GORE-TEX Military Fabrics

Max Talk 24: Squad Hasty Attack II: Maneuver by Bounding Overwatch

June 3rd, 2019

This is the twenty fourth installment of ‘Max Talk Monday’ which shares select episodes from a series of instructional videos. Max Velocity Tactical (MVT) has established a reputation on the leading edge of tactical live fire and force on force training. MVT is dedicated to developing and training tactical excellence at the individual and team level.

This is a follow up to the ‘Squad in the Attack: Hasty Attack‘ video from last Monday. It explores the use of ‘bounding overwatch’ as an added security measure as the squad advances, and covers additional aspects of squad maneuver under fire. Utilizing a sand table model with army men, as a method of introduction to explain these essential small unit tactics drills.

Detailed explanations can be found in the MVT Tactical Manual: Small Unit Tactics.

Max is a tactical trainer and author, a lifelong professional soldier with extensive military experience. He served with British Special Operations Forces, both enlisted and as a commissioned officer; a graduate of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Max served on numerous operational deployments, and also served as a recruit instructor. Max spent five years serving as a paramilitary contractor in both Iraq and Afghanistan; the latter two years working for the British Government in Helmand Province, Afghanistan.

Website: Max Velocity Tactical

YouTube: Max Velocity Tactical

Excellence in Tactical Training.

Outdoor Research Factory Grand Opening In El Monte, California

June 3rd, 2019

There’s not much I love more than visiting factories, but it’s a rare occasion to be invited to a grand opening of a brand new factory, particularly in the textile industry.

Considering the long history of garment sewing in Southern California, I fully expected to see a refurbished factory. Instead, I was greeted with a brand new building, filled with completely new machines. Just nine months ago, OR’s patent company, Youngone, started their quest to open a new factory here in the States. After surveying several locations across the country, they initially settled on a different location. Unfortunately, inspection of the local area revealed it was unsuitable and they quickly selected El Monte, California, as their newest location. In just three months, the 32,000-square-foot factory was outfitted and the work force hired and trained.

Once inside, visitors are immediately greeted by a show room, outfitted with the full breadth of OR’s tactical offerings.

Just beyond, the production floor is laid out in multiple lines with new equipment and room for expansion. Supervisors and the factory director are situated at the front of the floor.

When OR’s latest employees came onboard, they were already quite adept at the cut and sew business, but there was still a learning curve. They all had to learn how to manufacture handwear with the Gore-Tex membrane. In particular, a great deal of investment was placed in training those who apply seam tape to the gear. Below, you can see a positive pressure test device which detects holes in the Gore-Tex membrane or seam tape. Any pinholes are immediately patched and put back through Quality Control inspection.

There are about 1000 displaced textile workers in El Monte due to factory after factory moving overseas in recent years. In particular, the jeans industry is almost entirely offshore. Outdoor Research was able to leverage that work force and put 115 of these skilled workers back to work.

The city of El Monte is very proud of this new factory and I can see why. The building is new construction, built to the latest code, and the work is vital to our nation’s defense. These textiles worlers are family members who will bring home a living wage and generous benefits package.

The celebration of the opening spanned two days, due to pressing schedules. First, Rep. Grace F. Napolitano (CA-32) toured the new facility, along with Michelle Wardian, President of Outdoor Research as well as El Monte Mayor Andre Quintero; Jason Duncan, VP of Tactical, Innovation, CSR – Outdoor Research; and TJ Laynor, Tactical Sales Director, Outdoor Research. They conducted a brief ribbon-cutting ceremony at the end of the tour.

The next day’s grand opening ceremony was quite an event. El Monte is 65.2% Hispanic and 30% Asian. The work force closely mirrors its community and the gathering was addressed in English, Spanish and Cantonese. Presiding were representatives from the the El Monte city council and city departments as well as LA County. These dignitaries also wished the factory well.

The economic impact of this new factory will be felt all throughout El Monte and it’s neighboring communities in the San Gabriel Valley, as some workers commute from as far away as Pasadena.

What’s more, Outdoor Research boasts a new, state of the art factory which specializes in manufacturing protective clothing for the US military. Already, it’s hard at work producing equipment for our men and women in uniform.

Canadian Navy – Naval Enhanced Combat Uniform Update

June 3rd, 2019

The latest version of the Canadian Navy’s Naval Enhanced Combat Uniform goes on trial soon with a Operational Wear test aboard a vessel. The earliest version was quite baggy, based on the Canadian Forces Combat Uniform, but in Black. It proved to be too baggy for use aboard ship. Logistik Unicorp produced the test uniforms and created a more streamlined fit as well as integrating features, like pocket designs, from a proposed next generation combat uniform.

The Naval Enhanced Combat Uniform is the replacement for the current No 5 Naval Combat Dress. Like its predecessor, it is black in color. However, two fabrics are currently being looked at, Nomex and Kermel, both competing pyramid fabrics with FR properties.

The shirt features onboard facing zippered Napoleon pockets as well as zippered hand pockets at the waist.

Additionally, there are zippered bicep pockets on either arm as well as a pile field for insignia.

One interesting feature is the integrated knee padding. It’s fairly simple and straightforward, but there are accommodations to add additional padding if needed.

In addition to fabric selection, they also hope to determine whether the trouser will feature a zippered rear pocket.

If all goes well, a final version will soon become the new No 5 dress for Canadian Navy personnel. Perhaps, some of the features of this uniform will find also their way into the combat uniform worn by ground-based Canadian forces.

You Never Know Where They’ll Show Up

June 3rd, 2019

Actually, I shouldn’t be surprised where this one showed up.

I gave Millbrook Tactical a patch during my visit to their booth at CANSEC and they immediately put it in display.

Samson Manufacturing Re-Introduces their MPX Handguards… Now Also Available in FDE

June 2nd, 2019

KEENE, NH – Now available in FDE for both the SIG SAUER MPX pistols and carbines, these narrow profile, M-LOK® handguard are the answer for those wishing to replace their larger and heavier factory handguard.

Both the black and the new FDE MPX Handguards are available in either 8” or 14” lengths. The continuous top rail and ample M-LOK slots allow you to put your accessories wherever you need them. The handguards are made from 6061 aluminum and mount securely to the receiver using the existing mounting hardware.

For a limited time, these MPX handguards are on sale! The MPX-8 handguards, in either black or FDE, are now $89.43 (regularly $111.79) and the MPX-14 handguards, in either black or FDE, are $118.23 (regularly $147.79). Order yours now from the Samson website.

For more information contact esales@samson-mfg.com, or visit www.samson-mfg.com to check out all of our products.

SCUBAPRO Sunday – D-Day Navy Combat Demolition Units, The Frogmen of D-Day

June 2nd, 2019

When the U.S. entered WWII, the Navy knew it would need men that would have to go in to reconnoiter the landing sites, locate and destroy obstacles and defenses. The Army and Navy established the Amphibious Scout and Raider School at Fort Pierce, Florida in 1943 to train men in the specialty of amphibious raids and tactics. Most of these men used their skills throughout North Africa, the Pacific, and the Normandy landings. In 1943, the Navy created a large dedicated force for this task called the Naval Combat Demolition Unit, or NCDU, that were also trained at Fort Pierce, Florida.

The Navy had a significant role in the June 6, 1944, D-Day invasion. However, long before that day, the Naval Combat Demolition Units (NCDUs) had to perform pre-invasion recons of the beaches and shore placements, even going as far as to bring buckets of sand back to make sure the beach could support the specialized amphibious tanks that would go ashore to provide close-in gun support. The Navy’s role in D-day was to provide shore bombardment, the follow-up gunfire support, plus transporting and landing many of the Army troops who stormed ashore.

The Naval Beach Battalions were naval elements of the Army Engineer Special Brigades for the invasion of Normandy. NCDUs were formed up about one year before D-Day. They were made up of 1 officer and 5 enlisted men. They trained alongside the Scouts and Raiders at Fort Pierce. They were organized by Lt. Cdr. Draper Kaufman, an explosives expert, with the specific goal of clearing beach obstacles.

In Late 1943, 10 NCDUs had arrived in England from Fort Pierce, FL, to meet and train with their British counterparts for future missions. In early 44, the units split and joined with the 2nd, 6th, and 7th USN Beach Battalions, the organizations, set up to coordinate and facilitate the Army landings. At this time, eight additional six-man units arrived from the U.S. to be split among the Beach Battalions.

The NCDU men were not the Frogman you would see in the movies of the same name. They were more like the man you would see in the movie Carlson’s Raiders. They mainly operated from rubber rafts and were not expected to spend long periods in the water. They wore fatigues, combat boots, and steel helmets. The men were in excellent physical condition but operated mainly in shallow water.

The more recons that were done on Hitler’s “Atlantic Wall” showed it becoming more formidable by the months. So as new personal from Ft Peirce arrived and the subsequent arrival of some Army Combat Engineers enabled each of the NCDUs to double in size. In April, of 44 the officers leading the Navy units and their Army counterparts were briefed about a hypothetical long, wide gradual sloping sand beach with a 25-foot tide change.

On that beach, and extending into the surf, they could expect minefields and a variety of devilishly designed obstacles placed to block and cripple landing craft. To clear the beach, the invasion planners envisioned an aerial and naval bombardment sweeping the coastline. Then the initial wave of infantry, supported by specially designed amphibious tanks, would land during low tide after dawn and rush to secure the beaches. Following in their wake, the NCDUs would land with a mission to blow a 50-yard gap in the German obstacles and place markers so landing craft coming in later that morning at high tide would have a straight, unobstructed path leading to the beach.

The Americans were assigned beaches “Utah” and “Omaha.” At 0630, H-Hour, on the morning of June 6, 1944, 11 NCDUs came in with 8th Infantry Regiment at Utah. With the Army securing the beach, the Navy demolition men went to work and quickly blew eight 50-yard gaps and had enough time to expand one gap to 700 yards. This allowed successive waves of troops, ashore and quickly secured a substantial beachhead by midday.

Four sailors were killed on Utah, and 11 others were wounded. Because of their efficient work, the units on Utah beach received a Navy Unit Commendation.

At Omaha, the Germans were better entrenched and had built a more robust network of obstacles. Sixteen teams, each with 7 Navy and 5 Army engineers tasked with clearing fifty-foot-wide corridors through the beach obstacles. One of the first teams ashore was wiped out as it landed, and another lost all but one man as it prepared to set off its lengths of twenty-pound explosive charges. Casualties were appalling: of the 175 NCDU men at Omaha, thirty-one were killed and sixty wounded—a 53 percent loss rate. It also didn’t help that the pre-invasion air and sea bombardments mostly missed their marks. As a result, the invaders were savaged by heavy artillery, mortar and machine-gun fire that ripped into the NCDU landing craft. Also, choppy seas swamped many of the amphibious tanks, depriving the invaders of needed of close-in firepower. However, the survivors succeeded in clearing five main channels through the obstacles and three partial channels before the rising tide forced them to withdraw. By the end of the day, about one-third of the obstacles had been destroyed or removed.

Through the gaps poured the reinforcements needed to hold off any counter attacks and to take the fight inland. Seven sailors earned the Navy Cross for their work that day. For their heroic actions, the Omaha NCDUs received a Presidential Unit Citation.

On Gold, Juno, and Sword the British beaches the NCDUs relied heavily on Royal Marine commandos specially trained for the task. Their mission and equipment were similar to their American counterparts but owing to less effective defenses; the Marines sustained fewer casualties, then the Americans did.

www.wwiifoundation.org/2014/09/10/ernie-corvese-us-navy-ncdu-d-day

Attn Brandon Whorley…The Jeep

June 2nd, 2019

JB sends from the DR.

You Never Know Where They’ll Show Up

June 2nd, 2019

Reader HY sends this message:

“Nice work climbing Mt. Rainer! I was taking your picture from Mt Hood summit and didn’t even know it. Hard to see but the pic with the backpack has Rainer in the back… Just to the left of the clear Mt. Adams. The other one of me holding the patch is showing Mt Jefferson. Cheers”