Yuma Sun

Yuma Proving Ground tests cutting-edge parachute system

- Yuma Proving Ground mark Schauer Mark Schauer is the public affairs officer at the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground.

In a combat theater, ground troops in the most isolated areas depend on airlifts for resupply. In the worst conditions, time can be a matter of life or death.

U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground (YPG) is home to all manner of parachute testing, with spacious and instrument­ed ranges large enough to accommodat­e even the world’s largest cargo parachutes.

YPG has long been on the cutting edge of developmen­tal and operationa­l testing of new airdrop capabiliti­es, including the Rapid Rigging De-rigging Airdrop System (RRDAS), which promises to get Soldiers out of a drop zone and into the fight with the equipment they need faster than ever.

Convention­al cargo payloads are typically cushioned with a honeycomb-like cardboard material between the vehicle or other heavy item and the steel palette that carries it from an aircraft to the ground. Even with good cargo parachutes and a perfect landing, multiple layers of the honeycomb will collapse upon impact with the ground. RRDAS, however, dramatical­ly reduces the amount of honeycomb necessary to dissipate the force of impact with 10 reusable airbag modules. The self-inflating airbags can be utilized as low as 750 feet above ground level and carry loads from between 5,000 and 22,000 pounds.

“When it flies through the air, ambient air pressurize­s all of the fabric-based airbags,” said Maj. Matthew Rohe, Assistant Product Manager for Cargo Aerial Delivery at the U.S. Army Program Executive Office Combat Support and Combat Service Support. “When it hits the ground, the airbag modules cushion the payload, so we don’t need as much honeycomb as in the current design.”

The reduced use of honeycomb should lower rigging time by 25%, but testers are particular­ly excited about reducing de-rigging time by 40%, which gets Soldiers out of harm’s way faster.

“The end state is that it will reduce the de-rigging time by about two and a half hours primarily through the reduction of the use of honeycomb so Soldiers on the drop zone won’t have to use axes, shovels, and picks,” said David Emond, operations manager for Product Manager

Force Sustainmen­t Systems. “Currently, once the vehicle crushes the honeycomb Soldiers have to cut out all the honeycomb around the vehicle’s tires to be able to drive it off.”

The system also boasts features to ensure an airdropped vehicle will land upright.

“The system has deployable outriggers on it,” said Rohe. “If it is a high center of gravity load with a chance of tipping over

when it hits the ground, these outriggers kick out and will stop it from flipping over.”

Though developmen­tal testing of RRDAS is scheduled to end later this year and full fielding of the system to troops is expected in Fiscal Year 2025, intermitte­nt testing at YPG based on feedback from operationa­l testing at Fort Bragg, North Carolina should continue for two years after that.

“We will be able to increase

the load of the payload and the length of the platform so we can drop heavier and longer items,” said Rohe. “We’ll be testing on and off at Yuma for several years to come.”

YPG is the Army’s primary personnel and cargo parachute tester, with decades of institutio­nal knowledge in both rigging and evaluating these complex airdrop systems, as well as coordinati­ng multiple sorties safely. The post’s nearly 2,000 square

miles of restricted airspace and favorable weather make it an ideal location for air drop testing.

“We always use YPG because of the test assets available,” said Emond. “It is safer and cheaper to conduct developmen­tal testing here: it is the most reliable and dependable place to get the aircraft that we need to fly test missions.”

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF US ARMY ?? IN A COMBAT THEATER, GROUND TROOPS IN THE MOST ISOLATED AREAS depend on airlifts for resupply. The Rapid Rigging De-rigging Airdrop System being tested at Yuma Proving Ground promises to get soldiers out of a drop zone and into the fight with the equipment they need faster than ever.
PHOTO COURTESY OF US ARMY IN A COMBAT THEATER, GROUND TROOPS IN THE MOST ISOLATED AREAS depend on airlifts for resupply. The Rapid Rigging De-rigging Airdrop System being tested at Yuma Proving Ground promises to get soldiers out of a drop zone and into the fight with the equipment they need faster than ever.
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