Feral Jundi

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Weapons: Some Thoughts On Battlefield Lasers

Filed under: Medical,Weapons — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:57 AM

     Since November 2008, the 3rd ESC has had 64 laser incidents reported in Iraq, resulting in 45 documented injuries to soldiers. Two of those injuries were permanent — one soldier is now legally blind in one eye, Hayes said.

     Both Multi-National Corps—Iraq and 3rd ESC Commander Brig. Gen. Michael Lally are stepping up laser safety and training efforts, including confiscating some unapproved lasers and establishing green laser training requirements and detailed safety accident reporting and training, officials said.

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   These two articles below brought up a couple of interesting points that guys in war zones are going to have to think about in the future and even now.  Having a pair of sunglasses or goggles with laser protective lenses is going to be more important to have, as lasers develop and find their way onto the battlefield in new and interesting ways.  The military is already experiencing laser injuries with  basic laser aiming devices, and I only see that increasing on the military side of things.  But are there statistics on contractor injuries, and is the industry ready for this coming evolutions of battlefield lasers?

   In the first article below, they discuss weaponized lasers and how the DoD wants to purchase Revision eyewear for the troops. We will probably see many offerings of laser protected lenses coming on to the the tactical eyewear scene, as it should.  As for companies issuing this type of protection, who knows.  More than likely it will take numerous injuries before they react and do the right thing.  Or it will take a mandate by the DoD, much like with body armor and helmets, in order to operate on the battlefield. Until then, it will more than likely fall back on the individual contractor to decide if they want to wear the stuff.

   Which leads me to my next point.  Perhaps the laser coating or whatever protective element to the glasses, should become standard for tactical eyewear?  Like under new Milspec standards, ballistics protection would include protection against lasers.  I know this is nothing new and is being talked about in military circles. The military even has a manual on laser range safety.  But that is for laser range finder/pointer stuff, and this new generation of battlefield lasers are just a tad bit more lethal.

   And as the second article on laser injuries indicates, those dazzling green lasers that you see the troops use all the time, are actually causing blindness and eye injuries.  Yikes.  With that said, I wonder how many contractors have been hit with green lasers intentionally or accidently while on the battlefield?  How many guys coming up on check points manned by overzealous guards, were zapped by those things?  Laser protective eyewear should be something to think about.

   With the really big stuff coming on to the scene, the problems I could see, is the accidental reflection maybe?  A large beam hits a car mirror and reflects it onto a convoy or something? Or they bounce a laser off of a satellite reflector or a drone reflector, and now you have ‘death rays’ coming from the sky. lol

    If they get that Boeing 747 with a laser in the nose operational, then they could be throwing beams from that.  On the plus side, these lasers will be much more precise than dropping a bomb, but I wonder if an enemy could use a mirror and use that large beam to their advantage?  Or the enemy could get into making really high powered green or blue lasers, and try to blind soldiers or ignite gas tanks and fuel stations from a distance.  They could also start wildfires with the things, in order to entrap patrols with fire. There are plenty of DIY hacks on youtube in order to make such lasers, and their uses are only limited by their imagination.

   Now another thing I was thinking about, is using these high powered lasers to target individuals. It’s one thing to use them to destroy jets, mortars, rockets, and whatnot in the air.  But to take one dude out, in a group of people, with a well placed laser shot, would be impressive. It would trump using a Hellfire, and taking out entire villages to just get one guy.       I could see bouncing a laser off of a reflector, guided by satellite, and right into the cranium of some Taliban leader who is surrounded by women and children. That would pretty much destroy the enemy’s ability to protect themselves with human shields, or to use collateral damage for propaganda purposes. You could also use the thing to take out IED’s, snipers or machine gun emplacements.  Now that I think about it, I could totally picture a drone circling the battlefield, and using the onboard targeting system to feed into the satellite reflector, and zapping enemy combatants like flies. Who knows, but one thing is for sure, lasers on the battlefield are on the rise and they are just one more thing to think about out there. –Matt

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Ray Guns Real: Army Betting Big on Laser Weapons

Gene J. Koprowski

January 21, 2010

The military envisions a future of laser warfare — ultra-precise weapons based on devastatingly powerful beams of light. It’s only a matter of time until the U.S. Army fights terrorists and other enemy combatants with laser beams, engaging in battles seen previously only in movies like ‘Starship Troopers’ and ‘Star Trek.’

The ray gun is real … or at least it will be soon.

The U.S. Army is betting big on laser warfare — designing, testing and perfecting ultra-precise weapons based on devastatingly powerful beams of light. And given recent developments, it’s only a matter of time until the military has in its arsenal a weapon that until now has been the staple of science fiction — the ray gun.

Set your phasers to kill.

Boeing, one of the Pentagon’s top contractors, already has a laser weapon that will improve the military’s ability to counter artillery, mortar, drone aircraft and even rockets, a spokesman tells FoxNews.

Boeing’s is the highest-profile program of all of the projects under development for the Department of Defense, and last week it took a step closer to reality. At its facility in Huntsville, Ala., Boeing accepted a military truck built by Oshkosh Defense that will carry its laser beam control system into battle.

(more…)

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Industry Talk: ‘They Are The Unappreciated Patriots’, by T. Christian Miller

 

     This series is just heart wrenching to read, and it certainly cuts to the bone.  Contractors are the unappreciated patriots, and we have certainly sacrificed in this war.  T. Christian Miller has done a fantastic job of showing that sacrifice, and informing the public on what exactly is going on with our injured contractors/patriots.

  He is also showing some courage by actually calling us ‘unappreciated patriots’. To most journalists out there, we are less than human and less than a patriot, and their opinions scream throughout their reportage. I am sure his peers are thumbing their nose at him.

     This particular story is also a reminder about what is at stake when you enter this profession.  Everyone thinks about these types of injuries from time to time, but when you read through this story, you put a picture to the ‘what if’s’ of this job.  That is good though, because it is these gut checks that actually snap folks into the mindset of doing things right.(you would think…) Because if you do get it wrong, you stand to lose a lot….

     Hell, fate has it’s own plan, and you could do everything right and still lose a lot.  That is the job and that is war. Anyhoo, check out the story and at the end of this post, there is a link to a audio slide show of what Grizzly went through. –Matt

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‘They are the unappreciated patriots’

In Iraq and Afghanistan, contractors like Reggie Lane often face the same dangers as U.S. troops. And make the same terrible sacrifices.

By T. Christian Miller

October 6, 2009

Reporting from Central Point, Ore.

A nurse rocked him awake as pale dawn light crept into the room. “C’mon now, c’mon,” the nurse murmured. “Time to get up.”Reggie Lane was once a hulking man of 260 pounds. Friends called him “Big Dad.” Now, he weighed less than 200 pounds and his brain was severely damaged. He groaned angry, wordless cries.The nurse moved fast. Two bursts of deodorant spray under each useless arm. Then he dressed Lane and used a mechanical arm to hoist him into a wheelchair.He wheeled Big Dad down a hallway and parked the chair in a beige dining room, in front of a picture window. Outside stretched a green valley of pear trees filled with white blossoms.Lane’s head fell forward, his chin buried in his chest. His legs crossed and uncrossed involuntarily. His left index finger was rigid and pointed, as if frozen in permanent accusation.In 2004, Lane was driving a fuel truck in Iraq for a defense contractor when insurgents attacked his convoy with rocket-propelled grenades. For most of the five years since, Lane, now 60, has spent his days in silence — a reminder of the hidden costs of relying on civilian contract workers to support the U.S. war effort. (more…)

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Industry Talk: Congressman Announces Plan to Reform U.S. System to Care for Injured Civilian Contractors

    Interesting stuff, and I hope Rep. Cummings can produce something that is supported on both sides of the isle. –Matt

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Congressman Announces Plan to Reform U.S. System to Care for Injured Civilian Contractors

by T. Christian Miller, ProPublica – September 9, 2009

Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., said Wednesday that he will introduce legislation later this year to improve the delivery of medical care to civilian contractors injured while working with the military in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Cummings declined to provide details about his proposal but said he hoped it would reduce the $300 million a year paid by defense contractors to insurance companies.

“The system is broken, and the insurance companies have reaped the benefits,” said Cummings, who pushed for hearings [1] earlier this year after investigations [2] by ProPublica, ABC News and the Los Angeles Times found that insurance carriers routinely denied claims by injured contractors.

(more…)

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Gear Review: Superfeet Insoles

Filed under: Gear Review — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:34 AM

  Well this is a product you won’t be seeing reviewed in Soldier of Fortune or Serviam.  LOL  But I do believe in this product and it has a lot to do with the security contracting industry in my opinion.  That product is Superfeet insoles.  

    Superfeet are insoles with a hard plastic arch support cup.  They come in various sizes and thicknesses and they are well made.  I have had my insoles for literally years in all of my shoes, and I have never had knee or ankle problems.  The thing with these insoles, is that they maintain the shape of your foot and they maintain a consistent bio-mechanics for your ankle-knee-hip-back relationship.  And a healthy body equates to being deployable and doing the job day in and day out.  

    And if you are like me, you have had leg or knee or hip problems do to years of wear and tear, and you also depend upon your body for your job.  So if you are walking and standing all the time, and you are wearing crappy boots and shoes that do not provide good support and your insoles are not supporting your arches, then you will suffer.  So the answer is to get well fitting boots or shoes, and get a good solid foundation for your foot that is consistent through all of your footwear.

   In Iraq, I wore a pair of Bates M-6 boots with Superfeet insoles.  I loved them and I never had tired feed after those long 12 hour days.  Same thing when I was a smokejumper and forest fire fighter.  I had a pair of Danner Rainforest boots with Superfeet in them, and I never had leg or foot problems.  And for running, I always put Superfeet in my ‘go fasters’.  I guess my point with this, is that if you have the same footbed in all of your footwear, then your body will have an easier time adjusting from shoe to boot to shoe again.  And the muscles and arches in your foot will thank you too, because they are properly supported and they are not strained from going back and forth between footbeds.

   I should also mention that I had a serious leg injury in 2003 when I was a smokejumper.  I broke my right femur during a parachute accident on a fire jump near McCall Idaho. And after they operated on me and I healed up after a long haul, I ended up with an inch shorter right leg!  So bio-mechanics was really important to me now, and I have been totally paranoid that my back or something will get thrown out from just walking or running again.  But thanks to a lift in my right shoe coupled with Superfeet insoles, I have not had any back or hip or knee related injuries.(knock on wood)

    Also, if you do get into the whole Superfeet thing, be sure to put them in all of your footwear to make it work.  The idea is to get your foot used to the same footbed in everything you wear.  And the benefit of this, is that from now on you can buy a new shoe or boot and put Superfeet in them and your feet will recognize the same footbed every time.  That means less footwear break-in time and less pain in your feet.

    One other point I want to make is do not just buy them off the website blindly, if you can help it. One suggestion is to go to REI Outdoor Equipment Stores and they have bins of Superfeet insoles that you can put into your shoes to try on.  Or just go to any running store and ask to pull a pair out of the box to try on.  They will feel weird at first, but trust me, your feet will get used to it and love them.  But definitely play around with them and find the Superfeet insole that works for you. – Head Jundi

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Super Feet

Superfeet’s firm, contoured shape provides comfort soft insoles cannot achieve.

Insoles are like mattresses. A good mattress is made of firm, supportive materials. A bad mattress is soft and unsupportive. Same thing with insoles. When you stand on a Superfeet Premium Insole, you can feel the firmly supportive shape and materials. It’s not soft and mushy like other brands…because although soft non-supportive insoles feel good when you first put them in your shoes, in the long run your foot problems don’t disappear.

Support the Foot. Align the Body.

Wearing soft insoles is like running in the soft, dry sand at the beach. Initially it feels good, but you quickly grow tired, waste energy, and begin to feel the stress on your knees and back. Wearing Superfeet Premium insoles is like running on firmer, wet sand. It’s still comfortable, but your feet feel more balanced and stable, and it’s certainly more productive and enjoyable from a performance point of view.

Body Alignment

Every Shoe. Everyday.

Everybody’s feet are different, and they wear different types of shoes. That means it is unreasonable to think one model of insole will meet everyone’s needs. That’s why Superfeet makes different products to fit different foot shapes in different types of footwear. No matter what type of activity or sport you engage in, Superfeet has a product for you – at a price you can afford.

60 Day Comfort Guarantee

With Superfeet’s 60 Day Comfort Guarantee you have nothing to lose but your sore feet. If you are not satisfied with your new Superfeet insoles, return them within 60 days of purchase to your place of purchase for a credit or refund. This guarantee is only valid with a proof of purchase, and is not good for misused, abused or improperly cleaned Superfeet product. THIS GUARANTEE IS SUBJECT TO THE RETAILER’S RETURN POLICY.

Superfeet Website

 

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