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ARTICLE
February 2003
Special Ops Helmet to Be Fielded Army-wide
Lightweight MICH headgear so far well received by troops, officials said
by Elizabeth Book
A new lightweight military helmet already fielded to U.S. special operations
forces and elite Army infantry units could, in the future, be distributed among
conventional troops, officials said.
During the past three years, the Special Operations Forces Special Projects
Team, located within the U.S. Army Soldier Systems Center at Natick, Mass.,
spent $1.5 million to develop the Modular Integrated Communications Helmet (MICH).
The helmet has numerous advantages over the traditional combat headgear, said
Richard Elder, project officer for the MICH.
Elder, a former U.S. Army Ranger, told National Defense that the helmet is
not only comfortable and reliable, but also provides improved communications
capabilities.
“First, the higher cut [of the helmet] allows a user to have complete
range of motion while using the complete range of load carriage systems and
body armor employed by our user groups,” he said. “It allows a user
to lay in the prone and engage a target. This is huge. This task was very difficult
to impossible with the old PASGT (Personnel Armor System Ground Troops) helmet
while wearing most body armor and load carriage,” Elder said.
He explained that it was impossible to engage a target from the prone position
while wearing night-vision devices, and the MICH provides a more solid platform.
The MICH has a six-, seven-, or eight-pad foam suspension system. The pads
can be added, removed or changed, based on the soldier’s comfort level.
Pads in the crown portion of the helmet can be replaced by oblong or oval pads.
The pad suspension is “universally tailorable to the users’ head
shape while affording greatly increased impact protection,” Elder said.
The pads within the MICH, after being worn for several minutes, loosen up and
eventually conform to the shape of the soldier’s head.
The MICH helmet only comes in two sizes, while past helmets have come in five
sizes, Elder said. This is because the pads are adjustable and can be molded
more accurately to the head. “They can accommodate a lot more,”
he said.
Elder said that the slow-impact protection is better than any fielded helmet
in the Army or Special Forces inventory. “This helmet is the only ballistic
helmet within Special Operations Command to be authorized for use with motorcycles,
[and] all terrain vehicles.”
The helmet also protects from flying bullets. “The ballistics are rated
to stop a 9 mm bullet traveling 1,450 feet per second, from 0 degrees of obliquity
(straight on, with no angle) with a high degree of survivability,” Elder
said.
“I’m sorry that this survivability factor can’t be better
equated to some known unit or metric, but the variables are too many to speak
of,” he said.
However, “This helmet already has saved lives during combat. Users have
been shot in the head and survived with the ability to fight on. There are no
guarantees, but it is definitely the safest headwear to date,” Elder said.
Elder noted that the suspension system has special components which add to
the helmet’s durability. “The bolts used to hold the suspension
onto the shell are ballistic. These must pass the same ballistic tests as the
shell itself. This is important, because all of the current ballistic helmets
out there have non-ballistic hardware in place. If you received a round strike
on the bolt head, it would send secondary projectile into the user. Basically,
the back of the bolt could break off and become its own projectile.
“The MICH is rated to stop this from happening. This has also been proven
in combat and is key to the helmet’s success,” Elder said.
Elder added that a reversible helmet cover, in woodland and desert camouflage
patterns, is available and useful for forces that might change location frequently.
For special operations forces, the MICH is fielded with high- and low-noise
headsets.
A speaker system can be used inside the headset and can also be worn by itself.
The high-noise headset can buffer noise and can be used for group communications.
The low-noise headset does not buffer outside noise, but it also can be worn
without the helmet.
The communications piece was developed by modifying commercial off-the-shelf
technology, with different versions developed for both land and maritime operations.
The helmet is compatible with approximately 30 communications platforms specific
to the special operations community. “Those include aircraft intercom
systems, fixed-wing and rotary wing aircraft, boat intercom systems, ground-mobility
vehicle intercom systems (HMVS), and of course commercial and military specific
radios,” Elder said.
The Army Soldier Systems Center’s Special Operations Forces Special Projects
Team worked with contractor MSA/Gallet to develop the helmet. In October 2002,
SOCOM awarded a $6.3 million contract to CGF Helmets, Inc., of Newport, Vt.,
which has since been acquired by MSA/Gallet. “There is an option for 70,000
helmets, but only 20,000 have so far been fielded,” said Elder. The dollar
amount of the contract is much larger now, as the $6.3 million represents only
approximately 10,000 helmets, Elder explained.
“The Special Operations Forces Special Projects team is made up of a
combination of former users and specialists from industry to include engineers,
contracting specialists and logisticians. With this type of mix, the development
and fielding of gear on a rapid timeline (12-15 months from concept to fielding)
is the common practice for our customer groups,” Elder said.
The helmet was tested by the Army Test and Evaluation Command (ATEC) at Aberdeen
Proving Grounds, Md., and by the Airborne Special Operations Test Directorate
(ABSOTD) at Fort Bragg, N.C., Elder said.
“The helmet fielded fully to all of the United States Special Operations
Command. This consists of the Rangers, Special Forces, Navy SEALs and Air Force
Special Operations. This helmet is also fully fielded to the Marine Corps reconnaissance
community, the FBI’s Hostage Response Team, and a brigade at the 82nd
Airborne Division,” he said.
The Army currently is type-classifying the MICH. “This would lead to
its inclusion/fielding to large portions of the conventional force and use with
the Land Warrior program,” Elder said.
“My goal for this project is to see it progress and fielded to the conventional
forces. There is no reason a conventional infantryman should not be afforded
this level of protection. This also would help to perpetuate the helmet system
and replacements for SOCOM and other user groups,” Elder said.
The Special Operation Forces Special Projects team is working on multiple programs
for SOCOM. “We hope to see more transition to the conventional forces
in the long term. As a team, we work for any ‘special operations’
type of force which would required shooter’s-type gear,” Elder said.
The MICH helmet is part of a broad modernization effort called the Special
Operations Forces Advanced Requirements (SPEAR), designed to provide for the
unique equipment needs of Army, Navy and Air Force special operations units.
The SPEAR program has developed, for example, advanced body armor, a load carriage
system and lightweight environmental protection. The Soldier Systems Center
also is working to develop ballistic/laser eyewear, lightweight nuclear, biological
and chemical protection, modular target identification and modular target acquisition,
team/platoon C4, and is making improvements to physiological management.
The body armor/load carriage system (BALCS) provides ballistic protection,
buoyancy compensation and load carriage capacity,
while minimizing the burdens of weight, carriage and heat stress. The body
armor component protects against fragmentation, handgun and rifle threats. The
system contains a soft armor vest, front and back interchangeable upgrade plates,
and modular neck and groin protection. The medium-sized vest weighs approximately
6 pounds.
The equipment load carrying subsystem includes a modular pocketing and harness
system, which helps soldiers tailor their load to their mission. There is also
a modified commercial backpack system, which includes a backpack, patrol pack
and butt pack. The backpack can carry 120 pounds and can be adjusted to fit
most male special operations soldiers. The patrol pack can carry 50 pounds,
and the butt pack can carry 13 pounds.
The SPEAR lightweight environmental protection garments include underwear,
stretch bib overalls, wind resistance jackets and pile jackets. Lightweight
underwear is made with Capilene-treated polyester knits, to take perspiration
away from the body. The stretch bib overalls’ outer surface is a smooth,
non-snag nylon, while the inside is made with a stretch polyester fleece.
The wind resistance and pile jackets are both manufactured with heavyweight
fleece, hand-warmer pockets, a windproof front and back yoke.
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