 Hey, good morning, good morning. The beginnings of a fuel system supply point, we've got berms built here that are going to have containment for fuel bags. They'll be pumps and hoses all over the place in a couple days. They'll pick up fuel from DLA, they'll bring it over here, and we'll offload it into these bags. And then we'll store the bags, test the fuel, make sure it's good, and then after a couple days we'll push it back out to another DLA customer. For the rest of the exercise, I believe we are going to be setting up our SSP, we've got a six bag system we're going to be putting up. I believe for this exercise we're going to have 70,000 gallons of fuel. To get finished with this, we'll probably drag it over a little to scoot it closer into our sleeping area, and then we'll probably get the poles and start standing it up. We've got the beginnings of our battalion talk, tents for each staff section inside, where you can access them from the outside as well, and then on the inside in the middle we'll have a little collaboration area where we can come together as a staff and work through some problem solving, some MDMP, all that kind of stuff. We have our expandable van here for our SPO. They run a lot of the tracking for our water, any of those other laundry, shower operations, that type of thing. Staff Sergeant Daniel Leone, 92 whiskey, water operations NCO. Yeah, not a problem. So what we currently have going on is that that pump right there is essentially pumping the water. It's going into this bag, this bag is now gravity feeding into these bags. When we are ready to operate, we're going to be able to draw from these bags into that equipment. Specialist Andrea Aguilar, chemical, biological, radiological nuclear specialist of the 968. This right here is a TWIPS machine. This is a water purification machine. We checked the water that was coming out of the road view. The ultimate goal is to make sure that the reverse osmosis that happens in the road view can perform and be able to have potable water. I'm PSC Karina Pedroza, I'm a 92 Sierra at 263rd quartermaster. This is our last, it stands for a laundry investment advanced system. And these two are both considered drums. This is drum A and this is drum B. It's considered a washer and a dryer. It will wash for like 30 to 40 minutes and then it will go through a drying cycle which is like 10 to 20 minutes. The turnaround time is two hours. Each lad can carry 200 of those laundry bags. So in total we can carry 600. So right here that's the heater and right next to them where they just sat down is the water pump for the showers. So that is where we get our warm water which takes the water from the blivvit, it makes it warm and then that is how we get the water to run through the showers. This is the flooring we set so the soldiers don't have to step on the dirt. RS6 will have their tent with all their cool network gear and all that stuff that will link up to the signal company we got over here. I am First Lieutenant David Unis from the Ford Ford signal company. We are out here for the Qlex 21 exercise providing TACnet services which is the TACCO internet. We are going to drop it as close to the STT as possible in the containment. It doesn't have to be center but we are going to drop it. We have a STT satellite transportable terminal and we are moving our generator next to it because we are running 24 hour ops. I want it as close to the STT as possible. Yeah. That's good right there, yeah it's all done. Ok so right now we have our bulldozer leveling out the ground so we can set up the liner in the back. Right now the soldiers are unfolding a liner for the next berm. Yes sir. Yes sir. You put the 20,000 gallon bag inside the berm. Once we get the fourth dirt wall up the liner will go over that dirt wall and that will complete the containment system and then at some point tomorrow we'll push 20,000 gallons into that bag. We have an FSSP set up. At this point we are receiving fuel, bolt fuel. The first truck, we had the lemus come out and test the fuel. Once we got the go ahead and the approval that the fuel is good we then start doing our job at 92 Fox. Start opening valves. We got to turn gate valves, the pump. Our first valve is valve all the way in and then we just check for leaks if we see anything we say something. Our pump operators are watching the RPMs, the volts, the fuel. If anything starts going wrong they're going to let everybody know. He's going to let us know when it starts getting low. Whenever you're on top of a tanker you don't want to have any loose items and stuff you don't want nothing dangling over that main hole. If the lemus they hook up right there periodically to test the fuel to make sure our filters are doing everything properly. Down there in the pit those are our fuel gauges. So when the fuel starts rising in it they got a stick that they measure the string with to let us know how much fuel is in it. We're trying to get our samples from the trucks. It's Lina Diaz with the 306 quartermaster company, I'm a petroleum laboratory specialist. But once we get them inside the lab we come here. The first thing we do is our API gravity which is going to be this. It's our density API, the temperature. It's testing right now. But once we get the sample we come in here and we start running the different types of tests. Distillation would be this machine, PC would be this machine, our flash point would be this one. Our density is this one and then our freeze point. It should have this tag filled out. Nice to meet you. Hey how are you doing LT? Good sir, how are you doing? Steve Pazack, nice to meet you. I mean you can't get any better than this, I mean this is, getting out safely, getting out to be able to do the mission. Tell me where you're from and what you do on the civilian side because remember to start a major in the army this is my squad. Who I am, my buddies, my family, my civilian employer because reservists are a little bit special we got to play into that too so it's really that diamond, right? And so continue to talk that. This is Colonel Steve Pazack, commander of the 90th Sustainment Brigade, out here at Camp Pendleton, California, visiting Team Exxon. They're out here fueling the fight as we put fuel into bags right now for the first time at the quartermaster liquid logistics 2021 exercise. It's a larger nationwide exercise and these units out here are fueling the fight for Marine Corps and Navy equipment in Southern California. You know, taking care of the southeast and you got four picket, taking care of the northeast and then the headquarters is in Fort Hood. I'm PFC Hannah Romero. And I'm PFC Haven Wilkerson. And we're petroleum supply specialists. And the 1000 second quartermaster company. Very, very hot, so ridiculously hot. You've been running pipeline, we had to set up all the pipeline all around here. So what happens? We have to do one section at a time in order to get it perfectly. Make sure these are tight and sealed. We have those are couplings. We have coupling teams. Yeah, pig earplug looks like and we it's a scraper, but we call it pig because whenever it goes through the pipes, it's like makes a pig sound. Whenever the pig receives, it goes to this, this valve, we have to be closed. That one open. This one open and the pigs go through there and that red slide would lift up. Oh, I'm so proud of these two. They did a great job and they've been doing really hard work out here. And I'm super excited to be part of this company. And we've had a great exercise so far. All right, wave to the camera. Our Sergeant Desmond Faizon, culinary NCO 13th ESC is referred to as the victory meal. But basically the meal is real simple. It's eggs, steak. And hash browns. And this is a hearty meal, you know, feeds the soldiers, fills them up, get them fuel for the day and ready to accomplish their mission. And they have an option of fresh fruit, water, apple juice, orange juice, grape juice, milk. I think it's extremely vital. I mean, if I have a good breakfast, a meaty breakfast, you know, I feel better. I feel ready to go. I have energy to burn knowing that I ate something, you know. Plus, this is this is more of a morale boost because then they, you know, they can sit in social lives with their peers and, you know, talk about what they got going on for today or what they had going on for the day prior. So I'd say our being here is extremely vital.