Korfmann observed Turkish shepherds sling ordinary pebbles, ‘in 5 out of 11 trials the pebbles reached 200 m, and the three best casts were between 230 and 240 m (1973), while Dohrenwend has himself thrown beach pebbles over 200 yds (1994: 86).”

Since many of these statistics are formulated from authors’ experiences, the ranges that are creeping into literature, and becoming the standard, might not be representative of the true potential of the sling. The sling is a demanding weapon; range varies considerably from amateur to expert. Below is a table documenting the varied ranges of some members on slinging.org’s forum. It’s also important to consider the projectiles used in the test. A stone or softball will not perform as well as a biconical lead projectile, like those often used in antiquity.

For comparison, the current World Flight record for a “historically accurate” English longbow and horn/sinew composite bow is 306m and 566m respectively. It should be noted, however, that these ranges were achieved using light-weight flight arrows designed for range, and not for combat.

Website here.

5-Strand Woven Paracord Sling Tutorial

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress