Love Letters To Robots: Why Marines Extended K-MAX In Afghanistan (EXCLUSIVE)
http://defense.aol.com/2013/03/18/love-letters-to-robots-why-marines-extended-k-max-in-afghanista/
Love Letters To Robots: Why Marines Extended K-MAX In Afghanistan (EXCLUSIVE)
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.
Published: March 18, 2013
Half the US forces in Afghanistan may be coming home, but K-MAX, the little unmanned helicopter, will stay until the end. A pair of the remote-controlled cargo choppers arrived in Afghanistan in late 2011 for what was billed as a short-term experiment, but the Marines liked it so much that the trial deployment was repeatedly extended, and now the military has confirmed it will keep them on "indefinitely." (The extension was first reported yesterday by Reuters). Three love letters to the remote-controlled cargo chopper from military officers, obtained exclusively by AOL Defense, show why.
Technologically, K-MAX is just plain neat. It's a small one-man chopper built by Kaman Aerospace Corp. originally for logging operations, where it airlifted tree trunks out of tight areas . It was converted to a remotely piloted vehicle by Lockheed Martin. Tactically, K-MAX allows delivery of supplies to forward outposts by air, without risking human pilots or, worse yet, sending ground convoys through the gauntlet of Taliban ambushes and roadside bombs.
Half the US forces in Afghanistan may be coming home, but K-MAX, the little unmanned helicopter, will stay until the end. A pair of the remote-controlled cargo choppers arrived in Afghanistan in late 2011 for what was billed as a short-term experiment, but the Marines liked it so much that the trial deployment was repeatedly extended, and now the military has confirmed it will keep them on "indefinitely." (The extension was first reported yesterday by Reuters). Three love letters to the remote-controlled cargo chopper from military officers, obtained exclusively by AOL Defense, show why.
Technologically, K-MAX is just plain neat. It's a small one-man chopper built by Kaman Aerospace Corp. originally for logging operations, where it airlifted tree trunks out of tight areas . It was converted to a remotely piloted vehicle by Lockheed Martin. Tactically, K-MAX allows delivery of supplies to forward outposts by air, without risking human pilots or, worse yet, sending ground convoys through the gauntlet of Taliban ambushes and roadside bombs.