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Army Gets New Combat Uniform

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Army Gets New Combat Uniform
By Sgt. 1st Class Marcia Triggs
Army News Service
June 15, 2004


WASHINGTON - The Army will be fielding a new combat uniform designed by NCOs and tested by Stryker Brigade Soldiers in Iraq since October.

On the Army's 229th birthday, senior leadership introduced the Army Combat Uniform during a Pentagon cake-cutting ceremony. Soldiers were on display, suited-up in the wrinkle-free uniform with a digitized camouflage pattern.

Three different versions of the ACU have been developed, and more than 10,000 uniforms have been produced and dragged through the sand in Iraq and at Army training centers. Even more are on American production lines to be issued by April 2005 to Soldiers in deploying units. Fielding to the total Army should be complete by December 2007, said officials from the Program Executive Office, known as PEO Soldier.

There were 20 changes made to the uniform, to include removing the color black and adapting the digital print from the Marine Corps uniform to meet the needs of the Army, said Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Myhre, the Clothing and Individual Equipment noncommissioned officer in charge.

Black is no longer useful on the uniform because it is not a color commonly found in nature. The drawback to black is that its color immediately catches the eye, he added.

"The color scheme in the ACU capitalizes on the environments that we operate in," Myhre said. "The current colors on the ACU are green-woodland, grey-urban environments and sand brown-desert. The pattern is not a 100-percent solution in every environment, but a good solution across the board."

"This isn't about a cosmetic redesign of the uniform," said Col. John Norwood, the project manager for Clothing and Individual Equipment. "It's a functionality change of the uniform that will improve the ability of Soldiers to execute their combat mission."

Every change was made for a reason. The bottom pockets on the jacket were removed and placed on the shoulder sleeves so Soldiers can have access to them while wearing body armor. The pockets were also tilted forward so that they are easily accessible. Buttons were replaced with zippers that open from the top and bottom to provide comfort while wearing armor.

Patches and tabs are affixed to the uniform with Velcro to give the wearer more flexibility and to save the Soldier money, Myhre said. Soldiers can take the name-tapes and patches off their uniforms before laundering, which will add to the lifecycle of the patches. Also the cost to get patches sewn on will be eliminated, he added.

The ACU will consist of a jacket, trousers, moisture wicking t-shirt and the brown combat boots. It will replace both versions of the BDU and the desert camouflage uniform. The black beret will be the normal headgear for the ACU, but there is a matching patrol cap to be worn at the commander's discretion.

At $88 per uniform, about $30 more than the BDU, Soldiers will eventually reap gains in money and time by not having to take uniforms to the cleaners or shine boots.

The life of the ACU began in January 2003 when PEO Soldier teamed with Myhre, Master Sgt. Alex Samoba and Staff Sgt. Matt Goodine - from the 1st Stryker Brigade, Fort Lewis, Wash.

The team looked at a number of uniforms and took the best part of each uniform and combined it into one. They built their first prototype and delivered 25 uniforms to Stryker squads at the National Training Center. After listening to their comments, the team went back to the lab and created prototype two.

Twenty-one uniforms were then delivered to Stryker Soldiers at the Joint Training and Readiness Center, Fort Polk, La.

"We watched them as they entered and cleared rooms, as they carried their rucksack and all of the things they had to be able to do in the uniform, and then we came up with prototype three," Myhre said.

Two issues of the third version were given to the Stryker Soldiers deploying to Iraq. Three months ago, Myhre was among a team who visited Iraq to get more feedback from Soldiers.

"We would talk to Soldiers right after they had completed a mission while the benefits of the uniform were still fresh in their minds. We wanted to know how did the uniform help the mission."

Sgt. Maj. of the Army Kenneth Preston is one of the ACU's biggest supporters. He said major command sergeants major had a chance to see the uniform and give advice toward the final version.

"We have not made a major change to our uniforms since the BDUs (battle dress uniforms) were introduced in the early 1980s," Preston said. "This new uniform performs well in multiple environments. Its new pockets and color designs are a result of feedback from Soldiers in combat. Every modification made on the uniform was designed with a specific purpose and not just for the sake of change."

Uniform changes include:

1. Mandarin collar that can be worn up or down

2. Rank insignia centered on the front of the blouse

3. Velcro for wearing unit patch, skill tabs and recognition devices

4. Zippered front closure

5. Elbow pouch for internal elbow pad inserts

6. Knee pouch for internal knee pad inserts

7. Draw string leg cuff

8. Tilted chest pockets with Velcro closure

9. Three-slot pen pocket on bottom of sleeve

10. Velcro sleeve cuff closure

11. Shoulder pockets with Velcro

12. Forward tilted cargo pockets

13. Integrated blouse bellows for increased upper body mobility

14. Integrated Friend or Foe Identification Square on both left and right shoulder pocket flap.

15. Bellowed calf storage pocket on left and right leg

16. Moisture-wicking desert tan t-shirt

17. Patrol Cap with double thick bill and internal pocket

18. Improved hot-weather desert boot or temperate-weather desert boot

19. Two-inch, black nylon web belt

20. Moisture-wicking socks.
 
I thought these had been in service already
 
i wonder what it will look like in the trees and woodland, i can see it doing well in urban or desert situations
 
Olsen Twins Banger said:
the soldier on the left is almost blending in to the wall i saw that camo will make a big difference

Althought it sounds like you are trying to be funny it's true. It's about time the Army changed the uniform. They came up with BDU not that long after Vietnam and we really haven't been fighting in that type of jungle situation on a large scale for quite sometime.
 
The Marine Corps Digis blend in real well in the field. They fade fast as all hell though. I don't like how the Army got rid of the collar insignia.
 
jnuts said:
I'm not believing that.

Thermal imagers work on heat differential. Ain't no way that uniform is gonna mask that.


i remember research being shown on a science program here where a british researcher had made a unifor that masked the soldier on thermal imaging (the black and white sort), the only way you were able to see him were his boots

they also said they were working on a uniform that could evade nightvision, its really impressive if they had that
 
In any case you can't make a suit that the thermal or night vision looks right through.

so even if this works there's a blur or a black spot where the guy is. you're gonna notice it.
 
it does mean that if they can appear 'cold' to camera then a soldier can hide in undergrowth/cover himself in undergrowth and not be captured, whereas he would be if arouund noirmally..thermal cameras only see things in terms of hot and cold as well

im sure once these things become surplus, criminals are going to buy them so they can hide from the helicopters thermal cams
 
danielson said:
it does mean that if they can appear 'cold' to camera then a soldier can hide in undergrowth/cover himself in undergrowth and not be captured, whereas he would be if arouund noirmally..thermal cameras only see things in terms of hot and cold as well

For this to work, the uniform would have to make an individual's radiant temp match that of the ground around them. The moment he stood up from the ground, the suit would have to change temp again. Ground is warmer than air at night at usually vice/versa during the day. A period known as thermal crossover is where the temp differences start to swap and the differential becomes less clear.

I'm not convinced it's going to work. Latest generation IR cameras have a very good sensitivity. They don't need much of a temperature differential. I think it's a great idea, but I don't think it's technically possible.
 
Thing is ugly as hell, but I guess if it works...

What up with the backward flag on the dudes right arm...
 
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