



Solar Power Pre-Deployment To Afghanistan? 184
dAzED1 writes "My little brother is heading for training at 29 Palms as a Navy Corpsman with FMF. He gets a [Sailor|Soldier|Marine]'s pay, so while he can't afford gadgets, I can; since he'll be in a LAR unit, I was thinking of getting him a small video camera, an iPod, and some sort of solar recharger. Whatever he takes, he'll have to be able to carry in his pack, which is already going to be heavy with his medic gear. Other than the weight issue, I am having problems finding a solar recharger that doesn't get wildly differing reviews as to basic quality. He'll have plenty of sun and few clouds, but it needs to be lightweight, effective, and robust. With price not being much of a concern, what would you suggest for accomplishing this? Advice on a small robust video camera would be appreciated as well."
Foldable solar charger (Score:2, Informative)
This foldable solar charger from treehugger is great http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/01/foldable_solar.php
Forget the charger... (Score:5, Insightful)
Forget the charger, and get him something nice that runs on AAs. Lots of military equipment, such as the AN/PRC-14 night vision goggles or the little radios that squads carry around, run on AAs and so he is sure never to have a shortage. You literally have boxes of these things just floating around where ever you go. They aren't that heavy, they are virtually unbreakable, and he will have to carry some anyway. When I was in, guys bought electric shavers that ran on AAs expressly for this reason.
Besides, his unit will appreciate him not flipping a mirror out for all to see whenever he wants to listen to music.
Re:Forget the charger... (Score:4, Funny)
AN/PRC-14 night vision goggles
Sorry to be a blue falcon and spotlight a fellow Infantryman...but it's AN/PVS-14. PRC's are radios. Now go get me a Prick/E-7 and a box of grid squares. (:
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Now go get me a Prick/E-7 and a box of grid squares. (:
Sure, just fill out an ID-10-T form and get me the keys to the impact area first. I don't have a Prick/E-7, but I think I know where there's a Prick/E-8. Someone told me they saw one behind the 1st Sergeant's desk the other day.
We actually got the FNG to go look behind the desk once.... ah, good times.
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"Sorry sir, these iPods really suck the batteries!"
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"Besides, his unit will appreciate him not flipping a mirror out for all to see whenever he wants to listen to music."
That's the first thing I thought of... The irony of a well intended present putting a bulls-eye on your brother's head is tragic.
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Good luck. There's almost no mp3 players or cameras that run on AAs. However Energizer has the Energi To Go [energizer.com] that charges most devices with regular AAs, including a version for iPods and one that has a mini-USB plug that's very popular on many digital cameras and cellphones. I'd suggest buying a device that can be charged with those.
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Um, are you retarded?
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Wait, you think they're going to be hauling around a glass-laminated rooftop panel?
What's being discussed is something more like this [google.com].
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When he walks over it, will his HUD have this line?
Found: 1 box AA batteries
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Pay (Score:5, Interesting)
He gets a [Sailor|Soldier|Marine]'s pay, so while he can't afford gadgets
Unless he has kids or liens, he should be able to afford gadgets since his housing is free and He'll get a lot of tax-free combat pay if he deploys.
Anybody who's visited a larger military base such as Lackland AFB or Fort Bragg knows the many junior enlisteds driving pimped out ridez and sporting gadgets and bling. When younger recruits get out of basic training they're like kids in candy stores, especially since base exchanges have the latest stuff at low prices.
Also, given his unit, I hope that he dosen't plan to listen with headphones while on duty.
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After rent, I still make 5 times as much as him...and I live in a nice area. Thanks for the offtopic, though.
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(feeding the troll...)
did you get mod'd up, or did you just start at 3? I was an 0311 back in Desert Storm, would re-enlist now if I could, I'm in my late 30's, and I'm hetero. You've got a lot of fail going on there - wrong on every count. No, as the ask-slashdot says, my little brother is heading to Afghanistan, and I'd like to get him gadgets he can't afford. The fact that I make more than him doesn't mean I'm ignorant, or condescending...it's just reality. Not sure why you have a problem with me wa
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Wow, this comment deserves a Slashdot recode to include a +10 Insightful...
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Awww...how cute! you got owned and you ended up insulting someone who was in the military. God forbid, he use his money for a send off for his brother. What a spoiled activity!
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Well, maybe beer and women come a close second.
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But never the target of insurance companies. How strange.
God bless these brave soldiers!
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> But never the target of insurance companies.
Whatever gave you that idea? Soldiers can and sometimes do purchase private life insurance to supplement their government-sudsidized insurance.
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Re:Pay (Score:4, Informative)
Right on. When you compare military pay to the salary of the average 19-year-old with only a high school diploma, the miliary pay wins out. And that's even before you consider that food, housing, health care, and education expenses are already paid for.
My first year in active duty left me with enough money to buy a new $4,000 computer and a slew of fun electronic gadgets. And I still had more left over that I honestly wasn't sure what to do with except save. Even though I wasn't rich, I sure felt rich because everyone in my life up until that point had told me about how difficult it was to pay bills and taxes when you're an adult.
Now, if I were smart, I would have invested it and kept saving. It's not a secret that if you invest a few hundred a month, every month, you can retire a millionaire by the age of 65.
(I threw that plan out the window when I got a girlfriend.)
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AAFES prices aren't great, closer to MSRP and Walmart will always beat them, but usually the kids have great credit after basic and creditors know they can call your CO and get you in troulbe if you don't pay your bills unlike the civilian world where your boss could care less.
Re:Pay (Score:4, Informative)
I just looked at it.
1399.50/month for an enlisted with 4 months of active "experience". It's not a lot of money on the surface, but it's plenty of money when you have no expenses.
$1399.50 is more money than I spend in any given month, if I exclude rent. It's much more money than I spend in any given month if I also exclude food. Given that enlisted can do both, if they wish, they're not destitute.
I'm not saying you'll ever make a lot of money as an enlisted man, but you wouldn't need to save up for "months" to buy an ipod. You'd need to save for about a week.
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It's more than I spend in a month including rent and food.
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According to this [afmentor.com] chart, E-1's with less than 2 years of service make 1400 bucks a month. Without having to pay for food or rent. Without spending more than $250 of that in the first month of basic training.
So if an E-1 makes so little money that it takes them "a few months" to save up for an iPod, then that's one expensive iPod - 1400 * 3 = 4200 bucks. That's enough for a small used car and a new wardrobe with money left over for iPods and Xboxes. Do the math.
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The hell I am exaggerating.
I served. I was there. I saw it. Why the hell do you think there are so many check cashing scam places near every frigging base?
Yeah, so you went out and looked at the pay scale, but didn't bother take into account the fact that you have to pay for uniform upkeep, you have to pay taxes, you might want to get something besides chowhall food every now and then, and if you want to have a vehicle, you have to pay for that as well.
Almost every single enlisted man I knew who was marr
Re:Pay (Score:5, Informative)
Unmarried Sailors get galley rations, comprehensive medical and dental care, an annual clothing allowance (doesn't completely cover uniforms, but it's pretty close), plus any special pays for rate designation (submarines, etc). While they're at sea they receive sea pay as well. Married Sailors received a housing allowance, commuted rations in their paycheck, and all the other standard benefits.
Virtually every young Sailor I knew in submarine school had, at minimum, a video game system, decent sized TV, fancy cell phone, laptop, various games, a CD/DVD collection, and more in their barracks rooms. All without going into much unsecured credit debt, if any.
Of course, there's always a few idiots who overextend themselves, and there's always a few who are more conservative with their money (a roommate of mine finished sub school with over $20,000 in his checking account). My primary point still stands.
In any event, thank you for your service!
Re:Pay (Score:5, Funny)
Wait, universal health care, Government ID Cards, government food, housing and clothing assistance? .... COMMUNISM!!!! THEY'VE TAKEN OVER OUR MILITARY! GRAB YOUR GUNS! :D
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Re:Pay (Score:5, Insightful)
Semper Fi, Jarhead.
I got out in '93, mainly because I was tired of working two extra jobs plus keeping up with everything with the Corps, just to support my family. I was a Cpl at the time, living in base housing, with one kid, one car, one wife, and not much else. As I recall, my total gross from my military pay was right at 13K that year. I made almost that much working part time at McD's that year.
I got out and took a job with a defense contractor doing the same thing I was doing in the Corps (TMDE repair/calibration), and immediately was grossing more than 25K.
While I was in, everyone I knew below the rank of Gunny or SSgt, and had a family was on food stamps and WIC.
And for the other poster commenting on the tricked out cars and crap he saw on the air force base... Stop and think... There's not many places to spend money when you're deployed to a combat zone. I suspect most of those 'kids' you saw that you thought were right outta boot have been to the sandbox and back.
Also, for your further education, the military doesn't pay all your expenses as an enlisted man... at least not when I was in the Corps. No one drew a pay check for the entire 12 weeks of boot camp, but when we got our initial pay, we took that $900 check they gave us, and spent most of it paying for our uniforms, our PX bill, and our travel to take our 10 day leave. While I was in school at 29 Palms, I didn't get paid at all for three months because of a payroll screw up. When I finally got paid, I owed for uniforms, haircuts, etc. When I was in school at MCLB Albany, GA, I ended up spending more than an entire months take home on a complete new issue of uniforms just so I could pass the Junk on Bunk inspections to get weekend liberty and not spend all weekend picking up trash on the CG's detail, or doing something equally banal on orders designed to give me something to do to keep young Marines out of trouble.
I'll end the rant this has become by simply saying this... no matter how much members of the military get paid, especially young enlisted men and women, they've made the choice to put their lives on the line, to shed their blood, just so other people back home can continue to make statements and assumptions about things they truly don't and will never understand.
It is by the blood of these men and women, my brothers and sisters in arms, that this country, as bad as it may be at the moment, is still the place people such as yourself gladly call home.
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they've made the choice to put their lives on the line, to shed their blood, just so other people back home can continue to make statements and assumptions about things they truly don't and will never understand.
I was never a bully at school, nor did I join a gang and harass and abuse people.
I guess I just "don't and will never" understand those poor fellas.
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*sigh* I know this is troll/flamebait, but I can't help myself....
The arguments the above post can be made about any military...not matter who in history you pick. Even good ol' King Arthur had his kniggets go out and fight battles to protect "the good and the right."
From the largest perspective, for better or worse, a military is a necessary function for a country to survive. Show me a single country with a history longer than 1 year that survived without any form of military service at all...it just doe
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I agree with you completely on all other points but...
I suppose there are "good" wars and "bad" wars as the AC's post seems to claim, but it doesn't mean that the guys doing the fighting, killing, and dying are at fault or are evil in some way. We (humans, that is) dehumanize the enemy; everyone does. AC does this, also, by implying that either the GP is either too stupid to understand his role or to evil to care...or maybe evil enough to be complicit.
Being trained to fight and being a serviceman doesn't excuse you from your moral duties. If you fail to think about what you're doing and then afterwards get convicted for war crimes "I was just following orders" doesn't quite cut it. Maybe that was implied by you, but I thought I should point it out. Now futile wars shouldn't be something we blame the soldiers that fight them for anyway, but the governments that start them.
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The Costa Rican standing army was abolished in 1948. See elespiritudel48 [elespiritudel48.org] (translation [google.com]) and US department of state [state.gov] articles.
See also List of countries without armed forces [wikipedia.org].
"Standing armies [are] inconsistent with [a people's] freedom and subversive of the
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Or are you just here to show everyone how smart you are by educating them on how much enlisted men get paid.
Yeah, I'm trying to show everybody I'm smart from stating well-known facts and linking to charts on google, as others are doing in this discussion and being modded up for it. In fact, all slashdotters are trying to show others how funny/informative/insightful/interesting they are. That's what makes visiting this place a net gain for everybody.
Even so-called "offtopic" comments may also be informative. Moronic summaries are not new to slashdot, but if the writer has the gall to show up in the discussion
re: Solar Power Pre-deployment To Afghanistan? (Score:1)
Better PV panels are glass, which is not recommended to be packed into a duffel bag on a military (or commercial) transport. Foldable or roll-up panels are quite a bit more pricey. What are the chances you could ship him one (PV panel) after he gets settled ?? (or is he always going to be on the roll). Solar is not very compact, and the glass is, well, glass. Dust gathers and needs to be cleaned off, with water, to not scratch or haze the glass. Disposable batteries, or a 28V vehicle charger may be a bette
Go for the better battery.... (Score:2)
Skip the solar. You can't anticipate weather in the field like they get. Or even, where in the field. Go for the better battery.
http://www.sfc.com/en/man-portable-technology-jenny.html
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Troll / insightful...I honestly have no idea what category to put you in. Congratulations
I am a writer, is what I am. Thank you.
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forward light-armor recon in Afghanistan; we're talking luxury items anyway, so if it's raining...well, no juice - he'll live. Batteries are hard to get, heavy, and expensive. He generally will be away from camp, for days on end. And since he's a medic and not a Marine...he won't be point.
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Batteries are hard to get, heavy, and expensive.
In Afghanistan? The only three things we could be sure of being resupplied with regularly in the field were ammunition, MREs, and batteries. Everything (night sights, NVG) ran on either AA or CR123A batteries. AA's are all over the place over there. Our company got 'em by the freakin' pallet load.
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Or even worse, when we have to blacken the skies to stop the machines, the solar won't work at all! You might be able to plug it into one of your fellow soldiers though...
"With price not being much of a concern..." (Score:5, Interesting)
Money may not be much of a concern, but what about time and skill?
I had family overseas recently and had the same thought, but didn't have as much money to spend. I decided to go the DIY route and made one of these Solarize your backpack and power all your gizmos [instructables.com]
It's handy because it's lightweight and can be strapped (as the description says) to nearly any backpack, including most military ones, or taken off and set up somewhere stationary.
It also adds more of a personal touch to the whole idea. Buying something nice and expensive for a soldier is nice, but I've often times heard from them that having something personally made (even if it's a letter) is worth gold over there as well. Reminds 'em of home and all, y'know?
If you know how (or know someone that does) I would recommend making one of these.
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I don't know why the parent was marked Troll. I'd be a little concerned if one of my fellow soldiers was walking around with a shiny surface strapped to his back.
Re:"With price not being much of a concern..." (Score:5, Insightful)
Scout vs Sniper (Score:1)
For bonus points: c) return fire instantly.
Return fire to shoot a sniper? No, you take cover instantly and hide damn well first! There's no chance to measure the impact vector on the dummy, so you'll have to approximate the origin of the rounds (bullets).
If you have countersniper measures, you stay damn well hidden, then locate and shoot him, using either a sniper scope and rifle, or grenade launchers and machine guns. If not, you throw smoke grenades, stay low, and get the HELL out of there!
Subject Wrong (Score:1)
Please ignore the subject "Scout vs Sniper". Just realized his brother is a medic. Sorry, my bad.
Medics don't use thin needles like our everyday hospitals. They use THICK ones, like the inkjet refill syringes that we use!
Also, medics inject one another on a regular basis during their medic training. Almost all of them have arm veins that have collapsed from too many injections!
(True for the Singapore army anyway.)
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Flip video camera (Score:1, Insightful)
I've got nothing to suggest re PV but the Flip video camera sounds like it would fit the bill quite well. Simple, robust, tough, easy to use. Probably want to give it a different paint job, though. Kinda bright colors from the look of it.
PowerTraveller maybe? (Score:2, Informative)
Whilst I haven't used their solar products, I do have a v1 PowerMonkey and love it. Their solargorilla product seems to do what you need:
https://powertraveller.com/iwantsome/primatepower/solargorilla/
Video Cam (Score:5, Insightful)
Make sure the video cam you get him is flash memory based. HD based ones will certainly die with the shock and vibration they will take in the field. I recently got Canon Vixia HF10, which is flash based, HD and works quite well. However, for something the field he may prefer something a bit more robust like a Sanyo Xacti or a Flip HD.
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I've spent time comparing different camera models at an electronics store and didn't even see one with a rotating drive - likely for the durability reason you mention. Flash memory is extremely cheap and small compared to the rest of the camera, so the added capacity probably not worth the risk.
Admittedly, I was shopping for a photo camera with a video clip feature, not a camcorder. It's plausible the latter come with more memory (and hence occasionally HD), since video takes more space.
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Yes, about 1/3-1/4 of camcorders are hard drive based... Another 10-25% or so are recordable CD or DVD based. Then you have flash memory based and then you have your tape based. Flash memory is the way to go.
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Kindle (Score:2)
Get him a Kindle and lots of ebooks for it. I'm sure he'll appreciate it.
too fragile (Score:2)
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unless it came with a completely hard shell of some sort.
Hey dAzED1, if you have money... Two words: Panasonic Toughbook!
And several earphones (mix of noise-cancelling and ordinary ones). I'm guessing the wires will break sometimes, due to the rough treatment of these gadgets. (A soldier wearing 80 pounds of gear won't be willing to treat the gadgets gently.)
(For the laptop: Be sure that all games and apps inside don't require Internet activation. Include an image of the hard disk, non-syspreped.)
Wind up? (Score:5, Insightful)
How about a wind up power supply instead? I read that the US Military was actually considering procuring and deploying these to combat the "battery problem."
Oh, wind up power supplies are powered themselves by . . . MREs.
Mod parent up (Score:2)
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I have good results with Brunton Solar [amazon.com]
There is a wide variety of sizes and shapes and Brunton [brunton.com] has a pretty good rep.
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I read that the US Military was actually considering procuring and deploying these to combat the "battery problem."
I've been watching "Generation Kill" on DVD. These poor guys are always scrounging for batteries for their night vision gear. The silly thing is that they spend half their time charging around in HUMVs — that presumably have huge alternators. Funny that nobody thought to equip them with a supply of NiCads and a changing station.
But out on a mission, away from such sources of power, I can't see grunts finding the time to lay solar cells in the sun or to wind up a charger.
Bling? In Combat? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Bling? In Combat? (Score:4, Informative)
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Good advice. Our medic was sniped in the glow of his iPod.
Poor guy never even heard it coming.
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Our medic was sniped in the glow of his iPod.
Well at least he learned something from the boys in Vietnam lighting up cigarettes!
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I interviewed a guy who was a gunner on a WW2 bomber for a history class a few years back. He said that on a clear night with no moon, you could spot someone lighting a cigarette from whatever cruising altitude was.
Video? Get a good compact (Score:2)
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Of course, staying home may be a better option than dying to protect non-renewable resources.
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Powerfilm (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.powerfilmsolar.com/ [powerfilmsolar.com]
Flexible, thin film cells.
I use their components for rocketry.
Very tough stuff.
VHoldr helmet/mount cam and power (Score:2)
http://www.vholdr.com/
VHoldr has a pretty nice and affordable helmet cam. The lens is self-leveling and has a little laser-pointer (might be combat issue) but it has a dull black housing, uses microSD cards and has several mounts available. The mounts include helmet, handlebar, goggle and it'd be pretty easy to hack a mount to a Gorillapod (3 arm bendy tripod). Not to sound like a commercial but I've been looking @ that camera for a while.
Combine that with a solar-battery gadget/pack, extra memory cards and
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1. He's not wearing the helmet 24/7
2. The laser pointer makes that a non-starter.
3. Far too much gadetry. The guy isn't a filmmaker on location, but rather a medic who may have a few spare minutes to grab some interesting/fun footage.
Any regular late model digital camera can shoot enough video to be interesting. Pick one that uses AA's, and he'll never be THAT far from new/recharged ones.
Holy Crap People~ (Score:1)
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$1400 is base pay. Housing and rations are on top of that.
Deployed to SWA is ALWAYS 'living on-base'.
Small solar charger (Score:1, Informative)
Small, should meet the power requirements, and is meant for travel.
5oz and 9x5 folded.
http://www.rei.com/product/770230
Solio Magnesium (Score:1)
Not sure about the reviews, but if I had a choice I would get this...
http://store.solio.com/Solio-Magnesium-Edition/ [solio.com]
Light, durable and can power almost any gadget (phone, gps, camera....) and has an internal battery so you have reserve power available at night.
D) None of the above (Score:2)
Don't get him any gadgets at all.
He and his fellow soldiers will figure out things to do during their downtime. Let him be immersed in his job without modern distractions. Let him get a taste of what it's like to be completely cut off from modern conveniences. When he's older, he'll look back on it and it will give him a sense of pride that he was able to survive in a hostile environment for months without all the luxury gizmos and gadgets that are currently so popular with his civilian peers.
While I was ce
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I wasn't able to record anything to share with others when I was in; while I don't want to detract from his experience, I do selfishly want to share in it. Also, the mother involved would like to see such things.
Posterity and those not in the moment with you are also a consideration, after all ;)
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I'd recommend buying a load of AA Eneloop batteries and recharger. Unlike most rechargeable batteries, they retain a charge for over a year, so your brother could charge up a bunch of batteries whenever he has access to power.
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AA gadgets seems to be the overall suggestion people have made, when they actually made suggestions ;) thanks for the extra tip; as a bit of an environmentalist, I would like to keep from just having him go through hundreds of non-rechargeable, when possible.
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I wasn't able to record anything to share with others when I was in; while I don't want to detract from his experience, I do selfishly want to share in it. Also, the mother involved would like to see such things.
Posterity and those not in the moment with you are also a consideration, after all ;)
I know what you mean. I did the "sitzkrieg" in Desert Storm and have exactly one picture. 10 years later, I went back on active duty and deployed to Afghanistan. Two yearlong tours later... I had exactly three pictures, all taken by someone else who later emailed them to me. Never occurred to me to take "posterity" pictures. I was issued a camera for taking intel photos on occasion, but never ended up with any of my own. Like others have advised, I'd personally suggest getting him a small camera that runs o
www.solargorillia.com (Score:1)
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Freeloader. (Score:1)
try this one for the small stuff. (Score:2)
http://www.batteryjunction.com/solar-s-2600p.html [batteryjunction.com]
There are also adapter kits and a number of company's that sell the same thing, it's a no name out of china that will charge anything with USB power.
Helmet cam (Score:2)
These guys make great cheap helmet cams.
http://www2.oregonscientific.com/ [oregonscientific.com]
No solar. (Score:2, Informative)
As a recent veteran, here is what I brought which proved essential.
Black Leatherman Charge XTi, and Spec-OPS case, spare/additional bits, leatherman tool adapter, and one set of velleman security bits (30-some pieces, $15)
Spare CR2016 and CR2032 coin cells, and type 377 button batteries (should have brought more 377 and 357s)
Wavetek-Meterman VT-201 non-contact voltage detector (now only the fluke is available) (I put mine in a Spec-OPS brand case)
one of those test plugs to check 110v american style outlets
W
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He's a Navy corpsman medic attached to a Marine recon unit. When he gets deployed he will spend extensive time in the field. Solar backup makes a lot of sense.
Have you seen the kind of kit these guys sport? It's pimp in it's own way.
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he will indeed be with a LAR unit, doing seek-and-destroy of drugs in areas troops haven't yet been, from what he knows so far. He'll be a part of history, something that people will read about 500 years from now; being able to make little videos of what he sees seems almost something he's duty bound to do, at this point.