Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
January
26, 2006
2-7 Cav.
conducts NET training to synchronize Bradley vehicle crews
Sgt.
1st Class Brian Sipp
Pfc. Edward Stow,
a Bradley driver from Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2-7 Cavalry,
uploads a TOW missile into the launcher. The timed process was completed
in 23 seconds from start to finish.
Sgt. 1st Class Brian Sipp
4th BCT, 1st Cav. Div. Public Affairs
Troopers from the 2nd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment received their
Bradley fighting vehicles for Christmas and, as a follow-up New Year’s
gift, began training with the New Equipment Testing unit on every phase
of their new rides.
The Bradley NET Team, based in Fort Hood, Texas, began immersing the
Long Knife Soldiers in every aspect of Bradley operations in what will
end up as a 43-day certification program.
“We will take them from an introduction of the vehicle, to preventive
maintenance checks and services, to loading and unloading the weapons
systems, to eventually driving and firing during qualification during
the Table VIII phase,” explained Tony Orozco, Team Seven assistant
lead with the NET team.
“We’ve got a three-to-one ratio of Soldiers to instructors;
that’s one instructor for every crew. We run 24-7 operations around
the clock, and all of our Bradley instructors have extensive experience
with the system and are fully-qualified on it,” added Orozco.
Since the Army combined the 11B and 11M military occupational specialties,
or dismounted and mounted infantry, the need for total immersion is
essential in getting all the Bradley crews on the same page, said Staff
Sgt. Brandon Dockery, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division
master gunner.
“The formerly dismounted infantry have to learn a whole new mounted
way of conducting operations, and vice-versa. It will make the infantryman
more diverse in the future, but takes time and practice,” Dockery
added.
“A lot of these guys have never been on a Bradley before; this
gives them full training, from start to finish,” said Sgt. 1st
Class Russell Borea, A Company, 2-7 Cav., 2nd platoon sergeant.
Dockery agreed, “This type of training gives the crew the individualized
attention that they need; good hands-on training instead of just classroom
instruction.”
The NET teams consist of a majority of former Bradley operators and
are called in to train Soldiers every time that a unit fields new equipment
or receives an upgrade to existing equipment, according to Orozco. They
are contracted to remain at Fort Bliss for a period of six months.
“As one 43-day class ends, we start another, and another company
rotates through. Our end state is getting the entire 4th BCT qualified
and proficient on their vehicles,” he concluded