The Swiss were the ones who correctly understood that any defence against Soviet attack is anti-tank defence and gave every soldier an anti-tank weapon. It might not have been the best, but they had it and they had a lot of it.
No it was really awful to have a coat with all inside going side by side when running not comfortable when sitting on truck benches, very awful with rifle magazines in the chest pockets. Not enough protected for cold weather, keeping sweat and moisture for days. Apart from the hood and the IR veil it was a big crap
@@badbotchdown9845 I would say it was decent for the era it was developed in. Also, when it comes to cold weather, quilted layers are a thing… But of course, I wouldn’t use my m70 uniform for serious situations, I have better stuff for that. I would call this more of an evaders choice of kit rather than a frontline soldiers kit.
We were hardly ever wearing that combat uniform. Most of the time it was the "Gebirgs Anorak" with the woolen pants. Much more comfortable for long marches, skiing, running etc. Looking back it seems to me, we only wore the Kampfanzug 70 when the exercise had something of an official touch - like an inspection or what not. That was the case during basic training (Andermatt 1986), NCO Training etc. and all my refresher courses after that. I actually quite liked the Mountain Anorak with the woolen pants, never had a problem with the wool chaffing my thighs..... otherwise... heult der Wolf ;-)
In 1979 we wore it very often, even if we were mountain infantry. As I had a bad case of sinus troubles I once "lost" three nose sprays in those pockets, only to find them the moment we changed the uniforms for regular cleaning. Chur 212/79
@@Braun30 Basic and NCO Training in Andermatt/Stans (Geb Inf RS 211/86) was mostly done in the Gebirgs-Anorak. WKs nearly exclusively (Geb Füs Bat lll/72).
Et bien tu as eu bien de la chance !! Moi j'ai fais mon ecole de recrue à Colombier en 1986 suivi de 7 cours de répetition et on portait cette tenue jour et nuit....
Swiss Army Soldier's Knife can be seen at 0:27 and 2:10. The basic model was introduced in 1890 and redesigned in 1951. Starting in 1962 until 2007 it was redesigned to a different pattern with aluminum scales; the civil equivalent (which actually came before the military issue) is predecessor to the current Pioneer. In 2008 a new model was introduced, larger, with saw and locking one-handed blade. It's equivalent is the Trailmaster. All Soldier knives except for the 2008 version were produced by both Victorinox and Wenger to the same standards, but slight modifications. The Soldier's rifle has always been a great utilitarian toolset, but also had tools to maintain the rifle (at least the bolt action ones).
You can see jackets like that even today. In the German Army for example we infantrymen like to wear the ,,smock". Which is basically a jacket with a lot of pockets on the waist area. I've worn mine on marches, combat exercises and doing obstacle courses and i love it, very versatile
Aplausos para ese uniforme, tiene un parecido al alemán, nunca lo dejen, ni lo abandonen por camouflages pixelados ridículos, encontré bacan la parka, saludos de Arica chile.
Thanks for sharing this, I have the field jacket and now see the utility it provided the soldier. The veil is fascinating, never seen one, but makes total sense.
Excellent ! Merci pour le partage ! Cela me rappelle le petit livre vert "Livre du soldat", qui était distribué jadis. J'espère voir d'autres perles historiques bientôt.
1:32 17kg "as light...as a ballet dancer" RIP to the ballet dancer that only weights 17kg and RIP to the soldier who has 17kg on his shoulders all day long.
Ha, I have the jacket and rucksack. I always wondered what those pockets on the bag were for. Fit water bottles in mine. Same the jacket came wishing the face scroll.
@@DaletheStgwDude I can only imagine! I'd also imagine the Swiss are used to cold temperatures anyways, and don't need a lot of layers even in the cold.
@@Thomachi even for indigenous are temperatures on Gotthard and the alps to low to feel comfortable. I grew up in the alps and this winter was damn cold
I bought a jacket the model 57 great for hiking wear a fleece sweater under and I stay warm but breathable I prefer to hike with the jacket than a backpack saves my back and tires me out less
Congrats on your purchase! You probably bought a model 61 (if it has windcuffs, bayonet carrier and shoulder waterproofing) or model 70 (later simplified pattern).
Their ponchos su:k... Only way to be able to use as a shelter would be to gorilla tape two or three together and hope... They are good for a rain coat. I got 5 new for $20 ten years ago
У этой формы есть и недостатки...крючки ранца цепляются к куртке...и натирают кровоподтеки на ключицах...Но видимо суровых швейцарцев это не пугало!!!Других претензий нет к этой форме.
Merci ! Petite remarque : Le Tarnanzug 1983 ne remplace pas le Kampfanzug 70 -> il s'agit juste d'une tenue camouflée destinée au personnel "non-combattant". Le TAZ 83 n'a pas des poches spécialisées pour porter les chargeurs / grenades ....
@@DaletheStgwDude Effectivement. Anecdote -> Comme les Fass 57 n'ont pas de porte-chargeurs attitrés (vu l'uniforme suisse), le Chili des années 1960s, a du acheter des portes-chargeurs de HK G3 à l'Allemagne pour pouvoir transporter les chargeurs de leurs SIG 510-4 acquis à l'époque.
Hallo Dale. Ich finde deinen Kanal erstklassig! Deine Videos sind sehr hilfreich in bezug zu meinem interesse für die ersten Jahre des Kampfanzugs.. Hast du noch mehr Videos oder bezugsquellen für Infos zur Schweizer Armee Ausrüstung um 1958 bis 1964?
Hoi Dave, danke! Leider gibt es zu dem Kampfanzug 61 nicht viel audiovisuelles Material. Am besten konsultieren Sie das Bundesarchiv, suchen Sie einfach, was Sie finden möchten.
Actual load was somewhere in that category. 6 kgs of magazines. 3 kgs of HG 43 6 Kgs Fass57 3 kgs gran ac 58 17 kgs heavy duty flack jacket Gas mask, pellerine (poncho), shovel, knapsack tied to the gazarusa with enough food for a couple of days. Then they asked you to run! The heavy flack jacket was for us, heavy mortar crews were considered stationary troops, so we got the heavy stuff.
I'd like a video / post explaining what goes in which pocket if possible. Thank you for this post. I'm nit sure why, but they tickle my interest enormously!
In rear pockets: canteen, pouch for shoe shine/sewing/spare buttons/3 brushes (two for shoes one for clothes) Pouch for maintain /clean rifle Gamelle= field bowl containing (same as German one) Alcohol solid field pocket stove With a white bag containing a spoon and fork.
In front: Chest pockets are for 2x2 Stgw magazines. Lower pockets are for paper/note book and pencil, personal things as cigarettes Left arm pocket personal band aid, for NCO a whistle
Ben non le couteau de POCHE comme il s'appelle comporte une lame un poinçon un tournevis (qui sert comme contact pour tout les vhcles si pas de clé) un ouvre-boîte /decapsuleur et Basta
I have a set of these. They aren't very practicle. Using it in summer you'll die. Takes forever to dry. It is not customizable at all. Basically a cotton smock and cargo pants with a ton of pockets.
The swiss shot down multiple allied and German planes in ww2. They also shot at any German patrols who crossed the border. The swiss may be neutral but they aren't a push over.
"No longer a walking Christmas tree."
Brilliant! :D
The Swiss were the ones who correctly understood that any defence against Soviet attack is anti-tank defence and gave every soldier an anti-tank weapon. It might not have been the best, but they had it and they had a lot of it.
The Swiss were the ones ...good one
germany started with this in WW2, not switzerland
@@PySnek yeah Germany started a lot of shit
Don't forget Finland!
@@brianfergus839 like still today.
Much better load out, than even equipment used today. They really made the jacket and pants, into real survival gear.
No it was really awful to have a coat with all inside going side by side when running not comfortable when sitting on truck benches, very awful with rifle magazines in the chest pockets.
Not enough protected for cold weather, keeping sweat and moisture for days.
Apart from the hood and the IR veil it was a big crap
@@badbotchdown9845 I would say it was decent for the era it was developed in.
Also, when it comes to cold weather, quilted layers are a thing…
But of course, I wouldn’t use my m70 uniform for serious situations, I have better stuff for that.
I would call this more of an evaders choice of kit rather than a frontline soldiers kit.
There is so much interesting stuff that isn't on the internet yet.
Dale the Stgw. Dude I'm excited to learn more, keep it coming!
We were hardly ever wearing that combat uniform. Most of the time it was the "Gebirgs Anorak" with the woolen pants. Much more comfortable for long marches, skiing, running etc. Looking back it seems to me, we only wore the Kampfanzug 70 when the exercise had something of an official touch - like an inspection or what not. That was the case during basic training (Andermatt 1986), NCO Training etc. and all my refresher courses after that. I actually quite liked the Mountain Anorak with the woolen pants, never had a problem with the wool chaffing my thighs..... otherwise... heult der Wolf ;-)
I haven't made one day of service without long underwear under my pants, more comfortable when outside and not wolf for me.
@@badbotchdown9845 I was lucky in that regard. The wolf left me alone, even with short underwear in summer.
In 1979 we wore it very often, even if we were mountain infantry.
As I had a bad case of sinus troubles I once "lost" three nose sprays in those pockets, only to find them the moment we changed the uniforms for regular cleaning.
Chur 212/79
@@Braun30 Basic and NCO Training in Andermatt/Stans (Geb Inf RS 211/86) was mostly done in the Gebirgs-Anorak. WKs nearly exclusively (Geb Füs Bat lll/72).
Et bien tu as eu bien de la chance !! Moi j'ai fais mon ecole de recrue à Colombier en 1986 suivi de 7 cours de répetition et on portait cette tenue jour et nuit....
“Anti- Infrared veil”. Damn. I wonder how affective it was.
Thanks for the translation. Your videos are amazing.
Anything that blurs the shape of the face is useful. In 1961 Infrared scanners were few and far between, and not the quality of today's scanners.
The Swiss military concept with the equipment was actually very well thought out. In my military career, I got to try it out.
love the face veils - anti IR - and a sound track almost writen by Elgar!
The rain coat was called the "Drac(ula)", because wearing it with your gas mask gives you a scary look!
Today I learned that it can rain in Switzerland 😂👍
Swiss Army Soldier's Knife can be seen at 0:27 and 2:10.
The basic model was introduced in 1890 and redesigned in 1951. Starting in 1962 until 2007 it was redesigned to a different pattern with aluminum scales; the civil equivalent (which actually came before the military issue) is predecessor to the current Pioneer. In 2008 a new model was introduced, larger, with saw and locking one-handed blade. It's equivalent is the Trailmaster.
All Soldier knives except for the 2008 version were produced by both Victorinox and Wenger to the same standards, but slight modifications.
The Soldier's rifle has always been a great utilitarian toolset, but also had tools to maintain the rifle (at least the bolt action ones).
I fell in love with this uniform
Hot and heavy makes it attractive
You can see jackets like that even today.
In the German Army for example we infantrymen like to wear the ,,smock".
Which is basically a jacket with a lot of pockets on the waist area.
I've worn mine on marches, combat exercises and doing obstacle courses and i love it, very versatile
Aplausos para ese uniforme, tiene un parecido al alemán, nunca lo dejen, ni lo abandonen por camouflages pixelados ridículos, encontré bacan la parka, saludos de Arica chile.
Sehr fortschrittlicher Kampfanzug für diese Zeit.
Thanks for sharing this, I have the field jacket and now see the utility it provided the soldier. The veil is fascinating, never seen one, but makes total sense.
Dale, now I am going to look, I have two of these, I'll check both.
@@hanktorrance6855 And? :) Don't leave us hanging, Hank! ^^
Excellent ! Merci pour le partage ! Cela me rappelle le petit livre vert "Livre du soldat", qui était distribué jadis.
J'espère voir d'autres perles historiques bientôt.
Ha oui çui là avec ses dessins en noir ou noir
Ha. I have one of these coats. They are great. The anti infared veil is one of my favorite things on it.
I do too, apart from its weight it’s fantastic, mine is missing the veil though. Wish I knew where to get hold of one.
Absolutely brilliant set up.
That's a dope looking setup for being 60 years old
А как шикарно это выглядело в 1957 году...😉
Some interesting developments in equipment and load carrying
Отличный фильм!!!В фильме TAZ - 57 раннего типа...,,помочи на штанах с 4 пряжками,крепление штыка на куртке...Очень интересно.С меня лайк!
1:32 17kg "as light...as a ballet dancer"
RIP to the ballet dancer that only weights 17kg and RIP to the soldier who has 17kg on his shoulders all day long.
most of the weight actually rest on the ankles and legs, not on the shoulder and back, which makes the weight much more managable
We have only two sizes for this one too big or too small
Ha, I have the jacket and rucksack. I always wondered what those pockets on the bag were for. Fit water bottles in mine. Same the jacket came wishing the face scroll.
Shame I can’t type. That should have said shame it came without face veil
Gosh, they are putting all that kit over a woolen uniform. I'd be sweating like a pig with all that!
Love seeing old films like these!
@@DaletheStgwDude I can only imagine! I'd also imagine the Swiss are used to cold temperatures anyways, and don't need a lot of layers even in the cold.
@@Thomachi even for indigenous are temperatures on Gotthard and the alps to low to feel comfortable. I grew up in the alps and this winter was damn cold
For avoiding red scars on skin loup) I have always wearing long underwear under my pants
I bought a jacket the model 57 great for hiking wear a fleece sweater under and I stay warm but breathable I prefer to hike with the jacket than a backpack saves my back and tires me out less
Congrats on your purchase! You probably bought a model 61 (if it has windcuffs, bayonet carrier and shoulder waterproofing) or model 70 (later simplified pattern).
thanks !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This is badass
Love those coats i got 2
Only thing i dislike about them is the sleeves are too short for my arms
Their ponchos su:k... Only way to be able to use as a shelter would be to gorilla tape two or three together and hope... They are good for a rain coat. I got 5 new for $20 ten years ago
2:20 That is really useful.
У этой формы есть и недостатки...крючки ранца цепляются к куртке...и натирают кровоподтеки на ключицах...Но видимо суровых швейцарцев это не пугало!!!Других претензий нет к этой форме.
It’s definitely not very ergonomic. I feel they went a bit too far with this whole “integrated” concept. Definitely interesting though
Как насчёт расцветки а-ля TAZ-57? В природе вообще существует местность, где такой камуфляж скрывал бы солдата?
very cool, garish is right
We hated the version with plastic coating.
A mobile sauna, first thing you did when you were issued a new one was to cut all plastic off.
Absolutely right we did it also
I like it, Swiss is good
Merci ! Petite remarque : Le Tarnanzug 1983 ne remplace pas le Kampfanzug 70 -> il s'agit juste d'une tenue camouflée destinée au personnel "non-combattant". Le TAZ 83 n'a pas des poches spécialisées pour porter les chargeurs / grenades ....
@@DaletheStgwDude Effectivement. Anecdote -> Comme les Fass 57 n'ont pas de porte-chargeurs attitrés (vu l'uniforme suisse), le Chili des années 1960s, a du acheter des portes-chargeurs de HK G3 à l'Allemagne pour pouvoir transporter les chargeurs de leurs SIG 510-4 acquis à l'époque.
Même avec le programme Félin ils s’en sortent mieux que nous…
Hallo Dale. Ich finde deinen Kanal erstklassig! Deine Videos sind sehr hilfreich in bezug zu meinem interesse für die ersten Jahre des Kampfanzugs.. Hast du noch mehr Videos oder bezugsquellen für Infos zur Schweizer Armee Ausrüstung um 1958 bis 1964?
Hoi Dave, danke! Leider gibt es zu dem Kampfanzug 61 nicht viel audiovisuelles Material. Am besten konsultieren Sie das Bundesarchiv, suchen Sie einfach, was Sie finden möchten.
And now im im carrying around 35-40 kilos in the current Infantry RS...
Actual load was somewhere in that category.
6 kgs of magazines.
3 kgs of HG 43
6 Kgs Fass57
3 kgs gran ac 58
17 kgs heavy duty flack jacket
Gas mask, pellerine (poncho), shovel, knapsack tied to the gazarusa with enough food for a couple of days.
Then they asked you to run!
The heavy flack jacket was for us, heavy mortar crews were considered stationary troops, so we got the heavy stuff.
@@Braun30 Autsch...... what a schlepp!
I would have the preferred to the low German version of this instructional video.
SEMPER FIDELIS ALL GRANATIERI 🇨🇭
FWIW the voiceover is the characteristic tone of Alphonse Kehrer.
He have made so many army documentary voices
I'd like a video / post explaining what goes in which pocket if possible.
Thank you for this post. I'm nit sure why, but they tickle my interest enormously!
In rear pockets: canteen, pouch for shoe shine/sewing/spare buttons/3 brushes (two for shoes one for clothes)
Pouch for maintain /clean rifle
Gamelle= field bowl containing (same as German one)
Alcohol solid field pocket stove
With a white bag containing a spoon and fork.
In front:
Chest pockets are for 2x2 Stgw magazines.
Lower pockets are for paper/note book and pencil, personal things as cigarettes
Left arm pocket personal band aid, for NCO a whistle
where can i buy that veil?
It’s standard in all M61 and M70 vests
A 2.14, le brave soldat sort de sa poche le fameux "couteau suisse" à quarante- douze lames , c'est ça ?? LOL
Ben non le couteau de POCHE comme il s'appelle comporte une lame un poinçon un tournevis (qui sert comme contact pour tout les vhcles si pas de clé) un ouvre-boîte /decapsuleur et Basta
Try moving swiftly with 17kilo of equipment in your pockets.
I have a set of these. They aren't very practicle. Using it in summer you'll die. Takes forever to dry. It is not customizable at all. Basically a cotton smock and cargo pants with a ton of pockets.
Ok. Maybe smth else to say?
Worst uniform I ever bought. I actually like the Finnish m62 uniform with the Swedish webbing better.
Die Schweizer, beschützt die Berge, Weitermachen ! x D
i have one of this
Why the mountain speak French German and italian ?
I'm guessing it would be uncomfortable
Soviet army is so cool
Sa a limite laire plus pratique que lequipement actuel, je dirai meme moin encombrant
Great, bud not colored.
Swiss and army in one sentence? that is like Soy Sausage....stick to tax evasion and making chocolate
The swiss shot down multiple allied and German planes in ww2. They also shot at any German patrols who crossed the border. The swiss may be neutral but they aren't a push over.
@@ikoikoni It's a mistake, often a grave one, to look at the enemy as a "pushover".