U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Pacific

 

U.S. Marine Corps Forces, Pacific

In Any Clime and Place

Marine Corps Warfighting Lab begins testing ship-to-shore landing craft

By Lance Cpl. Erik Estrada | | March 18, 2014

HONOLULU --

Members of the Marine Corps Warfighting Lab arrived here to test a model version of the Ultra Heavy-lift Amphibious Connector (UHAC) March 3.

The UHAC is an amphibious craft that has three times the lift capacity and greater coastal access than the Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC.)

“It’s promising because it allows a greater lift and it’s exciting to see,” said Capt. James Pineiro, the Ground Combat Element branch head, at the Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory.

Less than half the size of the actual UHAC, the Warfighting Laboratory was here to see their project in action for the first time after years of planning.

If the concept model goes through, the UHAC could work side by side with the LCAC, which currently does all the ship-to-shore transportation of everything from High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) to tanks.

“The full-scale model should be able to carry at least three tanks and a HMMVW,” said Gunnery Sgt. Joseph Perera, the lab’s Infantry Weapons Project Officer. “It’s going to save a lot of time and fuel for the Marine Corps as well.”

Although the concept model doesn’t appear to be armored well, the final production is planned to have armor plating and .50-caliber machine guns, which Perera says are needed on the UHAC to be able to protect itself.
 
 “The UHAC’s goal is to have more combat power and breach the land further than the LCAC,” said Pineiro.

“All this is part of the ‘next effort’ that the Office of Naval Research and the Marine Corps Warfighting Lab are looking at for connectors, which bring more combat vehicles and power to shore quickly,” said Mr. Geoffrey Main, Program Manager at the Office of Naval Research. “The UHAC full scale should climb a 12 to 16 foot wall when it is completed. It can go over everything short of a 16 to 18 foot seawall.”

According to Main, this would mark a big improvement, since the LCAC can only go over a three to four foot wall.

Main was around at the beginning when Navatek, Ltd., a ship-building company from Honolulu, came to the Office of Naval Research and proposed the UHAC project in 2008. MCWL liked the idea and began to proceed with the project.

“Initially it was for another program,” said Main. “We saw it was compatible with the well deck and that it would provide three times the capability of the LCAC, but yet, in the same space as the LCAC.”
 
In the upcoming exercise Rim of the Pacific 2014, the half-scale UHAC is slated for an Advanced Warfighting Experiment (AWE) where it will disembark from a ship and make its way onto shore. This will give the Navy and Marine Corps forces a closer look at the UHAC and its abilities.
 
Although the UHAC is still an experiment, members of the MCWL believe if it passes its experimentation process and makes it to the fleet, it would help the Marines and Sailors tremendously.

“Not only does it provide more combat power much more quickly, but access to beaches and littoral environments” said Main. “[It allows] a lot more options ashore, which is extremely valuable … because our adversaries are developing ever better capabilities to repel a landing. The best defense against that is having many (options).”

Expeditionary MARFORPAC mcwl UHAC