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  2. Pouch Attachment Ladder System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pouch_Attachment_Ladder_System

    The PALS grid is easily visible in this image of the US Marine Corps' Interceptor Body Armor; note the pouches attached to the system in the background (2005). The Pouch Attachment Ladder System or PALS is a grid of webbing invented and patented by United States Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center used to attach smaller equipment onto load-bearing platforms, such ...

  3. MOLLE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOLLE

    A US Army soldier wearing MOLLE gear Universal Camouflage Pattern. Modular Lightweight Load-Carrying Equipment, or MOLLE (pronounced / ˈ m ɒ l. l iː / MOL-lee), is the current generation of load-bearing equipment used by a number of NATO armed forces, especially the British Army and the United States Army since the late 1990s.

  4. Interceptor multi-threat body armor system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interceptor_Multi-Threat...

    The Interceptor armor also has a PALS webbing grid on the front of the vest which accommodate the same type of pockets used in the modular lightweight load-carrying equipment backpack/carry vest system. This allows a soldier to tailor-fit his MOLLE and body armor system.

  5. 1908 pattern webbing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1908_Pattern_Webbing

    Soldiers of the Leicestershire Regiment in France in 1915, in Full Marching Order. The ammunition pouches can be clearly seen. During the Second Boer War of 1899–1902, the standard British Army set of personal equipment, comprising a belt, haversack and ammunition pouches, was the leather Slade–Wallace equipment, which had been introduced in 1888.

  6. Roman military personal equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_military_personal...

    The sagittarius was armed with a composite bow (arcus), shooting an arrow (sagitta), [17] made of horn, wood, and sinew held together with hide glue. However, Vegetius recommended training recruits "arcubus ligneis", with wooden bows. The reinforcing laths for the composite bows were found throughout the empire, even in the western provinces ...

  7. All-purpose lightweight individual carrying equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-purpose_Lightweight...

    The all-purpose lightweight individual carrying equipment (ALICE) is a set of load-carrying equipment adopted as United States Army Standard A on 17 January 1973 [1] to replace the M-1956 individual load-carrying equipment (ILCE) and M-1967 modernized load-carrying equipment (MLCE).