 The training, well, like is in the name, the training support facility is to support the training of soldiers and their education in their history and heritage, also to help in leadership development. With the majority of them coming early on, I think it gives them a good grounding, a good basis for what the rest of their training is going to be, so that way they've got what's happened in the past up to some of the current technology and then they can move on from there and getting the specific training that they're going to take. The soldiers come out onto this floor, they're given instruction on items that are directly related to their particular MOS. So if a track mechanic came through, they would look at the various track and suspension systems on the tanks and it would show them how they evolved. And then case study information would be thrown in to kind of give them some critical thinking on what the problem was, how the Army addressed that problem and how it was fixed in subsequent models during production and design. And getting up close and personal, you're not allowed to touch anything, but at least you can get close to that history. And a lot of the pieces that are here are unique. There's some that are only one or two in the entire world that are here on display at the training support facility. We've been filming a series of short films here even since before I got here and they're available on the Ordinance Facebook page. Folks who are working either in the museum system or here on the base or in Ordinance have highlighted important historical pieces from the collection and they'll do a specific background film on that and explain why it's significant, why it's being preserved here at the training support facility.