Given that you like the TV as issued, this question wasn't aimed at you; rather, at those who think the TV is garbage.
But I can note that:
One can carry 10 mags with the TV as issued. There is a magazine slot insert that can be put into a side pouch.
At the cost of losing either the C9 box or the 2qt canteen that normally rides there....
I've got the canteen in there with an aftermarket hydration adaptor that turns this into a Camelback - and hydration, especially when laden up with all the extra stuff (particularly armour) that we wear these days, is very very important. I wouldn't want to give up that water to carry mags in that pouch.
There are add-on pouches, and if you wish to carry more, there is the "day pack", or whatever it's called. And it has add on pouches as well.
I've yet to see any add-on mag pouches for the issue TV - where would they fit? The only provision for extra pouches is on the back, and I hope you aren't advocating carrying ready ammo on one's back....
Don't get me started on the "day pack" either....
Yes, maybe that could be done. The rifle has evolved since we bought it, so why not the TV? Having said that, is it necessary? Desirable, maybe, but necessary?
Aren't those one and the same? Isn't anything "desirable" by the guys on the pointy end an extension of combat capacity? Especially when they are already voting with that most precious of votes, their wallets?
Have you seen how much some of this Gucci stuff costs? When the boys are spending their Queen's Coin on upgraded personal military kit, that speaks pretty strongly to me about how they feel about the extra capability it adds. All the soldiers I've ever known have been a pretty thrifty bunch.
"repeat. Always repeat" Cheesy. With any kit procurement, I don't think there is an end state, but rather a continuing process whereby the kit improves over time as the needs dictate.
I agree - and it would seem that the needs of the pointy end are dictating that it may be time to add capability to the issue TV.
It works just fine for **my** needs - but to date, I haven't had a need to carry more than three mags of ammunition. I certainly would NOT, however, extrapolate that into claiming that the issue TV has a 20% overcapacity in magazine stowage.
Well said. LFTEU does incorporate an exhaustive scientific process to trial "stuff", from gloves and boots to weapons and the like. There is extensive user feedback, but being human, they don't always get it right. They do most of the time, but not always.
Nobody ever will. It's like developing computer software: you do the best you can, you be as rigorous and professional as lies within your capability, and as soon as the software is released into the wild, a ton of bugs will show up as people actually use the stuff.
Does that mean the programmers are idiots, or incompetent, or negligent? No, not at all - as long as they fix the bugs and release the fixes in a timely manner.
The danger sign is when your programmers start claiming that bugs aren't serious, or that the users aren't using it properly, or otherwise rationalize away the need to fix bugs. The End User Is Always Right.
That's a lot easier to do in software, where you just shunt some electrons around, than in the material world - them protons and neutrons are a bitch. But any project that doesn't have baked into it a user-feedback and rapid improvement process is doing everybody a disservice.
I think that the TV was a success story, however.
Overall, I tend to agree with you - but one can snatch defeat from the jaws of victory by failing to adapt to changing circumstances, and it sounds like the TV has a set of changing circumstances to deal with here. Why be so hostile to that?
DG