The Marines' unmanned ground vehicle will look a lot like the Army's
It's official: After several years of testing and experiments, the Marine Corps is sure it wants an unmanned ground vehicle.
Speaking at the Modern Day Marine conference in Washington on Wednesday, Lt. Col. Scott Humr, the deputy for the Marines' Intelligent Robotics and Autonomous Systems program, said the Corps was now developing a requirements document for its multi-purpose UGV, though the timing of its publication was still to be determined.
'We see this as an important piece of how we envision robots working with robots,' Humr said.
Marines want to add counter-drone weapon to amphibious vehicle
In 2023, Marines from the 3rd Littoral Logistics Battalion in Hawaii teamed up with the Army and the South Korean government to try out a Korean UGV prototype, the Hanwha Arion-SMET, in a two-week foreign comparative test, an event officials said at the time marked 'a critical juncture in the Corps' exploration of advances unmanned technologies.'
The test, which emphasized the UGV's artificial intelligence and machine learning capacity, also underscored the vehicle's value in contested environments, where rugged unmanned logistics platforms can decrease risk to warfighters and better ensure sustainment of combat operations.
Separately, manufacturer Rheinmetall has provided the Marine Corps with autonomous UGVs equipped with remotely controlled weapons station turrets for testing purposes since 2023.
The Marine Corps has shown interest in a robotic mule for transporting gear and weapons for over a decade, with early prototypes from the Marine Corps Warfighting Lab resembling an actual four-legged animal. But Humr said the solution the Corps was now falling in on would be close to the one already defined by the Army. The Army last year awarded contracts for Small Multipurpose Equipment Transports to American Rheinmetall Vehicles and HDT Expeditionary Systems, with officials saying they planned to award a production contract for more than 2,000 of the vehicles to one of the companies in fiscal 2027.
'A lot of the work they've done is like 90% of what we need. And so we're not going to reinvent the wheel, as it were,' Humr told Marine Corps Times. 'Now we just need to move out on developing the annexes, do the materiel change requests, and just start getting things out there.'
Humr emphasized the family-of-systems approach the Marine Corps is now using to shape its unmanned platform acquisition strategy.
'We love to see [unmanned aerial vehicles interfacing with ground platforms and taking loads … containers, whatever, and leaving the Marine out of the loop, as it were, and delivering those systems autonomously,' he said.
With counter-unmanned aerial systems protections bolted on and perimeter protection, he said, the vehicles should be able to operate independently near a combat operations center or further afield.
'I think those are going to be very critical for logistics, for sensing, for communications, [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] etc., logistics,' Humr said. 'We need to develop the requirement a little bit more and ensure that we get it out there quickly, and make sure we have the funding to support that as well. I think we'll get that.'
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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
A tiny-house investor racked up $20,000 in credit card debt to set up a property. Now the 384-square-foot home brings in up to $1,500 a month.
After buying two single-family homes, Manny Reyna added a tiny home to his portfolio. He dealt with a handful of unexpected costs, from a septic system to electrical installation. He now earns up to $1,500 monthly from the tiny home and plans to add more to his land. Manny Reyna admits that when he purchased his first tiny house, he was underprepared. "I didn't know what I was doing," the financially independent real estate investor told Business Insider. As an Army vet, Reyna leveraged a 0% down VA loan to buy his first home in San Antonio in 2021. At the time, he had about $12,000 to his name, nearly all of which went toward closing costs. A year later, he used a VA loan again to buy a second single-family home. He moved in with his family, rented the first to a long-term tenant, and started bringing in passive rental income. When the opportunity to add a fully furnished, 384-square-foot tiny home to his portfolio arose months later, he jumped, figuring he could generate quality returns by listing it on Airbnb. And that's essentially what happened: Reyna and the seller, who had built the tiny home on his own land, agreed on seller financing for the $50,000 property. Plus, the seller agreed to lease his land to Reyna, saving him the headache of finding, buying, and preparing another plot of land. "I started renting it out on Airbnb immediately, and it took off," Reyna said. But as foot traffic on the property increased, the landowner wanted more privacy and gave Reyna six months to move the tiny home. Reyna's first obstacle was figuring out where to put the tiny home. He had two main criteria for the land: It had to be within a 30-minute drive from his home and a place where people were already visiting. 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He secured the land without much upfront cash by using a VLB loan, a program that allows veterans in Texas to buy land with competitive interest rates and low down payments. "I had never bought land before. It's a whole other process," Reyna said, adding that it took four months to close. "When you buy the land, you need to get a surveyor, which is like an engineer who looks at the parameters of the land, maps it all out for you, and gives you a certificate saying, this is what your land looks like." The surveyor was the first of many professionals Reyna would hire to prepare the land for the tiny home properly. Reyna's next hires included a land-clearing company to prepare the land and a moving company to transport the tiny home. The movers "dropped it on some cement blocks," he said. "It's not on wheels or anything — it sits on cement blocks — and I'm not going to lie, it didn't look very nice aesthetically at first. So, I had to go build a deck." 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Los Angeles Times
an hour ago
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A celebrity KBBQ stalwart returns to Koreatown, with a new bar on the way
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an hour ago
- Yahoo
Live: Army secretary testifies before Armed Services Committee
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