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    Down n’ Dirty: Vanguard soldiers learn vehicle recovery tactics

    Down n’ Dirty: Vanguard soldiers learn vehicle recovery tactics

    Photo By Sgt. Maj. Tanya Lumbard | Spc. Jesse Frost, with Company D, 6th Squadron, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 4th IBCT, learns...... read more read more

    FORT STEWART, Ga. – Sixteen troops tested their ability to prove that no terrain is too tough to help keep the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division on the right path. The ‘Vanguard Brigade’ mechanics performed more than a routine maintenance procedure, March 5-20, and learned how to unearth hefty military vehicles submerged in Fort Stewart, Ga.’s red clay.

    The vehicle recovery course, more commonly known as H8 training, was formerly taught only at Fort Jackson, S.C. Now, members of the Georgia National Guard are able to certify the Marne Division soldiers in their own backyard.

    “This recovery training is a benefit to all the Soldiers who serve as recovery technicians,” said Sgt. Trevor Whitman, with Company E, 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment, 4th IBCT. “We learned everything from winch and crane controls to how to overturn, retrieve, lift and tow vehicles.”

    Whitman, who has deployed twice as a service and recovery technician, said learning how to properly recover vehicles at home-station is critical to his unit’s overall mission readiness.

    “There are a lot of different obstacles you may face overseas, such as vehicle roll-overs, canals you may run into, and roads give way,” he said. “This training here certifies us to be able to handle those situations (if they arise).”

    The soldiers were split into four-man teams- two served as riggers who ensure that the overturned vehicle is properly hooked up, and two soldiers hook up the inoperable vehicle to their recovery truck.

    “It’s not as easy as it sounds,” said Spc. Joseph Monroe, with Company B, 703rd Brigade Support Battalion, 4th IBCT, adding that recovery operations require both technical and physical demands. “You have to do a lot of planning--know the weight of your vehicle, if the vehicle has a load, how deep is the sunken mud, and then you have to go out and do the physical part. Nothing on these trucks is light. You have to pull, push, hook up, pick up, use chains and winches--it’s all heavy stuff.”
    Monroe said this heavy-duty training was realistic, though. He explained that in addition to learning how to recover vehicles, the soldiers were also faced with protecting their convoy from simulated enemy opposition forces.

    “These are situations we can face in a combat environment,” he said. “The unit that is training us is a good unit. The instructors here have helped us in the best way they can so that we can (in turn) help our units."

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 03.19.2012
    Date Posted: 03.22.2012 18:21
    Story ID: 85635
    Location: FORT STEWART, GA, US

    Web Views: 67
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN