NMCB 3 Successfully Completes Mount Out Exercise
Navy News Service
Story Number: NNS151014-12
Release Date: 10/14/2015 11:49:00 AM
By Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class (SW) Michael Gomez, Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 3 Public Affairs
OKINAWA, Japan (NNS) -- Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 3 conducted a 48-hour mount out exercise (MOX) at Camp Shields, Okinawa, Japan, Oct. 6-8.
The MOX simulates the battalion's ability to deploy an 89-person air detachment (AIRDET) within 48 hours to support any mission required by a supported commander.
The mission could range from major combat operations to humanitarian and disaster relief. The Mount out requires moving heavy construction equipment and large quantities of support materials.
The Embark team conducted a series of evolution, from weighting and balancing, shoring, palletizing materials, collecting data for each piece of equipment and prioritizing the order of shipment in a staging area.
According to Engineering Aide 2nd Class Heather N. Salzam, it starts from the lowest person to all the way up. If the math isn't correct on their data sheet, it ends with the load planner not being able to place an item on a plane.
'It couldn't be done if we weren't on the same page,' said Salzam. 'Communications was the key element in executing the task.'
The evolution requires coordination and teamwork to build pallets, weigh and measure each piece of equipment to locate its center of balance.
Load planners input the information into a computer program called Transportation Coordinators' Automated Information for Movements System (TCAIMS) to determine where everything will be placed in the military aircraft. If the load is not properly planned, it could unbalance the airplane and endanger the flight.
'Our personnel (Embark team) did an outstanding job with the 48 Mount-Out Exercise (MOX),' said Equipment Operator 1st Class Francis Villareal. 'We had a motivated group of Seabees who executed and performed their tasking with accuracy at every phase of the MOX. Each team from the Weighing and Marking to the Pallet Building and Load Planners worked in unison that led to an efficient process. The deckplate leadership from the First Classes to the Chiefs was present throughout the process, but it was the troops that made it all happen.'
At the final stage of the exercise, personnel from Naval Construction Group (NCG) 1 conducted a joint inspection to determine the accuracy of the information for the items that will be placed on the aircraft.
'It was definitely a successful evolution,' said Engineering Aide 1st Class Adrian Floy, NCG 1 embark evaluator. 'The Seabees were very well trained; it was one of the better exercises I've seen completed.'
The exercise was based around a humanitarian scenario. NMCB-3's AIRDET was hypothetically ordered to fly to Palawan, Republic of Philippines, to assist in disaster relief efforts following a super typhoon.
AIRDET leadership conducted detailed mission planning for tasks such as search and recovery, clearing debris, delivering emergency supplies, constructing a tent camp, and repairing the airport and seaport to open the way for further relief efforts.
NMCB 3 is homeported in Port Hueneme, Calif., and is currently deployed to Okinawa, Japan. Its mission is to support Navy and joint forces throughout the U.S. Pacific Command with construction projects and humanitarian missions in more than 13 different geographical locations.
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