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The Engineer
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Government Offers Prize for Lighter Battery

07/17/2007 10:28 AM

Inventors across the country are being asked to find a way to lighten the load U.S. soldiers carry on their backs -- largely due to the high-tech gear that uses batteries -- and the solution will be decided in a $1 million contest.

The military wants to lighten the load troops carry into combat.

The Department of Defense is asking a person or team to come up with a way to lessen the weight of the 20-40 pounds of batteries a solider carries on a typical four-day mission. The batteries power everything from soldiers' GPS systems to their night-vision goggles.

"In many missions the batteries are heavier then the ammunition they are carrying," said Dr. William S. Reese Jr., Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Laboratories and Basic Sciences -- whose office, the Director of Defense Research and Engineering, is sponsoring the prize competition. "We'd like to reverse that ratio."

Some missions require as much as 100 pounds of equipment, according to Brig. General Mark Brown who commands the Army's Program Executive Office Soldier program.

"Any weight reduction on batteries would really help us out," Army Spc. Daniel Tinsely, currently serving in Iraq, told CNN's Federick Pleitgen.

"It's a challenge we've had in the military forever," said CNN military analyst retired Army Brig. Gen. James "Spider" Marks.

Marks says one of the best things to help out the soldiers would be to give them a "power pack" that's miniaturized -- one that can last a long time and doesn't weigh much.

And that's the key to winning the $1 million. The whole prototype must weigh 8.8 pounds (4 kilograms) or less and produce 20 watts average power for 4 days or 96 hours. It has to be wearable, like a vest, and will undergo rigorous testing.

The entry that can demonstrate a wearable electric power system that can provide 96 hours of equipment operation at 8.8 pounds or less, will take first place and the $1 million. Systems coming in second and third place will receive $500,000 and $250,000.

The contest, announced July 5, will take place in the fall of 2008. It is open to individuals and teams and the DDR&E hopes to attract entrepreneurs as well as traditional defense contractors.

This is the first cash prize giveaway by the DDR&E, Reese added.

"We welcome all players to the game," he said.

An individual must be a U.S. citizen and at least 21 years old. A team can be comprised of non-citizens but the team leader must be a U.S. citizen at least 21 years old.

During the five-day competition, the top performing systems will take part in an eight-hour trial meant to mimic real life troop activities. Competitors will strap on their prototypes and "subject their power systems to periods of walking, lying prone, outdoor environmental conditions, potentially short-term cold chambers and off-wearer operation in an airtight container."

The judging panel will consist of government scientists, engineers and military personnel.

The military hopes these power packs may also have commercial use in camping, hiking and other outdoor activities.

First responders could power radios and search lights with the new technology, Reese suggested. "You could run a small refrigerator off of it," he added.

In September the military will hold a public meeting to brief potential competitors on technical details, the rules and qualification requirements. The registration deadline is November 30, 2007.

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Guru
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#1

Re: Government Offers Prize for Lighter Battery

07/17/2007 3:36 PM

Muddled thinking?

A modern soldier carries more wieght than a suit of arrmour, and it's distributed much worse!

Maybe make the beurocrats and planners wear it for a few days...then mybe the'de have a re-think?

Often the best way to solve a problem is to remove it! ?

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Guru
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#2

Re: Government Offers Prize for Lighter Battery

07/17/2007 4:16 PM

This reminds me of the biography I wrote about Ferdinand Porsche last week. Porsche invented the first petroleum-electric hybrid car way back in 1898, but the 1,800-kg battery pack that it required wasn't good for hill climbing. The U.S. military can have the finest technology in the world, but the soldier who has to climb hills in Afghanistan shouldn't be expected to tote 100 lbs. of equipment around.

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Power-User

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#3

Re: Government Offers Prize for Lighter Battery

07/17/2007 8:55 PM

The big bucks always go for more War and weapons of destruction. How about raising the coconscious level of your enemy and eliminate the need to shoot him?

The human body is capable of some remarkable energy I've heard, is there a way to harness that source?

Chemical will always be limited by source of combustibles. It looks like to me we will need to get to a Bottle of energy. Just keep storing it in something that can handle the quantity.

Can there be energy sources without a pole, I mean the old Positive and Negative thing?

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Guru
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#4
In reply to #3

Re: Government Offers Prize for Lighter Battery

07/18/2007 2:57 AM

The human body is capable of some remarkable energy I've heard, is there a way to harness that source?

Give the troops 2 bottles

#1 Hot sweet tea/coffee

#2 Scotch

???

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#5
In reply to #4

Re: Government Offers Prize for Lighter Battery

07/18/2007 4:28 PM

First the government pours millions and billions into the space program developing hydrogen fuel cells and leaves all this technology in 1970's status for 30 years then Pres. G. W.Bush like many of his predicessors announces an energy bill including a alternative energy program.

Although ENERGY!!!!

is considered one of the top CRISIS, in our country (and the World), out of a national budget of (100's of Trillions?) of dollars, are we spending perhaps 1 or 2 million? on new battery and fuel cell development? Probably not!!!!!

THIS ABOUT THE EQUIVALENT OF SPENDING ONE CENT OUT OF A THOUSAND DOLLAR BUDGET.

I know someone who worked on that project for the U.S. government. Bush's Energy director quietly quashed (ungranted) all the money set aside for the fuel cell and lithium ion Battery development, it was only the Japanize government and industry that stepped in at the last minute and decided to continue the funding. This is for the one and only LAB doing work on this project for the US gov with a handful of people.

Further a lot of work has already been done on this general topic by private industry and the government hasn't utilized most of that development. Especially the lithium, hydrogen storage technology worked on by Ovshinsky, and other lithium storage battery solutions for instance, the working platform by Volvo and suppressed by Multinational Oil Corporations and Detroit.

Geoffrey

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