Primary Arms

Posts Tagged ‘Clothe The Soldier’

Canadian Converged CADPAT Rainsuit

Saturday, October 1st, 2011

Canadian Forces Converged Rainsuit Guide

As part of the Clothe The Soldier program the Canadian Forces have been issued the relatively new Converged CADPAT Rainsuit (CCR) manufactured from a Waterproof, Moisture Vapour Permeable (WMVP) membrane with static dissipative properties. The latter property is particularly important when working around POL and aircraft.

Consisting of a jacket and trousers, the interesting thing about the CCR is the “converged” element of the name. Utilizing the Air Force rainsuit as a baseline, CTS integrated design elements for ground combat forces in order to produce a joint garment.

Canadian Air Force Adopts Revision Eyewear

Thursday, January 27th, 2011

Revision, has been awarded a $2.7 million contract with the Canadian DND to supply Air Force members with Ballistic Eyewear (BEW), also known as the Sawfly Spectacle System. The initial contract is to supply 33,000 kits and 40,000 additional lenses in 2011 with a 5 year option period. Revision first won the BEW contract for Canadian land forces in 2003.

“Revision is proud to provide the Canadian Air Force with their protective eyewear needs,” said Jonathan Blanshay, CEO of Revision. “Today’s battlefield requires protection from a growing list of threats, from IED shrapnel and flying debris to harmful laser wavelengths. Revision’s Sawfly Ballistic Eyewear is a single system that provides powerful ballistic protection and, at the customer’s request, the ability to protect against laser threats with high-performance, specialty lenses.”

The Clothe The Soldier (CTS) did some great stuff, ten years ago it seems. Lately, Canadians have been referring to the program as Clown The Soldier which has concentrated on such epic improvements as camouflage boots. We have heard through the proverbial grapevine that almost all funding for Army upgrades via CTS have been pulled and that the Air Force and Navy are getting their turn. Since the Army fielded Sawflys several years ago, we think that this is a minor indicator that this may actually be the case.

At any rate, Sawflys rock. They are well made, meeting or exceeding ANSI Z87.1-2010 and U.S. military ballistic impact requirements (MIL-PRF-31013, clause 3.5.1.1 and MIL-DTL-43511D, clause 3.5.10). Additionally, Revision just released their small sizes. Not to be confused with Asian sizing,

Stay tuned, we have been chasing a new product from Revision for some time and finally have a sample to unveil.

www.revisionmilitary.com