Michael O`Leary said:
Not necessarily, when it may actually be a question of textile or metalurgical technology rather than perceived utility of the item's purpose.
Quite true.
A couple years ago, I had purchased some 'fire-retardent' items on behalf of a school here that was travelling about setting up & running a new course to the system. In consult with the course staff, we purchased quite a few aftermarket Gucci items (flash hoods, undies, etc) of different varieties from many manufacturer's. The cocktails pretty much proved that most didn't live up to the standards the sellers had advertised, nor the mil specs. But troops
were are actually using some of this crap. After all was said and done, the stocked items actually lived up to their purpose and were still recognizable for what they were. No more LPOd for the course, it stayed with the stocked system items which met the mil specs (that is why they ended up being the stocked item in the first place after all) ... for the soldiers protection.
Mil specs, and the suitability of an after-market item to perform properly in an austere location (ie when you are wearing it during an IED strike) really can't be judged by anyone ... unless they are putting it through the appropriate ballistic trials etc. Some Gucci suppliers do this, some do not. Some items would meet the mil specs, and some would not. Some say they meet the mil specs, but do not.
There really is no easy solution to Gucci kit. If you want to see it on a list as "authorized for wear" then the CF would have to officially certify that it met the MilSpecs, ballistic specs etc. Why's that?? Because once it becomes "authorized" and officially sanctioned, the CF is responsible to ensure that you are protected and not put at undue risk of injury/death due to kit performance. They need to properly WRT safety etc. It's called due diligence. As a soldier, you are already at high risk, the system is just trying to mitigate that risk. Some of you would be surprised at what Gucci kit hasn't lived up to the ballistic standards etc of the stocked item even though the Company's own trials etc says it does.
That's why you'll never see a random listing of after-market items authorized (but not milspec certified) for wear by individual soldiers. The items which do become officially "allowable," become so because the mil specs have been certified as being met. To go on any officially "sanctioned" list each individual item by each individual supplier would have to be run through DRDC etc, and this Nation simply doesn't have the budget for that. And some of those milspecs regarding combustability, ballistic level etc just can't be at the user level, unless of course, you're willing to let that section commander "blow your shit up."
Although, I know a great many section commanders who'd probably love to be authorized to do just that.
It's not just an Army issue either. Roper gloves are an LPOd item now, but in order to be used by us ... they can't come from just any supplier because they simply do not meet the milspecs for conditions they'd be used for and in by soldiers. We LPOd 5 types, they all looked pretty much identical and then sent them off to be tested and "certified" as authorized ... 2 pairs passed (and neither were the cheapest pairs although one was the most expensive pair).