Posted on 10/15/2014 3:09:53 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Military work is physically demandingand we're not just talking about soldiers on the battlefield. Travel down the chain, and you'll find plenty of positions where strength and stamina are highly valued skills.
Take the Navy for example. The Navy needs ships and those ships need to be built and maintaineda rough, physically draining job. Sandblasting, riveting, and grinding excess metal off the ships can take a toll on the human body. You're often carrying tools that can weigh upwards of 30 pounds.
"There's a lot of wear and tear on you," says Adam Miller, director of new initiatives for Lockheed Martin. "Skilled workers can maybe do that for three to four minutes then they need to put the tool down and they need to rest."
For the past couple of years, Miller has been leading a team of engineers and designers to create one of the first industrial-use exoskeletons. Called the FORTIS, the exoskeleton is able to support tools of up to 36 pounds and transfer that load from a worker's hands and arms to the ground. The goal is to lighten workers' loads, ultimately making them more productive and skilled at their jobs.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
I had a co worker who was in the Navy for 4 years, I asked him what he did in the Navy, he said, “I scraped paint?.
20 times nothing is still nothing.
I looked at gauges. A slight step up.
All evolution eventually leads to a venomous winged ant e.g. the yellowjacket.
That thing will come in ahndy when swabbing the deck, or picking rust :-P
Semper Fi
Man, think how fast you could run a buffy with that thing. BTT
/johnny
Not new. Popular Mechanics showed this back in the 1960s, and the movie THE AMBUSHERS with Dean Martin also showed it in the brewery fight.
As a current active duty sailor, these are pretty cool, but let’s be honest, it’ll be a hundred years before these roll out to the fleet. We just got rid of Windows XP fer crying’ out loud.
Ahh, the pleasures of being a tirekicker in the USAF...;-) (That's a Crew Chief for the uninitiated)
Bay 12, please!
If that productivity gain is true, all government “workers” all should get 3 or 4 of them.
“Skilled workers can maybe do that for three to four minutes then they need to put the tool down and they need to rest.”
Been there done that.
Oh yes, they rest for maybe ten seconds then it’s back
to the grind for two hours if your lucky, eight hours
or more in a day.
Lord, where do they get these people, the WORK of a
WW II. ship yard would kill most of them.
Theoretical ideas in magazines and movies are quite different than a working model in the real world though.
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