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Good question is there a standard definition across the CAF or RCAF?How is IOC defined?
Good question is there a standard definition across the CAF or RCAF?How is IOC defined?
I don't think so.Good question is there a standard definition across the CAF or RCAF?
Usually when the 6th CAF project manager is posted in for their 2 year attempt at kicking cans down the road...How is IOC defined?
Yes.How is IOC defined?
Pretty sure any RCAF aircraft can carry sternly-worded letters and convening orders…I do not think that you understand air weapons.
I will leave it at that.
You can’t have a one-size-fits-all definition for IOC. The criteria that define IOC need to be tailored to specific capabilities/projects.Good question is there a standard definition across the CAF or RCAF?
Why?You can’t have a one-size-fits-all definition for IOC. The criteria that define IOC need to be tailored to specific capabilities/projects.
For a fighter, IOC may mean, in part, being capable to employ X missile. Doesn’t quite work for a tank.Why?
I’m solely asking because down here we have timetables and pathways for exactly that.
I came across a paper written by a CAF Major about various process in this.
Absolutely correct, it is a defined term.Why?
I’m solely asking because down here we have timetables and pathways for exactly that.
I came across a paper written by a CAF Major about various process in this.
I get that. But I’m talking about timeframes and milestones.For a fighter, IOC may mean, in part, being capable to employ X missile. Doesn’t quite work for a tank.
Canada could do well to consider what its allies do in that realm of acqusition. It doesn’t bridge lower (1-3) to mid-stage TRLs (4-6) well into the near-operational stage (7-9) for implementation into production capabilities. ADM(S&T)/DRDC does a great job in the mids (4-6), but seems content there and has a hard time working with operators to push through the latter TRLs. Maybe worth seeing how the US addresses the TRL 7-9 world with DARPA and IDIQ contracts to probe the art of the technologically and operationally ‘doable’ before going full-on acquire?I get that. But I’m talking about timeframes and milestones.
You can’t use boilerplate (well you can but it totally FUBAR stuff), and when things also have R&D components that offer leads to drift based on TRL.
Canada doesn’t do much better with MRs, if it’s any consolation. Yeah, Is and IIs will generally be better done in that there’s more ‘discipline’ (or at least an established process to be followed, for good or bad), especially for an MDAP (essential similar to Canada MCP - major capital project). As well, at least with the ACaT Is and IIs, the State by State participation in MDAPs is a known quantity m/thing, while regionalism and the fluid nature of ITB and VP policy in Canada contributes to more uncertainty and ‘lack of unity of effort’ shall we say.We do a terrible job on small $ ACAT III programs, in my experience.
There is often an over expectation of TRL, when a TRL 3-4 system is reported to be 7+
In all services there seems to be an acceptable belief that if it’s an ACAT III that if we botch it, we can just get something else later.
I don’t have a lot of time with ACAT II and I programs, but they seem to be handled significantly better - but I may be missing the forest from the trees.
To add to Dimsums mention of assisting in monitoring the sono field...in theory, thinking like a dry sensor type, put a decent surface search radar on it, and a EOIR ball....you'd be able to extend those 'sensor bubbles' and do concurrent "on tops" of anything you might want to investigate. These seem, to me at least, as enablers/enhances in the "detect/deter" game. I'd take gas over the weight of any ESM system...
I'd even look at putting a MAD system on the RPAs, or 1 on every 2 or 3 systems, but only if the trade off in fuel/endurance is minimal. I think MSA (multi-static acoustics) is the future; MAD is a "feel good/confirmatory" sensor, not a great "search" sensor. My 2 cents, which is worth about 1 cent.
I see modern airborne ASW going the way the USN is moving/have moved to; higher altitude flight profile for the majority of the time. Descending and climbing (1) reduces endurance (fuel burn) and (2) decreases RF range (monitoring the pattern). Better to keep the mothership up high....(this is just me thinking off the top of my head about TTPs, while sitting here).
My quick/dirty opinion on the current P8 layout (I've been in them), there would be room for a dual console (I'm picturing the TWC on the Cyclone) to add in a workstation setup for an 2 x additional "AES OPs" to operate 2 x ASW "wingpersons"; with the speed things happen in ASW, I'd want direct control of those systems, with next-to-zero time delay and complete OPCON to the TAC/Skipper on the mothership. Off the top of my head, I am visualizing 1 x MPA with 2 x Wing"person"'s.
Search stores; MPA and RPA carried and dispensed. Kill stores; MPA only (initially). v1 to v2 T & E would include 'remote kill stores' options.
Thru AAR and larger crew sizes, return our LRP aircraft to the crew day length the Argus crew had. They did, we could do it again.
Again...me completely spitballing off the top my head as I type (I wish we were doing this now, and I was part of the project!).
Depends if you're expecting LOS, BLOS, etc.Range - how far away from land would they be employed? Is there a need for a RPA “carrier/short deck”?
That definition of IOC leaves a lot of room for PMs to maneuver. It is not something tangible that can be practically applied to every project have have consistent timelines come from it. How that definition is applied differs from project to project.Absolutely correct, it is a defined term.
IOC: The minimum ability to effectively employ a new or improved capability for which adequate infrastructure, training, staffing and support is in place, both for the new capability and the organization that is employing it. (Project Approval Directive)
What that means specifically for each project is perhaps what you mean, @SupersonicMax, but what an IOC provides and needs to do so, is qualified by definition.
One aspect the PAD didn’t go into in too much detail is what kind of capability can be establied prior to IOC/FOC. In some cases, an ‘initial capability’ was defined in a case by case basis for some projects. In all cases that I know where ‘initial capability’ was referred to, it was a specific qualification and quantification of capabilities that required notable, temporary augmentation to the project during the early portion of the IMPL phase.