Source: United States Navy
The partner nation teams are using autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) to assist explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) dive teams by searching for manmade objects that could represent mines.
Officer in Charge of Deployable Geospatial Survey Team 2 (DGST 2) Royal Australian Navy Lt. Josh Callahan said the Australian team’s mission is to integrate with New Zealand counterparts and collect observations, insights and lessons learned about using the AUV and its capability.
“In DGST 2, we use AUVs to extrapolate depth and conduct feature detection which allows us to view wrecks or platforms that need maintenance,” Callahan said. “During RIMPAC, we are using them for mine countermeasure (MCM). This is significant because it pushes our training boundaries and will improve how we use the capability, and informs further integration with the Mine Warfare community.”
Royal New Zealand Navy Able Hydrographic System Operator Mackenzie Perry, assigned to HMNZS Matataua, is an AUV handler deployed for RIMPAC 2022 in Southern California.
“My job is to conduct pre-mission checks on the fish to ensure a tasking goes smoothly,” Perry said. “We monitor the AUV during the mission, recover it once it has completed the path and then download the site-scan data it has recorded.”
The data the AUV collects greatly reduces the workload on EOD divers and speeds up threat identification.
“Objects that are manmade will light up on the visual capture and we pass that data to the United States Marine Corps and Royal New Zealand Navy dive teams for further investigation.”
Perry said it has been interesting to observe how partner nations work.
“We learned how to lower the REMUS-100 from a United States Navy helicopter, and we want to take the information back to our home nations to improve deployability.”
RIMPAC 2022 is Perry’s first overseas deployment.
“I’m here to soak it all in,” Perry said. “It’s exciting to work with other nations and learn from them. I hope we continue working together after RIMPAC.”