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budanski
05-25-2004, 10:25 PM
Army Reboots GIs' Tired Fatigues

Wired (http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,63581,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_3)
Noah Shachtman

Ever since they tangled with the Red Coats, American generals have been giving their grunts more and more and more gear to lug -- from rations to radios, body armor to batteries. Now, for the first time, the Army has decided to junk the old uniforms and start from scratch. dubbed Future Force Warrior, or FFW

"We're stripping the soldier down to his skin, and building out from there," said Jean-Louis "Dutch" DeGay, an equipment specialist at the Army's Natick Soldier Systems Center, which is supervising the seven-year, $250 million overhaul,

In their current get-ups, American soldiers often jump into battle carrying more than 100 pounds of gear on their backs. Hauling the equivalent of a small fridge probably isn't the best idea for troops under any circumstances. But what makes today's equipment particularly maddening is how clumsily all that gear fits together. Night-vision goggles sit on top of the helmet so awkwardly that GIs have to take them off way more often than they should, DeGay said. Body armor is clunky, which makes it hard to duck and roll.

That won't work in the urban fights soldiers are now facing in Iraq -- and are likely to face for years to come. In these battles, infantrymen need as much mobility, and as much protection, as possible. And the equipment needs to be, to use a buzzword, integrated. That couldn't be done with a piecemeal upgrade. It needs a complete system wipe, like FFW.

Caught in street-to-street fighting across Iraq, U.S. troops can't get these upgrades soon enough, said John Pike, director of GlobalSecurity.org.

"Once you're in an urban environment, it strips out a lot of (America's) technology advantages," he said. "It puts you in a fair fight. And you don't want to be in a fair fight." Radios don't work as well in concrete canyons. Spy planes can't see as well. And big guns are often too indiscriminate. By making American troops "more lethal, more survivable," Pike said, FFW "restores to our infantry the same technological superiority that the rest of our military has."

The Army has tried to tweak its uniforms before. There's a clunky upgrade that has been stuck in the Pentagon's bureaucratic muck for years. And let's not even discuss the Power Ranger-motocross-ninja thing that the Defense Department trots out for TV cameras now and then. But FFW is supposed to be ready for full-scale deployment in 2010. And, if the war in Iraq doesn't suck up the Pentagon's last dollar, the project has a decent chance of hitting its deadline, Army insiders and independent analysts said.

Guys like Dutch DeGay are one reason why. He's in a team of 20 Natick specialists working on FFW, and riding herd over 26 contractors -- including a funky Brooklyn design shop. An 11th-generation infantryman, DeGay's ancestors have been carrying guns for the United States since the American Revolution. Before that, he said, they were Scottish highlanders.

"We have a warring disposition," growled DeGay, a former Ranger, infantry officer and armored platoon leader. "All we do is soldier."

He's making sure Natick's geeks and engineers keep the grunt in mind. But he's not the only one. Infantrymen and paratroopers at Fort Benning, Georgia, and at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland have already rolled around in the mud wearing FFW prototypes.

The tests have produced a series of small, but needed, changes over what soldiers now wear. For one thing, the new uniforms are now unisex. The zipper has been extended, and the uniform's butt flap has been expanded, so GI Janes aren't literally caught with their pants down if they have to pee. A bag has been attached to the inner thigh, for an easier time going No. 2.

The body armor is probably the biggest improvement, however. It sits on a series of foam pads around the rib cage, so there's a 2.5-inch gap between the harness and the body. It keeps the GI cool. And it's almost imperceptibly light -- unlike today's bulletproof vests, many of which are about as comfortable as that lead a**** the dentist makes you wear during X-rays. But the scarab-like shell can take five to seven direct hits from a machine gun, and it doubles as a holster for ammunition and grenades. DeGay and his fellow Future Force Warriors call it a "load-bearing chassis."

It also protects the computer that future infantrymen are expected to rely on. Instead of the bulky cables that ordinarily connect the computer to a PDA or a helmet-mounted display, FFW is supposed to use "e-textiles" -- durable cloth, with wires woven in. The helmet will integrate night vision into a built-in, half-inch monocle, and bone-conduction microphones will replace radio headsets.

At first, the sensors were metal. But tests showed that "some people's heads were literally too thick for that to work," DeGay said. Now, the metal has been replaced with a gel-based sensor that's sensitive enough to transmit pulse and breathing rates back to base, too.

There's still a slight whiff of vaporware in the air at Natick. Powering all these doodads, for instance, won't be easy. The Army wants to keep the total "power budget" for FFW down to 15 watts or so -- a quarter of what a typical light bulb takes. "We don't even know where to begin," sighed Kalish Shukla, FFW's power-management chief.

They have at least one idea, though. "Avoid the use of Microsoft Windows operating systems," a recent memo on the subject directed. FFW is going open source. Cleaner software needs less energy to run.

To cut a soldier's load back to 50 pounds, FFW designers plan to dump a whole bunch onto a robotic "mule," yet to be designed. Even if this robo-Sherpa isn't ready by the 2010 deadline (and it's looking increasingly likely that it won't), the FFW crew intends to push ahead.

"If we had to push all this out the door right now, the soldier would still have a system that didn't feel like he was lugging all this gear," DeGay said. "He doesn't have to waste brain matter moving from this rock to that one. And that's going to make him fight better, in the end."

That is, if the Pentagon will let it happen. Stretched thin by commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Defense Department withheld some of FFW's money for the current fiscal year, Army sources said. Some goals set for 2006 have been pushed back to 2007, although the 2010 deployment date for Future Force Warrior is still intact. For now.

http://a1112.g.akamai.net/7/1112/492/2002091454/www.wired.com/news/images/full/03_f.12601.jpg
Eleventh-generation infantryman "Dutch" DeGay helps the Army's geeks and engineers keep the grunt in mind as they design the next wave of soldier uniforms.

http://a1112.g.akamai.net/7/1112/492/2002091454/www.wired.com/news/images/full/09_f.12599.jpg
The new uniforms are unisex, which means the zippers have been extended, so GI Janes aren't literally caught with their pants down if they have to pee.

http://a1112.g.akamai.net/7/1112/492/2002091454/www.wired.com/news/images/full/04_f.12595.jpg
An Army mannequin sports the U.S. military's new Future Force Warrior uniform. It's the first time since the Revolutionary War that the Army has started building its combat get-ups from scratch.

http://a1112.g.akamai.net/7/1112/492/2002091454/www.wired.com/news/images/full/06_f.12597.jpg
Instead of the bulky cables soldiers ordinarily use, the Future Force Warrior is supposed to rely on "e-textiles" -- durable cloth, with wires woven in.

scm77
05-25-2004, 10:38 PM
A bag has been attached to the inner thigh, for an easier time going No. 2.
WTF?? :|

mattnwnc03
05-25-2004, 11:05 PM
man thats not half bad, were gonna look like the marines off alien or somthin hehe

Fioraon
05-25-2004, 11:08 PM
I bet zou could land on the moon with that uniform....

squeak
05-25-2004, 11:16 PM
I like that camouflage.

Bulkowski
05-25-2004, 11:55 PM
yes, now we can just unzip it down and have it all hang out woot :hug:

MetalBoy
05-26-2004, 12:26 AM
We're stripping the soldier down to his skin

Coming from a guy named "De Gay", that sounds quite innapropriate.

Fioraon
05-26-2004, 12:28 AM
Where's the **** flap?

Rakki
05-26-2004, 12:42 AM
Forget the zippers and butt flaps - the Scottish got it right the first time with kilts - and no underwear :)

stuntman
05-26-2004, 02:10 AM
http://a1112.g.akamai.net/7/1112/492/2002091454/www.wired.com/news/images/full/04_f.12595.jpg

I have seen this camo on another web site I think it's called scorpion camo. I wonder if its going to be a general all around camo for both desert and woodland area?

TacoDelRio
05-26-2004, 02:28 AM
Yeah, looks like Scorpion camo. That looks to be a great mediteranean/desert camo, but I wonder if it'll be an all around camo, as you said Stuntman. Hopefully not.

Gotta pick me up a set of Scorpions.

DB

Lt_Crooks
05-26-2004, 03:02 PM
A bag has been attached to the inner thigh, for an easier time going No. 2.
no way in hell am i going to piss in my uniform!!

Jack Mehoff
05-26-2004, 03:26 PM
A bag has been attached to the inner thigh, for an easier time going No. 2.
no way in hell am i going to piss in my uniform!!

Bodily function No.2, that would be http://digilander.libero.it/jurada2003/smiley_154.gif

scm77
05-26-2004, 03:38 PM
I think it's more like this. http://digilander.libero.it/jurada2003/aktion082.giflol.

Abolith
05-26-2004, 03:48 PM
WTF?? where do you people find these odd emoticons...

you all have way too much time on your hands....

Jack Mehoff
05-26-2004, 03:50 PM
WTF?? where do you people find these odd emoticons...

you all have way too much time on your hands....

It's called Add to Favorites

Uncle Sam
05-26-2004, 04:09 PM
This is what I said in the other posts about this subject..."As long as it works, and saves G.I.'s lives, no matter what it looks like, I'm all for it!"

ßå$tĮТHÏ¿ð
05-26-2004, 04:17 PM
This is what I said in the other posts about this subject..."As long as it works, and saves G.I.'s lives, no matter what it looks like, I'm all for it!"

Hey if spandex leotards that come in neon pink saved soldiers live's , I'd be all for it too..but happy I didnt have to wear it :P Some of the gear shown seems to be a lil bulky, especially on your chest (which could give backproblems to smaller more leaner/lanky soldiers).

Midtown
05-26-2004, 04:26 PM
I like that camouflage.

might that be one of the new camoflauges the army is switching to?

Uncle Sam
05-26-2004, 05:14 PM
This is what I said in the other posts about this subject..."As long as it works, and saves G.I.'s lives, no matter what it looks like, I'm all for it!"

Hey if spandex leotards that come in neon pink saved soldiers live's , I'd be all for it too..but happy I didnt have to wear it :P Some of the gear shown seems to be a lil bulky, especially on your chest (which could give backproblems to smaller more leaner/lanky soldiers).

:lol: You knew what I meant.


The body armor sits on a series of foam pads around the rib cage, so there's a 2.5-inch gap between the harness and the body. It keeps the GI cool. And it's almost imperceptibly light -- unlike today's bulletproof vests. But the scarab-like shell can take five to seven direct hits from a machine gun, and it doubles as a holster for ammunition and grenades.

Didn't you read the darn thing..you...you...Bastard child ! :lol: :lol:

Midav
05-26-2004, 05:24 PM
I was wondering and also hoping that the US Army would be switching to a CADPAT/MARPAT'esque pattern.

How effective is this Scorpion pattern?

Any feedback would be appreciated.

oldsoak
05-26-2004, 07:02 PM
Looking at that pattern got me wondering. I reckon it would do quite well - IMHO it wont look out of place in urban, desert or even temperate areas. Its like a sort of cammed up coyote brown - it starts to take on the colours of its surroundings - no ? Awright, i'll get back to the bar.....