The US Army is about to receive a lightweight, unpowered exoskeleton suit called the Soldier Assistive Bionic Exosuit for Resupply (SABER), which can increase the strength and endurance of soldiers, DEVCOM Army Public Affairs Office said in a press release.
SABER weighs just three pounds and is a harness that soldiers strap around their shoulders and legs. All a soldier has to do to activate the suit is press a button on the left shoulder. When activated, the exoskeleton suit reduces stress on soldiers' backs by more than 100 pounds while lifting all sorts of heavy items, such as ammo boxes, artillery rounds, and .50 caliber machine guns. Testing showed that most soldiers had a 60% increase in endurance while wearing the suit.
Researchers at Vanderbilt designed SABER and worked with soldiers in the 101st Airborne Division to test exoskeleton suits in heavy-lifting field scenarios. The exosuit addresses the need to reduce injury and fatigue, which are critical to combat readiness.
"We spent the first few months focused on interviewing, observing, and spending time with Soldiers.
"We didn't try to create Iron Man — a complex, full-body, rigid, unrealistic suit. Instead, we started by deeply understanding Soldier needs to develop a lightweight, low-profile, non-powered wearable tool that helps provide much-needed assistance without slowing Soldiers down or interfering with other operational tasks," said Dr. Karl Zelik, associate professor of mechanical engineering, Vanderbilt University.
In the last five years, we've kept readers abreast with the Army's development of exoskeleton suits, including Army Tests New 'AI-Controlled-Exoskeleton' Super-Soldier and Army Starts Testing "Ironman-Like" Exoskeleton For Future Hybrid Wars.
SABER received high marks after 90% of soldiers who wore the suits after operational field testing in May said they would perform their duties much better.
Production of the suits will start in late 2022 by HeroWear, a Nashville-based industrial exosuit manufacturer. The goal is for hundreds of soldiers to be utilizing the suits in 2023.
We have noted the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) wants 'Ironman-like' suits on the modern battlefield.
#FunFactFriday - The Royal Navy has been testing Jet Suit assault teams to determine if the Iron Man-like suits could be used to rapidly swarm and board ships. U.S. Special Operations Command is also evaluating a jetpack that can reach speeds of more than 200 mph. pic.twitter.com/mo5FoGWkDu
— U.S. Naval Institute (@NavalInstitute) October 16, 2020
Maybe a real-life version of Marvel's Tony Stark jet suit will be fielded within this decade...
(Article by Tyler Durden republished from ZeroHedge.com)