- Reaction score
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- Points
- 210
They don‘t stay black for long, I don‘t imagine.
Anyway, I think quite a few troops in Afghanistan opted for the dessies.
I noticed the Brits are still wearing half-green and half-desert in most cases.
Anyway, I‘ve never seen a bullet go around something camoflauged. Just because you can‘t be seen doesn‘t mean you can‘t be shot... I think the whole cammie debate is pure bunk. The purpose of camoflauge isn‘t to look invisible, it‘s to reduce the profile and make it harder for your overall shape and outline to be readily identified.
Look at ships of war in WWII... they were camoflauged with bold diagonal lines and shapes, not to make them disappear (in fact they probably stood out more), but to make it harder to tell how many and how large the ships were, when together in groups, and to make it difficult for ranging, etc.
Anyway, I think quite a few troops in Afghanistan opted for the dessies.
I noticed the Brits are still wearing half-green and half-desert in most cases.
Anyway, I‘ve never seen a bullet go around something camoflauged. Just because you can‘t be seen doesn‘t mean you can‘t be shot... I think the whole cammie debate is pure bunk. The purpose of camoflauge isn‘t to look invisible, it‘s to reduce the profile and make it harder for your overall shape and outline to be readily identified.
Look at ships of war in WWII... they were camoflauged with bold diagonal lines and shapes, not to make them disappear (in fact they probably stood out more), but to make it harder to tell how many and how large the ships were, when together in groups, and to make it difficult for ranging, etc.