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thedrifter
10-07-04, 06:23 AM
Issue Date: October 11, 2004

High-tech targeting
Parris Island’s new rifle ranges offer improved targets, scoring

By Gordon Lubold
Times staff writer


Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, S.C., is upgrading the second of two rifle ranges, replacing silhouette targets like those used since World War II with automated pop-up targets and computerized scoring.
The enhanced ranges, one of which was completed last year, give training officials a much clearer picture of how Marine recruits’ marksmanship skills are developing during field training.

“Now we know recruits are hitting the target at nearly as high a rate as we thought or hoped,” said Maj. Chris Casados, executive officer of Weapons and Field Training Battalion at Parris Island. “It’s made a world of difference.”

The Hue City range, an unknown-distance range used for field-firing exercises, is undergoing a $425,000 upgrade set to be completed in November. On the new range, drill instructors will benefit from computerized scoring when running recruits through the field-firing portion of the marksmanship program, which includes firing in low light and darkness, multiple-target and moving-target exercises.

The hit-sensitive targets use sensors to register where a round strikes, then transmit the data to a computer system. Users can print reports for an individual or a unit showing strengths and weaknesses. For example, each shooter will be able to get a percentage score for each course of fire he shoots on the 16-lane range.

This project follows one completed last year at another unknown-distance range on Parris Island, the Khe Sanh range. That $700,000 enhancement allows range personnel to use “smart-card” technology to track scores on multiple targets for Marines firing from four positions, including a bunker, a window, a rubble pile and a rooftop. The pop-up targets operate using a pneumatic system and glide on rails.

The field-firing portion of marksmanship training is not a graduation requirement, but plenty of recruits — and Marines assigned to Parris Island — use the range to improve their shooting skills. But because scoring techniques were crude, depot officials were never quite sure how reliable the paper scoring system was.

Bull’s-eye?

Range personnel previously used another remote scoring system, but it was considered unreliable, and Marines couldn’t always tell if they had hit their intended target or not. Marines had to move targets manually and replace them if they were shot too many times. Beyond that, the scoring system required that Marines get a buddy to look downrange with binoculars to determine whether a target had been hit.

“Now we’ve given the Marine Corps a tool which guarantees 100 percent accuracy,” said Chris Taylor, a spokesman for the company building the new range, Blackwater Target Systems, a division of Blackwater USA of Moyock, N.C.

The scoring for the new targeting system is “99.99 percent accurate,” he said.

“The neat thing about the software is it gives real-time data,” said Taylor, a former Marine reconnaissance staff sergeant who got out in 1999.

The software also is flexible enough to allow range personnel to add data that may help future training, he said.

Better known for its security consulting work, Blackwater also builds rifle ranges for the armed forces and for other clients, including some who want mobile ranges in Iraq.

Blackwater’s range software is already used at ranges at Camp Pendleton, Calif., Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, and Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, N.C., Taylor said. But the ranges at Parris Island are the first two fully automatic ranges Blackwater has built for the Corps.

Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., has a similar rifle range. That facility, developed by ATA Defense Industries Inc., of Tennessee, also features computerized scoring and separate banks of automated targets.

The range incorporates sensors, rifles and computers in a scoring system that tracks data for the 40 known-distance and eight unknown-distance target lanes.

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/story.php?f=0-MARINEPAPER-381167.php

The Drifter's Wife

Ellie

LivinSoFree
10-07-04, 09:54 AM
When I went through A-Line a few months ago, let me tell you, the scoring for the field-firing portions was beyond crude, it was non-existant. The tower NCOs and line coaches didn't even bother taking the time to deal with scoring, and no one in the pits had even half the number of shot spotters they would've needed to mark their targets. It became painfully obvious after the first relays that this was something that we were getting rushed through simply because someone in higher said that we should do it, and that no one wanted these exercises scored because of the sheer number of recruits who would've gone UNQ if they had kept track... kind of struck me as a little odd.

Lock-n-Load
10-07-04, 11:15 AM
:marine: Thx for the real skinny on the rifle range where you were...I see almost 100% Marines displaying "Expert Badges" at Pendleton and Lejeune while attending US Marine reunions in those venues...it was just the opposite in early 1950s...a very small percentage shot "Expert" and about 97% of the Boot platoons; at least, fired "Marksman or "SharpShooter"...I marveled at high percentage of Marine "Expert" shooters today...or is it an illusion??....I dunno.:marine:

mrbsox
10-07-04, 12:31 PM
Paste em but don't waste em

was the cry in the butts, P.I. 1976.

Seeing the butts go by the way of Mess duty is kind of sad. We had a full range of Experts, SharpShooters, and Marksmen in Platoon 105. The D.I. had a few of us shoot another target so the other recruit wouldn't go UNK. Cost each of us a few points, but they made sure we still got our Expert score.

:marine: Rifle Expert, Pistol Expert..... not all that hard !!

LivinSoFree
10-07-04, 01:38 PM
SSgt, perhaps I should clarify. The KD course ranges are still very much alive and well, as are the pits. It's still grass week and firing week, and qualifying on the KD course from the 200, 300, and 500 yard lines is still as holy. I attribute the high number of Expert badges to just plain good instruction. The PMIs out there are top notch, and the line coaches on the KD course are pretty squared away.

HOWEVER. The Field Firing portions (which have nothing to do with what marksmanship badge you rate, at least not now), are as I described above, and while the classroom instruction is still decent, the line coaches are, for lack of a better term, idiots. When I went to the Unknown Distance/Supported Positions course, I had a coach that kept f***ing with my eye relief because he thought he knew better. Turns out, I didn't hit a thing until I said, "Sir, this recruit shot a 210 on the KD course with excessively close eye relief, and having to back it off like the coach has instructed is f***ing me up." Sure enough, I put my nose against the charging handle, and started knocking them down.

mrbsox
10-07-04, 09:09 PM
Poolees...

Sounds like this PFC did what Marines do.
Followed instructions
Followed orders
Then adjusted to the situation, and accomplished the mission.

You have to know YOUR weapon, and how you work best TOGETHER !!

Glad to hear the butts are still alive and well.

Get some :marine: