HuntingBow96 wrote:Thanks everyone, My gas mask works by the way
Works? Works for what?
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HuntingBow96 wrote:Thanks everyone, My gas mask works by the way
Jungle Recon Trooper wrote:The jungle does strange things to a man
Biggin wrote:praharin can be an insufferable dick

funkychicken wrote:Only on ZS do we talk about what we are going to wipe are asses with in the ZPAW.
sgttk wrote:Something else to remember is that a ghillie suit is like walking around in a full quilt. Once you get out of cold weather environments you will sweat your nads off.

moab wrote:sgttk wrote:Something else to remember is that a ghillie suit is like walking around in a full quilt. Once you get out of cold weather environments you will sweat your nads off.
It depends on the suit. Traditional bdu based yes. Very hot. But I have an aftermarket one based on real tree 3d type camo (not sure of that name but it's got all the camo cut outs hanging off it and sewn onto the suit) that is made out of really tough plastic screen material. That is very cool and breathable. The air literally goes right thru it. I wore it in the deep south in mid summer and had no problems with heat. I don't think they make this model anymore though. It's coveralls, a head cover that is like a stocking mask but made out of the screen material, gloves of the same and I think booties. The cool thing is that it is huge and goes on in seconds. Over whatever your wearing. And because it's coveralls nothing rides up and shows your under clothes. I'll have to post a pic of it up here one day. I just dug it out yesterday. It's the coolest ghillie suit I've ever seen for an off the shelf civilian pos. Very packable too. Smashing down into a small stuff sack.
HuntingBow96 wrote:moab wrote:sgttk wrote:Something else to remember is that a ghillie suit is like walking around in a full quilt. Once you get out of cold weather environments you will sweat your nads off.
It depends on the suit. Traditional bdu based yes. Very hot. But I have an aftermarket one based on real tree 3d type camo (not sure of that name but it's got all the camo cut outs hanging off it and sewn onto the suit) that is made out of really tough plastic screen material. That is very cool and breathable. The air literally goes right thru it. I wore it in the deep south in mid summer and had no problems with heat. I don't think they make this model anymore though. It's coveralls, a head cover that is like a stocking mask but made out of the screen material, gloves of the same and I think booties. The cool thing is that it is huge and goes on in seconds. Over whatever your wearing. And because it's coveralls nothing rides up and shows your under clothes. I'll have to post a pic of it up here one day. I just dug it out yesterday. It's the coolest ghillie suit I've ever seen for an off the shelf civilian pos. Very packable too. Smashing down into a small stuff sack.
Think we have pretty much the same one, I have worn mine in pretty much every weather and find it breathable and able to stay cool, And can pack it well.

moab wrote:HuntingBow96 wrote:moab wrote:sgttk wrote:Something else to remember is that a ghillie suit is like walking around in a full quilt. Once you get out of cold weather environments you will sweat your nads off.
It depends on the suit. Traditional bdu based yes. Very hot. But I have an aftermarket one based on real tree 3d type camo (not sure of that name but it's got all the camo cut outs hanging off it and sewn onto the suit) that is made out of really tough plastic screen material. That is very cool and breathable. The air literally goes right thru it. I wore it in the deep south in mid summer and had no problems with heat. I don't think they make this model anymore though. It's coveralls, a head cover that is like a stocking mask but made out of the screen material, gloves of the same and I think booties. The cool thing is that it is huge and goes on in seconds. Over whatever your wearing. And because it's coveralls nothing rides up and shows your under clothes. I'll have to post a pic of it up here one day. I just dug it out yesterday. It's the coolest ghillie suit I've ever seen for an off the shelf civilian pos. Very packable too. Smashing down into a small stuff sack.
Think we have pretty much the same one, I have worn mine in pretty much every weather and find it breathable and able to stay cool, And can pack it well.
I wore that thing on a rural surveillance once and had car after car driving right past me. Within a few feet. Very light ground cover. And no one even noticed me. I had some test video of it once. Showing one of my operatives wearing it in the bush and then walking out of the bush so you could see him. It was like a disappearing act.
It didn't save me from the chiggers though. Arrgghhh! Took me days to get over those little buggers.
I was in a Marine Corps sniper platoon. So I have a fair amount of knowledge with camo. The thing I really like about this suit (beyond the fact that it's coveralls and really covers everything) is that it's deployable in minutes. It packs light and is ready whenever you need it. And you don't have to spend a bunch of time putting face paint on or anything else. Between the suit, the hat and the gloves your covered head to toe. I still don't remember if there are booties. But it's very comfortable too. You can really move around in it. It's just to bad you can't really add vegetation to it. But the leafy camo itself is a good mix of colors for most green ground cover and brush. It's a huge advantage over just bdu's. And you'd never pack a real ghillie suit. Just to heavy.
I wonder if they make a pack cover and/or rifle cover out of this stuff. That would be a nice addition.

Velociryan wrote:I'd leave the ghillie suit in your locker at the mall security office if I were you.


HuntingBow96 wrote:Thanks everyone, My gas mask works by the way

huntingohio wrote:You test the seal by covering the air inlet with you hand and sucking to see if its sealed to your face [you cant breathe]
In date filters should be good to go
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

KnightoftheRoc wrote:huntingohio wrote:You test the seal by covering the air inlet with you hand and sucking to see if its sealed to your face [you cant breathe]
In date filters should be good to go
NO
You FORM the seal this way- it in no way TESTS it. The date on filters just means you can tell how old they are- it tells you nothing about the ability of them to actually still do their job.
Banana oil is cheap, life is not. Don't dick around with safety equipment- either do it right, or not at all.
@Jeriah- Bananna oil is used because it's odor is so distinct, and hard to mistake as anything else. It's also not something you'd normally catch a whiff of, but once smelled, easily identified. Plus, it's safe to breathe if the mask DOES leak.
Jeriah wrote:HuntingBow96 wrote:Thanks everyone, My gas mask works by the way
Sweet! How did you test it? The only way I've ever heard of is to put it on, then open a vial of "banana oil," and if you can smell bananas, it doesn't work. I have no idea why it has to be this banana stuff...subtle odor, maybe? Strong odor? I don't know.
funkychicken wrote:Only on ZS do we talk about what we are going to wipe are asses with in the ZPAW.
sgttk wrote:We used banana oil in the service. subtle odor, but not easily confused with anything else. However, the real proof in training for the effectiveness of the P mask is when you wear it into the gas chamber, walk around no problem, then take it off and suck in a snoot full of CS agent...Ahhh, good times...
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

KnightoftheRoc wrote:sgttk wrote:We used banana oil in the service. subtle odor, but not easily confused with anything else. However, the real proof in training for the effectiveness of the P mask is when you wear it into the gas chamber, walk around no problem, then take it off and suck in a snoot full of CS agent...Ahhh, good times...
At Ft. Leonard Wood, MO, the EXIT of the gas chamber had a HUGE old tree just outside the door, and directly in front of it. They had to station a man in front of it to deflect soldiers away from it as they blindly ran out of the chamber. This tree was old enough to easily pre-date the chamber being built- why in the world they set the chamber up that way, or in that place, or decided to leave the tree there, no one was ever able to explain. The silliest part was, the opposite side had nothing in the way, and could have easily been the exit side, instead of the entrance. That was my one and only exposure to actual tear gas- they used CS for all our other training, which personally, I find the easier of the two to deal with. It sucks, but not as bad as tear gas does.
GMScooter wrote:KnightoftheRoc wrote:sgttk wrote:We used banana oil in the service. subtle odor, but not easily confused with anything else. However, the real proof in training for the effectiveness of the P mask is when you wear it into the gas chamber, walk around no problem, then take it off and suck in a snoot full of CS agent...Ahhh, good times...
At Ft. Leonard Wood, MO, the EXIT of the gas chamber had a HUGE old tree just outside the door, and directly in front of it. They had to station a man in front of it to deflect soldiers away from it as they blindly ran out of the chamber. This tree was old enough to easily pre-date the chamber being built- why in the world they set the chamber up that way, or in that place, or decided to leave the tree there, no one was ever able to explain. The silliest part was, the opposite side had nothing in the way, and could have easily been the exit side, instead of the entrance. That was my one and only exposure to actual tear gas- they used CS for all our other training, which personally, I find the easier of the two to deal with. It sucks, but not as bad as tear gas does.
Knight, at some point in the distant past, there was a DI who thought it would be funny......
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

KnightoftheRoc wrote:Not to try to shoot holes in the ghillie suit idea, beyond my initial "I wouldn't" response, on the camo aspect, I've gone with woodland camo BDUs for Autumn deer season in NY state. My first use of them for this, I was laying on a rock "hump" with a view overlooking a field I knew the deer of the area to feed in. Another hunter "stalked" past me, and came within inches of stepping on my hand. Not wanting an accidental discharge, I waited till he got past me, and coughed once, so he'd know there was another hunter near. He stopped, turned, and looked for me- and still didn't see me. Now, I don't consider myself the Camo King or anything, but I have to admit, I did feel a bit cocky about it- once I managed to fight off the urge to laugh out loud!![]()
But, my point here, is that properly utilized, even basic camo is quite effective. I could have gone with a much more involved form of concealment, but felt the pattern and lack of motion would be enough to fool deer. I've had people who knew I was there, and looking for me, "lose" me, one reason I'm so fond of WC for my area. So, I'd go with some basic camouflage "normal" clothing over a specialized item like the ghillie suit. I can wear full camo, minus face paint, and walk into the local grocery store, and not really raise an eyebrow- with a ghillie suit, I don't think so. Having the ability to wear the limited wardrobe I'd be bugging out with in public if necessary is another vote in the favor of camos over ghillie suit.





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