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A somebody has to remember 25,000 phones numbers.You don't just buy cell phones and call it a comms plan. 25,000 cell phones bought in Canada could be useless in parts of the world.

A somebody has to remember 25,000 phones numbers.You don't just buy cell phones and call it a comms plan. 25,000 cell phones bought in Canada could be useless in parts of the world.
The whole point of picking GM Defense is to have a standard product that has parts compatibility with the civilian vehicles driven all over the country.
We don't need every town making trucks, and we don't need the entire automotive production capacity of the nation dedicated to making army trucks. We just need enough production of each type to keep a small line running.
The ISV is 80% standard Colorado ZR2, and Im sure the larger version shares lots of components with the Silverado. Thats the whole point of those GM Defense offerings. I specified GM Defense because we already use their product, and they offer more that we can make future use of. They were also the first NA manufacturer to get serious about getting back into the Defense game.
As for small drones, sure spread the love around, have different manufactures for the parts all over the country. There is a lot less complexity in having small shops make small drones than there is in having 30 different shops making your trucks.
A somebody has to remember 25,000 phones numbers.
You don't just buy cell phones and call it a comms plan. 25,000 cell phones bought in Canada could be useless in parts of the world.
Great if the goal is have one-way communications from one or a few points. Not so great if you expect any of those 25K to call a significant number of the same 25K. Group calling is limited to a handful of numbers.I regularly get Charlie Charlies over my phone. Weather alerts. Amber alerts. And individuals don't seem to have trouble reaching me nor I them. I have even been involved in group chats that never seem to end.
Quite frankly if Roshel can build the Senator line on a Ford F550 chassis, how hard would it be to dispense with the armour and build an ISV-type light infantry model vehicle based on the stock items they have for the Senator pickup and some additional tubular roll-bars? That way everything in he LUVW-line stays in Canada for decades to come.I agree with the concept but the Senator is built on top of a civilian vehicle as well, either the Ford F550 or the Dodge Ram 5500. Given that the Ford is made here in Canada and he Ram is made in Mexico I thought it might be a better fit.
This is why we have the Communications and Electronics Branch. They can set up tower networks for local areas to communicate. Then they can set up larger towers for distance comms. They can use frequency/ cell blockers to keep regular traffic from using the network.Great if the goal is have one-way communications from one or a few points. Not so great if you expect any of those 25K to call a significant number of the same 25K. Group calling is limited to a handful of numbers.
One problem with cel phone use during emergencies is the towers can get overwhelmed and can't discriminate between an 'official' call and somebody checking to see if their cat is ok. This was a big problem during the '98 ice storm (that and towers going down for lack of power). Way back in the day of landlines, Bell used to be able to identify certain numbers that would always have service regardless of the 'workload' of the switching gear (emergency services had to provide them updated lists every year). I'm not aware that something similar exists for cel phones.
The Senator and ISV/LUVW are entirely different beasts.I agree with the concept but the Senator is built on top of a civilian vehicle as well, either the Ford F550 or the Dodge Ram 5500. Given that the Ford is made here in Canada and he Ram is made in Mexico I thought it might be a better fit.
And further, if the Senator can be built on top of either the Dodge or Ford product then why not a GM product as well, a Silverado 5500 for example.
I went with GM because we already operate their vehicles, and they already have done the R&D to produce both Colorado and Silverado based military vehicles. Why pay Rochel extra to develop what GM already makes, and can assemble in Canada easily? In what world does it make sense to have Rochel covert a Colorado or Silverado into a light utility vehicle when GM already makes them?I agree. I was pointing out that we would be spoiled for choice to have vehicles of this class assembled in Canada without having to have GM set up a line.
Nothing will... Mexico is cheaper. America didn't kill Windsor and Oshawa, Mexico did. The best we can hope for is more defense specific builds in Canada.But it won't put Oshawa back to work.
I agree 100% with drones. Throw money into a R&D pile and let the small companies do what they can do. There will be waste, but there will be innovation as well.Wrt the drones. We are still in the 1910 to 1940s era of flight when pianomakers were offering novel means of solving problems. Encouraging people to keep offering solutions and allowing service people to play with the offerings seems to work for the Ukrainians as it did for the world in the first half of the 20th Century. When we don't have all the answers then we should be encouraging every answer.
I would go a step further than that. Make Roshel the prime contractor for ISV-style/LUVW trucks. Have the contract give a series of requirements for the trucks (painted in CARC/24V electrical system/blackout lights/etc/etc/etc). Then leave it up to them to figure out where to get the trucks from.Quite frankly if Roshel can build the Senator line on a Ford F550 chassis, how hard would it be to dispense with the armour and build an ISV-type light infantry model vehicle based on the stock items they have for the Senator pickup and some additional tubular roll-bars? That way everything in he LUVW-line stays in Canada for decades to come.
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Because we have to get away from buying 2000 trucks (all the numbers in this post are made up and for illustrative purposes only, don't get hung up on the numbers) one year and driving them into the ground for 20 years so the entire fleet is clapped out at the same time. We need to buy 100 trucks a year for 20 years so some are still new by the end of the contract.I went with GM because we already operate their vehicles, and they already have done the R&D to produce both Colorado and Silverado based military vehicles. Why pay Rochel extra to develop what GM already makes, and can assemble in Canada easily? In what world does it make sense to have Rochel covert a Colorado or Silverado into a light utility vehicle when GM already makes them?
Have you ever been in rural Canada? Moderate town during a power outage? We're not Europe, we struggle with cellular coverage outside major cities and dropping even 1000 phones onto a tower in an emergency situation where the civilian population is trying to contact family or EMS is a recipe to deny both groups use of the phones due to tower saturation.I can appreciate that but for a domestic security force, one that is designed to take the load off the Army proper, what level of comms would be appropriate?
25,000 personal comms devices, insecure or not, would solve a lot of comms problems in times of emergency. Having said that. I doubt if there are many Canadians that cannot be reached by cell phone these days.
Just give me a new C8A4, annual ammo allotment and some other bits, let me keep it at home, and I'll happily train on my spare time and be a part of the 300 (thousand). Oh... and build a few flat ranges in my area for easy access. I might even do some cardio again...