.....After Wasting $5 Billion, the Army Is Eyeing These New Camouflage Patterns

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CODE_3

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Earlier this summer we wrote: "The U.S. Marine Corps has long been known for doing more with less; smaller, more agile, and quick to react, it actually employed that ability when hunting for new uniforms in 2002.

Erik German at The Daily tells the story of the Marines and the Army's uniform selections, mentioning a conversation he had with a textile technologist that shows the Marines flexibility and the Army's cumbersome bureaucracy.

The Marines went to their sniper school at Quantico, Va., and told a couple of their guys to find a good camouflage color for the new uniform pattern. A group of snipers went to the local Home Depot and found the main base color in the Ralph Lauren section of the paint department. The color now called Coyote Brown went into the pattern of their very successful and well-loved MARPAT uniform pattern.

This was also around the time the Army was sending its troops to Iraq with uniforms and body armor in a variety of mismatched patterns that, in effect, left U.S. soldiers wearing a target for the enemy to fire upon.

Bedder explains that in response to this and the Marines new uniforms, the general in charge of Army uniform procurement told his staff to pick a color before trials were finished.

Five billion dollars, eight years later, and the Army is now doing the whole thing again. Over the next 12 months 1.1 million soldiers will be replacing their uniforms for something called Multicam.

Hopefully this will work out better for troops, and won't have to be replaced again in a handful of years."

Now see what direction that new camo may take.

You just see the big picture and camo helps to confuse the eye

Except there's someone with a weapon.

Color schemes are chosen to mimic natural surroundings.

It's best that colors are contrasted with dark and light shades so that the wearer blends into the natural reflections and shadows we're used to seeing.


Digital patterns re-create shapes found in nature, known as fractals, which we see as mere background noise.

Pixels break up the fabric into a macropattern and a micropattern, so the design doesn't appear as a solid block. Even when picked up by infrared technology, the human form is broken up and its movements are masked.

We interpret gradients and layers of color as a textured surface with depth. In this case, the desert.

ADS explains that the brain is deceived into regarding the fabric as part of the natural environment, rather than a solid flat surface.

Kryptek's example of 3-D layering features two levels: shading in the background and sharp random shapes in the foreground.

A light-reflecting gradient helps creates a three-dimensional illusion that blends into natural terrain.

And active-duty soldiers will be field testing the Phase IV entries. The Army will then weigh the benefits and costs of adopting new camouflage.

Kryptek says their designs are made for the battlefield and the backcountry alike, so troops and civilians can both take note


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/after-wasting--5-billion-dollars--the-army-is-eyeing-these-new-camouflage-patterns.html
 

murphy j

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Earlier this summer we wrote: "The U.S. Marine Corps has long been known for doing more with less; smaller, more agile, and quick to react, it actually employed that ability when hunting for new uniforms in 2002.

Erik German at The Daily tells the story of the Marines and the Army's uniform selections, mentioning a conversation he had with a textile technologist that shows the Marines flexibility and the Army's cumbersome bureaucracy.

The Marines went to their sniper school at Quantico, Va., and told a couple of their guys to find a good camouflage color for the new uniform pattern. A group of snipers went to the local Home Depot and found the main base color in the Ralph Lauren section of the paint department. The color now called Coyote Brown went into the pattern of their very successful and well-loved MARPAT uniform pattern.

This was also around the time the Army was sending its troops to Iraq with uniforms and body armor in a variety of mismatched patterns that, in effect, left U.S. soldiers wearing a target for the enemy to fire upon.

Bedder explains that in response to this and the Marines new uniforms, the general in charge of Army uniform procurement told his staff to pick a color before trials were finished.

Five billion dollars, eight years later, and the Army is now doing the whole thing again. Over the next 12 months 1.1 million soldiers will be replacing their uniforms for something called Multicam.

Hopefully this will work out better for troops, and won't have to be replaced again in a handful of years."

Now see what direction that new camo may take.

You just see the big picture and camo helps to confuse the eye

Except there's someone with a weapon.

Color schemes are chosen to mimic natural surroundings.

It's best that colors are contrasted with dark and light shades so that the wearer blends into the natural reflections and shadows we're used to seeing.


Digital patterns re-create shapes found in nature, known as fractals, which we see as mere background noise.

Pixels break up the fabric into a macropattern and a micropattern, so the design doesn't appear as a solid block. Even when picked up by infrared technology, the human form is broken up and its movements are masked.

We interpret gradients and layers of color as a textured surface with depth. In this case, the desert.

ADS explains that the brain is deceived into regarding the fabric as part of the natural environment, rather than a solid flat surface.

Kryptek's example of 3-D layering features two levels: shading in the background and sharp random shapes in the foreground.

A light-reflecting gradient helps creates a three-dimensional illusion that blends into natural terrain.

And active-duty soldiers will be field testing the Phase IV entries. The Army will then weigh the benefits and costs of adopting new camouflage.

Kryptek says their designs are made for the battlefield and the backcountry alike, so troops and civilians can both take note


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/after-wasting--5-billion-dollars--the-army-is-eyeing-these-new-camouflage-patterns.html

I've been following this for a couple years now. The fact that the Army even admitted that the current pattern is ineffective was a miracle in itself. The fact that we got Multicam for Afghanistan is another miracle. I have used Multicam on the two way range and it flat out works. How well these other patterns work? I don't know, but I know that the Army was considering making a recommendation to go ahead and adopt Multicam before the testing trials were even finished. Whether they made this recommendation or not I don't know, but I wouldn't feel ill equipped in Multicam like I do in UCP. I want the best pattern possible for my Army whatever it may be. UCP is NOT it.
 

Beechnut

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Only problem with the current ACU and ABU is the color pallet. The digi pattern is good. But hell, Marines switched first and did it right. One for desert, one for woodland. Novel idea...wtf... Freak'n bean counters...
 
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Just before I left the service in 1994, between Gulf 1 and Gulf 2, we had three sets of utility uniforms. Two sets we kept in mobility bags and the third was everyday wear. We wore woodland pattern for everyday. Stored in the bags were a desert colored woodland pattern style and a set of solid whites for snow covered areas.

One of my sons is in the Air Force now and he wears a digital tiger stripe pattern.
 

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