Halifax Tar said:
Who do you hold accountable when the simulator at the 17th Rifle Royal Regiment of Irish Foot Guards 33rd Bn breaks down in some far flung town ?
Things break down over time, its life, how would these be supported ? More RSS positions in the units or system maint folks ? The closest CFB is responsible ? That could be a challenge...
I would think simulators would go, primarily, to civilian positions. Most of my experience with them, is they are staffed with retired Reg Force folks who have some SME level knowledge of what the simulator is designed to replace (field or operational mission training for X type units/pers). I've been on the SIMNET down at the Mounted Warfare Sim Center in Knox and it was pretty advanced compared to anything I've seen on the army side in Canada. We did the JANUS system in Gagetown, the SAT is a version of sim that works (different opinions on that). We have a simulator for the Aurora for both the front and back ends that is actually pretty close to the real thing, minus the airsickness and cordite that can can, in theory, place ourselves in any mission pretty much anywhere in the world. If something gets messed up, we can stop, rewind, start again.
Most of the "interactors" I worked with on JANUS and a large majority of the folks who operate/maintain our OMS are retired aircrew who understand the mission sets we are exercising and are trained on the OMS itself. I'd rather that, than a handful of straight civies who don't know, or care about, the tactical stuff.
How to make this work, or workable, for the Reserve side?
- Give them access on weekends to the *bigger* systems at the larger bases is a possibility, but now you're talking about whatever issues arise from civilian contractors working weekends, or overtime. It was done in the past, though.
- develop simulators (*games*) that can run on the DWAN infrastructure in armouries (also been done in the past). There was a simulation...I don't want to call it a game, but I can't remember the name of it, that would run off a laptop server IIRC, back in the early 2000s. I used it a few times, but can't remember for the life of me what it was called. You could do things down at the nitty gritty level, like at the C/S level for a recce troop.
- sandtables are cheap, reusable and were a great simulator/training aid.
- TEWTs. You can go thru all your BP, estimates, everything but swinging shovels and digging holes and still exercise your sub-unit leadership in everything they'd be doing without burning thru gas and rations. Maybe it doesn't seem like this benefits the rank and file, Cpl/Pte level. But it can; run a one day TEWT a few weekends before the exercise to get your sub-unit leadership thinking and planning the Ex, things might be more organized and better training/learning for the whole unit when all the moving parts are together.
There are things that can be done. If you can't get money, or until you do get money, at the PRes armouries for any kind of simulation training, get some sandtable exercises and TEWTs on the go. It's not a perfect solution, but its something and something is better than nothing.