4166-K
5
7
FEB 99
ULLS-G . . .
good morning, america.
i'm
ted poppel
and this is dayline.
today we're taking a closer look
at the
eight
a
rmy
m
ateriel
s
tatus
s
ystem (
amss
) reports --what
they
are
, what they
do
, and
how they're
generated
.
our first
guest is
ima knowitall
.
ms. knowitall, give us an
overview
on amss
reports.
thank you,
fred
.
i'd be
happy
to.
ulls-g
generates eight key amss
reports that units should
use to
monitor readiness
. they
provide
n
on-
m
ission
c
apable (
nmc
)
inform ation for reportable
equipment, both
systems
and
subsystems
.
“Anyone can run these reports any time during the report period. All the reports,
except the PROJECTION REPORT, are cumulative from the start of the report
period to the day you run the data. Reports can provide current readiness status or
project the readiness status to the end of the report period.
“The NMC time and percentages are recalculated each time a report option is run.
This provides real-time information.
“Unit commanders should determine which reports to run and how often to run
them and make that a part of the unit’s SOP.”
thank you
,
ms. knowitall.
our second
guest is
willy gettit
.
mr. gettit,
give us a
breakdown
of the
eight
reports
.
my pleasure,
jed
.
all eight
reports can be
produced
at
company level
and three
reports --roll up by
uic
, roll
up by
eic
, and roll up by
system/subsytem admin
number
--can be produced at
battalion
or
brigade
. here
is a little
more
about
each report.
..
1. NON-MISSION CAPABLE
REPORT
2. PROJECTION REPORT
3. ROLLUP BY UNIT
IDENTIFICATION CODE (UIC)
4. ROLLUP BY END ITEM (EIC)
5. ROLLUP BY SYSTEM/SUB
SYSTEM ADMIN NUMBER
6. CLASS IX FAILURE
DATA BY ADMIN NUMBERS
7. SYSTEM STATUS
SUMMARY
8. EQUIPMENT
EXCEPTION REPORT