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Sense & Respond Logistics for the Marine Corps Light Armored Vehicle. January 11-13, 2011 Town & Country Resort and Convention Center Mission Valley San Diego, CA. Bob Appleton PMO-LAV (Contract Support) April 2011. Agenda. Background The Light Armored Vehicle
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Sense & Respond Logisticsfor theMarine Corps Light Armored Vehicle January 11-13, 2011 Town & Country Resort and Convention Center Mission Valley San Diego, CA Bob Appleton PMO-LAV (Contract Support) April 2011
Agenda • Background • The Light Armored Vehicle • The LAV Program Manager’s Office • The Challenge • The Sense & Respond Solution • How Can it Help? • The benefits • Why Do It • The motivation
Take-Aways • S&R is a concept – not a thing • Enabled by technology, process and policy • Full implementation of S&R including asset health monitoring and IUID tracking will result in: • Reduction of TOC by ¼ Billion Dollars for LAV • Reduction of unscheduled maintenance by ~90% • Holistic Approach is required to gain the benefits Source: A.T Kearney 2010 There is no silver bullet
Light Armored Vehicle • Entered USMC Service in 1980’s • Will Remain in Service for the Foreseeable Future • Vehicles are Employed in Four Light Armored Reconnaissance (LAR) Battalions • The LAV is: • Fast • Lethal • Austere
Program Manager’s Office-Light Armored Vehicle • Located with Army in Warren Michigan • Large Office with Many Diverse duties • USMC LAV Fleet • Foreign Military Sales • Marine Personnel Carrier • Substantial Marine Representation in Office • Visionary Leadership • Embraced PM’s Responsibility as Life Cycle System Manager early • Recognized better data is needed to provide better support
Based on That Vision, PMLAV Initiated a Series of Projects …each building on previous lessons learned • IDE – Integrated Digital Environment • IETM – Interactive Electronic Technical Manual • CTMA Projects with the National Center for Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS) to Explore Sense & Respond Logistics • On-board sensors • Wireless communication of data • Network sharing of data • JAMISS But Wait, There’s More…
PMLAV Product Lifecycle ManagementEfforts, Concerns, and Acronyms • TIA • CBM+ • RCM • DMSMS • TLCM-AT • GCSS-MC • BCA • CMMI • CM • AT • IETM • With PMAL: • EMSS • EPLS • With Oak Ridge Nat’l Labs • Web 3.0 • SIL • With NSA Crane, IN • TVTB • IDCE • JAMISS • With NCMS • S&RL • CLI • CWIX
CTMA Sense & Respond Project • 4 Phases 2003-Present • Can we sense asset health data on a legacy vehicle? • Can we make the data readily available? • Can we make sense of the data? • Can we turn the data into actionable knowledge?
Interpret Decide Information Courses of Action Enterprise Visibility Data Act Reset Respond Sense Evaluate Sense & Respond Logistics (S&RL) Projects DESCRIPTION PMLAV in partnership with the National Center for Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS) has engaged in a series of projects to leverage both government and commercial technologies to develop solutions to obtain a higher state of logistical readiness at lower cost. The S&R project is facilitating advance from mass-based logistics to Sense & Respond Logistics in the Light Armored Vehicle (LAV) fleet. This series of projects incorporates state-of-the-art commercial logistic tools on a legacy military vehicle and has already yielded significant benefits. SCHEDULE/COST PREVIOUS CONTRIBUTIONS S&R I Nov 2003-Dec 2004 Received the Defense Manufacturing Excellence Award. S&R II Nov 2005- Mar 2007 S&R III May 2007-November 2008 S&R IV Jan 2010-June 2011 Total NCMS Funding $2.7M Total Industry Share $5.4M Total PMLAV Funding $235K S&R projects have enabled ~ $15M in additional funding from sources outside PMLAV • PMO-LAV Portal • TLCM-AT • JAMISS • EMSS/EPLS • Portable Maintenance Device • Concepts Proven • Asset Health Monitoring • Approved wireless network • Mesh Network • USMC Policies • S&RL • SIM • IUID
Interpret Decide Information Courses of Action Enterprise Visibility Data Act Reset Respond Sense Evaluate Sense & Respond Logistics (S&RL) IV (Current) DESCRIPTION PMLAV in partnership with the National Center for Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS) has engaged in a series of projects to leverage both government and commercial technologies to develop solutions to obtain higher state of logistical readiness at lower cost. The S&R project is facilitating advance from mass-based logistics to Sense & Respond Logistics in the Light Armored Vehicle (LAV) fleet. This series of projects incorporates state-of-the-art commercial logistic tools on a legacy military vehicle and has already yielded significant benefits. SCHEDULE/COST CHARACTERISTICS S&R IV scheduled completion Sept 2011 Trying to finish 1 June $400K CTMA Funding $800K Industry “cost share” $135K PMLAV S&R IV project enabled ~ $7M in additional funding for related projects • Hull Health Monitoring (HHM) • Shots Fired Sensor • Expansion of the SRSS AHM • Integration of IUID Data • Analysis of data
Interpret Decide Information Courses of Action Enterprise Visibility Data Act Reset Respond Sense Evaluate Sense & Respond Logistics (S&RL) V (Next Phase) DESCRIPTION PMLAV in partnership with the National Center for Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS) has engaged in a series of projects to leverage both government and commercial technologies to develop solutions to obtain a higher state of logistical readiness at lower cost. The S&R project is facilitating advance from mass-based logistics to Sense & Respond Logistics in the Light Armored Vehicle (LAV) fleet. This series of projects incorporates state-of-the-art commercial logistic tools on a legacy military vehicle and has already yielded significant benefits. S&R V SCHEDULE/COST CHARACTERISTICS • A sensor template that incorporates evolving sensor technologies, LAV upgrades all within a CBM approach • • Multiple structural weight saving opportunities focused on the LAV • • Hull sensor technologies within a CBM environment • • Data schema for LAV that support a CBM environment • • Continued integration of evolving USMC maintenance technologies • S&RL V will commence upon completion of this phase • As early as July 1 • Estimate $400 CTMA Funding • Period of performance – 18 months
It’s All About the Data Product Data Management • Knowledge Management • Work smarter not harder • GOALS: • Consistent and Accurate Analysis • Consolidation and Interpretation • AVOID – Data Overload • Data as expeditionary as the Marines • Stretch information across • Strategic • Operational • Tactical Source: IAP 2009: Personalized Data and Knowledge Management Series (2009) Retrieved 28 August, 2010 from MIT Library News Web site:http://news-libraries.mit.edu/blog/2009-personalized/1262/
JAMISS IUID EMSS Portal EPLS Data Movement AL Prognostics PDM Data Security Data Warehouse TLCM-AT IETM RCM Modeling Tele- Maintenance It’s All About ALL the Data…Everywhere Accessible by all who need it, when they need it, in the format they need. WEB 3.0
Joint Asset Management Information Support System (JAMISS) DESCRIPTION • A web based logistics management software system that interfaces with disparate authoritative data sources making pertinent information available to stakeholders at all levels. • JAMISS unlocks the full potential of IUID for Condition Based Maintenance and Total Life Cycle Systems Management by seamlessly incorporating IUID data into the maintenance process. HISTORY CHARACTERISTICS • Originally Visual Labmate – Norfox Software • Used for support of USMC calibration labs • 2005 - USMC (TMDE) obtained the source code & continued development naming it VAMMP • 2005 - PMLAV began exploring the use of VAMMP as part of the Sense & Respond logistics project with CTMA • Integrating the LAV IETM with VAMMP • 2007 – Began translating VAMMP to web based app that incorporates IUID naming it JAMISS • 2008 – JDSR (at NSWC Crane) begins work on using JAMISS for automated armory • 2009 – PMLAV deploys JAMISS forward to capture IUID data on LAV fleet and begin to capture maintenance actions • Government owned software application • Web Based • Modular/Scalable • Hardware agnostic • Riding on EMSS backbone in theater • Compatible with applicable databases • IUID Registry • MIMMS/SASSY • FEDLOG • IETM • AHM Sensors • Role based / task based
IUID/JAMISS Efforts Ongoing at PMLAV • CTMA S&RL Project • Sponsored by National Center for Manufacturing Sciences • Tactical Vehicle Test Bed • At NSWC Crane, IN • JAMISS Deployed • Using IUID in the fight to track vehicles • Coalition Logistics Interoperability • Joint effort with NATO • Oak Ridge National Labs Study • Understanding the data • Automated Armory • Tracking our weapons
Tactical Vehicle Test Bed; NSA Crane • 15 Vehicle fleet of early generation LAVs • On-board sensors • IUID marks • JAMISS • Wireless network Purpose: Provide a platform on which to test potential technology upgrades, alternative fuels, operating concepts, etc. without danger of impact on the operating fleet.
JAMISS Deployed • Currently forward with the deployed LAR • Riding EMSS network • Training conducted at Mojave Viper • Forward deployed LAV assets all received IUID marks prior to shipment • FSRs deployed to guide progress • Phased approach to full implementation • Challenges to progress include: • Shortage of hardware • IA restrictions • Beginning mid 2011 – JAMISS Automated Armory will be deployed forward
Coalition Logistics Interoperability • Study the tools and techniques necessary for cooperative logistical support in a multi-national operation • Develop and demonstrate an IUID DEX for receipt, capture and storage of IUID data across NATO nations • Using JAMISS • Demonstrate the ability to: • Enable SIM • Improve traceability • Retain item history • Reduce Class IX stockage • Integrate USMC “Bridge Technologies” into NATO environment
Oak Ridge National Labs Making Sense of the Data Conducting a series of related projects to help PMLAV understand the meaning of the data already collected and advise the PM regarding the most useful data to collect and best methods to collect it in the future. • Data Analysis • SIL • IUID • JAMISS • Web 3.0
Automated Armory Using JAMISS & IUID Problem Statement: Current armory business practices have not changed significantly in half a century. The manual process relying on paper and pencil is inefficient, slow and inaccurate. • Benefits: • Accurate check in / out enabled by IUID, CAC and biometric capability • Fast and Accurate Inventory • Accurate parent/child relationships • Maintenance Tracking • Authorized personnel entry/exit records • Printing 10520 cards, reports, etc • Capable of accepting 2d, 1d, RFID, biometric, magnetic strip, biometric, manual inputs Faster Process = More Training Time …with greater accuracy
A Few of The Benefits • Increased Availability of Assets • IUID and CBM • Accurate Tracking/Accountability of Assets • IUID and Automated Armory • Reduced Total Ownership Cost • IUID and EPLS • Lighten the MAGTF • “Sharper Teeth; Shorter Tail”
Reduced Unscheduled Maintenance = Increased Availability Unscheduled Maintenance Each failure is treated as a separate incident when it occurs. There is no knowledge of the condition of components on the vehicle, or of the risk of impending failures. Down Waiting Parts Waiting Parts Waiting Parts Availability Repair Time Planned Maintenance Availability Most maintenance down time is spent awaiting parts. IUID data enables accurate prediction of upcoming required maintenance action in order that several such events can be packaged to be conducted at one time. Simultaneous repairs of multiple failures will also reduce total repair time. Down Waiting Parts Repair Time Predictive Maintenance Needed parts can be ordered before the vehicle is brought to maintenance. When the vehicle is brought in, the parts are awaiting the vehicle eliminating Logistics Delay down time completely, increasing Availability by 26 days over the period demonstrated. Availability Down Repair Time Only
Accurate Tracking/Accountability with IUID/JAMISS Results of Automated Armory Demo: • India Co, School of Infantry-West • The one “Accuracy” error was the result of an improperly coded CAC Card • Time saving during pick-up was the result of JAMISS combining all check-in functions • Data collected once; used many times Automated Armory – Camp Pendleton ResultsCWO2 Burns, GySgt Urena
Reduced LAV Total Ownership Cost due to Impact of IUID/EPLS USMC PM-LAV BCASummary Source: Independent BCA Commissioned by PMLAV, 2010
Lighten the MAGTF “Sharper Teeth; Shorter Tail” More Efficient Logistics = Smaller “Iron Mountain”
Our Motivation • It’s personal • We know their names We manage vehicles We take care of Marines.
QUESTIONS January 11-13, 2011 Town & Country Resort and Convention Center Mission Valley San Diego, CA