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A
commando team of paratroopers is dropped at night from an altitude
of 32,800 feet (10,000m) ready to take up position in an ordered
group around a target 31 miles (50 km) away. A few seconds later,
the aircraft proceeds to drop their all-terrain vehicles and
equipment in a controlled manner. Suspended from rectangular
parachutes equipped with an automatic guidance system, they
land close to the troops. The commandos and their equipment
reach the area exactly as planned and can start operations without
delay.
It
may sound like science fiction, but this scenario is likely
to become reality in the near future thanks to ParaFinder and
ParaLander, two mission systems allowing paratroopers and their
equipment to land with exceptional precision in time and space,
even if dropped far away from their target from a high altitude
of up to 10,000 meters. Forces using ParaFinder and ParaLander
can intervene remotely from any airfields in zones lacking any
handling and transport infrastructures. ParaLander can be used
equally well for civil and humanitarian operations. The German
army received the first ParaFinder systems in 2006, supplied
under a €7.45million contract awarded in 2003.. Initial
deliveried were destined to the special operations division
(DSO), the Special Forces command (KSK) as well as units of
paratroopers and naval frogmen.
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| "A
paratrooper using ParaFinder "is essentially equipped with
all necessary flying instruments," observes Jens Gönnemann,
head of systems development and testing at EADS Defence &
Security Systems. The first country to acquire this system,
Germany, decided in the fall of 2003 to equip its special forces
with it. ParaFinder and ParaLander. Using satellite based GPS
navigation and automatic guidance and control, these autonomous
precision aerial delivery systems could covertly guide men and
materials precisely to predefined landing zone keeping the transport
aircraft remote from this area, operating outside the reach
of the enemy's air defenses. The paratroopers and their loads
are silent, have a small radar reflection and are virtually
impossible to detect, especially at night. Utilizing the new
navigation systems, insertion can be performed under all weather
conditions, assuring soft, risk-free landing.
ParaFinder has been designed around two components: the mission
planning calculator and the navigation assistance unit. The
calculator processes the main jump parameters such as wind direction
as a function of altitude. "For the paratrooper, the navigation
assistance unit takes the form of an interactive visor which
guides him to his planned landing point," adds Jens Gönnemann
who has already jumped with the demonstration prototype. The
ParaFinder and ParaLander concept will certainly find other
applications, not just by virtue of its satellite navigation
system. Infantrymen acting within a network-centric operations
architecture may also benefit from the technologies developed
for the two systems, particularly the interactive visor.
The same architecture and mission planner is used to deploy
light, medium or heavy loads ranging from 2,200 to 13,000 lbs
(1 to 6 ton) with the ParaLander. The system entered operational
use with eth German Army in 2006.
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