Posted on May 12, 2019
PFC Cannon Crew Member
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Besides PowerPoints and paper work is there anything else specific that is usually done? Including AT’s.
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Responses: 8
SGT Cannon Crew Member
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Well as a Chief for a 119A3 crew, we do anything from usual admin laid back months to high speed AASLT raid training. Mostly you just prep for the upcoming AT. So if your on a reset year its more basic emplacements and crew drills for 6 months or so and the rest usually ends up being admin/ranges/ apft etc. as a new guy, you’ll most likely be given a lower job until you show that you know something. Pay attention, learn the system and do what you can outside of drill to better yourself. Even if that means taking the TM home and reading up on the system. And also.... PT outside of drill. Guards hard because there is alot outside that can keep you from it. Somethings better then nothing.
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1LT Isr Program Manager
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Basically PMCS, chow, PMCS. During annual your 2 week annual training, that’s where you actually shoot stuff.
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SSG David Verdoorn
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All depends if its a field drill or not.. during Field drills your advance party will show up the day before prep the equipment and head out to the guns and get them prepped. the next day everyone else shows up gets their gear/weapons and loads on the buses and meets advon out in the field. on homestation drills your going to run APFT and conduct mandatory training's (SHARP, EO, Suicide prevention and resilience).
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What is a typical Drill weekend like for a Field Artillery Unit in the Guard?
1LT Infantry Officer
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I was in an artillery unit for 3 years as a battalion S2 (1 year) and platoon leader for a paladin battery (2). As a 13B, it depends on what your gun is, but in a paladin unit, each month the PMCS's had to be completed on the guns, road tests, FCATS, sop training with your chief, and gun cleaning/maintenance.

As for admin stuff, different online trainings, unit evals, counselings, PT, armory cleaning, etc.

Long story short, you will be doing everything (mostly) an active unit would do throughout the month but condensed into a weekend. If you're not familiar with the dynamic, customs and courtesies are usually lax compared to an active unit.

AT, gunnery, and other field problems usually consist of a lot of waiting until you get a fire mission, and then it's go go go until it's over, followed by a survivability move of sorts and more waiting. Sleep next to or in your gun and lots of night movements and shooting. Basically like the field in any mos.

I had a great time and the artillery and especially the national guard is what you make of it. Enjoy!
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SFC Bradley Quinn
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I put my people thru drills. Laying the gun, setting up aiming posts, collimeter, cleaning the tube, disassemble and reassemble firing mechanism, etc. There is always something to do or refresh since it's only 2 days a month. If nothing else, CTT training can be done as a squad/group.
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SPC Brandon Lindsay
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You'll probably only do missions with the artillery peices twice a year. The drills depend on the length. You'll get a drill schedule with the training listed. ATs consist of a good bit of training. Starts out with catching up on briefings or classes the first day or two. Followed by 1 or more types of grunt training, IE ruck march, reflexive fire, shoothouse, team movements w/ Op4. Then movement to the field for around 9 days (more or less depending). While in the field, your treating it as a mission. Will fire the artillery and continue weapons training and small force on force tactics while out there if the fire missions go smoothly.
Except a battalion run at some point and a sexual harassment awareness briefing...
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1SG First Sergeant
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You should be completing your assigned tasks. Which could include PMCS, Armory maintenance, individual skill proficiency training, records update validations, section training, preparing for you your next field exercise, weapons maintenance, personal equipment inventories, section equipment inventories. This is not an all inclusive list of tasking duties, there is a plethora amount of tasks that need to be accomplished on drill weekends. I am positive that if you cannot find something to stay actively engage, you can always seek out either your platoon sergeant or your 1st Sargent, they would happily give you further guidance. As a PFC you should never have the time to not be engaged in some type of activity except when you are at lunch.
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SSG Robert Cole
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PMCS on your artillery piece. And that's about it.
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