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Liberals announce $1.24B sole-sourced deal to upgrade search and rescue helicopter fleet

Yup



Send an Uber.

Unmanned recovery helicopter

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Why would you risk aircraft, crews and people on the ground if you didn't absolutely have to?

An unarmed helicopter can’t verify a persons identity. There’s some specific processes that happen during a recovery op that rescuers do in a non-permissible environment - we don’t just hop on the Osprey or helo and say “home James, and put some spice on it!” 🙂
 
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If medical assistance is required then by all means send the whole team. But why risk them if you don't have to. After all isn't it Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape training?

For morale for one thing. Imagine aircrew flying off into the badlands knowing no one is really going to come for them.

Aircrew take longer and more money to replace than lots of other trades. So there is a “needs of the service” aspect to get you back in the seat and flying missions again too.

SERE is temporary if done right and lucky. Aircrew are a fairly good propaganda tool.
 
I had a conversation with a sar tech at the Summerside air show around 10 years ago. He said he once had to "bag" (breathing bag) a guy while being winched up in the basket in high seas (very windy). How is a drone going to do that If sar techs won't get in the back of drones?

Who is doing the hoisting to start with? It’s a people skill. Not one I can imagine a robot doing. Not in my lifetime at least. Or not without a lot of broken SAR Tech legs.
 
Driving by sight and using visual queues is a skill that will develop over time. I think the Navy expects too much of people too soon in this regard, while also not really teaching them how to use the tools at their disposal that will aide them in making that visual assessment.

With enough practice, they will get good at it but they need to be afforded the opportunity to practice. Our people aren't getting much practice these days.
Many of the good tugboat captains on this coast got their start as kids, pushing logs around with 9' dingy and small outboard. by the time they take their first ticket, the abilty to judge distance, forces, tides, wind are already ingrained into them.
 
Who is doing the hoisting to start with? It’s a people skill. Not one I can imagine a robot doing. Not in my lifetime at least. Or not without a lot of broken SAR Tech legs.
Sling load/SPIE-rig, perhaps. USMC Robi-K-MAXs sling autonomously…reverse that and hook a carabiner to the end of a sling below a hovering autonomous recovery craft, twomtugs on the sling, and up you go.

On other issues mentioned, if the aircrew to be recovered require intubating mid-hoist (would love to hear a medical opinion on that happening…may be a mess tale) I don’t think they’ll be doing much SEREing anyway…
 
Sling load/SPIE-rig, perhaps. USMC Robi-K-MAXs sling autonomously…reverse that and hook a carabiner to the end of a sling below a hovering autonomous recovery craft, twomtugs on the sling, and up you go.

On other issues mentioned, if the aircrew to be recovered require intubating mid-hoist (would love to hear a medical opinion on that happening…may be a mess tale) I don’t think they’ll be doing much SEREing anyway…

My mind went to SAR Techs trying to get on boats off the coast, rescuers trying to get Stokes litters up, etc. “some stuff will work, some won’t”. I don’t think AI is ready yet for the truly dynamic stuff that can save, or cost, lives and legs.
 
An unarmed helicopter can’t verify a persons identity. There’s some specific processes that happen during a recovery op that rescuers do in a non-permissible environment - we don’t just hop on the Osprey or helo and say “home James, and put some spice on it!” 🙂

I don't expect to see humans leave the field to robots. I do expect to see a lot fewer humans in the field, spread over a much larger area, accomplishing things that they couldn't otherwise do if they didn't have robots working for them and had to rely on muscle power and staying awake 24/7.

I'm curious to see how many two seater F16s the Ukrainians end up employing. I have a hunch that they will find it easier to locate and train non-flying UAV operators as WSOs and leave their few skilled pilots to manage the driving of their new aircraft.
 
My mind went to SAR Techs trying to get on boats off the coast, rescuers trying to get Stokes litters up, etc. “some stuff will work, some won’t”. I don’t think AI is ready yet for the truly dynamic stuff that can save, or cost, lives and legs.
If I was down behind a line evading, and was being closed in on, I’d happily link my CSEL/PRC-116 to ‘Hover George’ take a cyber-Uber ride home!
 
If I was down behind a line evading, and was being closed in on, I’d happily link my CSEL/PRC-116 to ‘Hover George’ take a cyber-Uber ride home!

If that was my only option, so would I. Given the choice, though, I’d prefer someone who was about to pop me if I couldn’t remember what my favourite flavour of Hubba Bubba was.

And that persons pals crewing some bullet hoses fitted to “the aircraft”. 🙂
 
I don't expect to see humans leave the field to robots. I do expect to see a lot fewer humans in the field, spread over a much larger area, accomplishing things that they couldn't otherwise do if they didn't have robots working for them and had to rely on muscle power and staying awake 24/7.

I'm curious to see how many two seater F16s the Ukrainians end up employing. I have a hunch that they will find it easier to locate and train non-flying UAV operators as WSOs and leave their few skilled pilots to manage the driving of their new aircraft.

I was pointing out that lots of things happen during a recovery op that an uncrewed air vehicle can’t do. Specific to CSAR stuff.

Not that it REALLY matters for CAF members though. CSAR isn’t a game we are a true player in. We just rely on those who can…
 
If that was my only option, so would I. Given the choice, though, I’d prefer someone who was about to pop me if I couldn’t remember what my favourite flavour of Hubba Bubba was.

And that persons pals crewing some bullet hoses fitted to “the aircraft”. 🙂
If that’s one of your ISOPREP questions, you deserve to be popped… 😉



In keeping with traditions, the questions should be extremely embarrassing for the questioner to ask… 😆
 
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Maybe they’ll make a pitch to use the CC-295 Kingfisher’s EO/IR turrets…those ones won’t be likely used for a while… 🤔

Ashton Kutcher Burn GIF by PeacockTV
 
My mind went to SAR Techs trying to get on boats off the coast, rescuers trying to get Stokes litters up, etc. “some stuff will work, some won’t”. I don’t think AI is ready yet for the truly dynamic stuff that can save, or cost, lives and legs.
This is about cars, but according to this article, AI is still generations away from being able work at the level of a human brain.


Excerpt:
For now, here’s what we know: Computers can run calculations a lot faster than we can, but they still have no idea how to process many common roadway variables. People driving down a city street with a few pigeons pecking away near the median know (a) that the pigeons will fly away as the car approaches and (b) that drivers behind them also know the pigeons will scatter. Drivers know, without having to think about it, that slamming the brakes wouldn’t just be unnecessary—it would be dangerous. So they maintain their speed.

What the smartest self-driving car “sees,” on the other hand, is a small obstacle. It doesn’t know where the obstacle came from or where it may go, only that the car is supposed to safely avoid obstacles, so it might respond by hitting the brakes. The best-case scenario is a small traffic jam, but braking suddenly could cause the next car coming down the road to rear-end it. Computers deal with their shortcomings through repetition, meaning that if you showed the same pigeon scenario to a self-driving car enough times, it might figure out how to handle it reliably. But it would likely have no idea how to deal with slightly different pigeons flying a slightly different way.
 
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