Obviously, the Power Ranger doesn't need a gun when he can clumsily do highly choreographed martial arts on an enemy and make him fly backwards in a flash of theatre squibs.Darth Wong wrote:Why isn't the Power Ranger carrying a rifle?

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For some reason I'm picturing a bunch of Iraqi soldiers wondering why there are five helmeted goons standing right in front of them having highly choreographed seizures while shouting about their need to defeat the box monster from the planet .... box.Gil Hamilton wrote: Obviously, the Power Ranger doesn't need a gun when he can clumsily do highly choreographed martial arts on an enemy and make him fly backwards in a flash of theatre squibs.
Please tell me you're joking.Vympel wrote:See that lump on his right wrist? That's his weapon. Mini smart missiles or some such nonsenseDarth Wong wrote:Why isn't the Power Ranger carrying a rifle?
Fortunately, such behavior automatically makes the Iraqi soldiers run up to them attack them one or two at a time rather than just shooting them Indiana Jones style until Saddam's super mutant beats them up and forces them to do a dramatic transformation sequence. That's the law of such shows.Vympel wrote:For some reason I'm picturing a bunch of Iraqi soldiers wondering why there are five helmeted goons standing right in front of them having highly choreographed seizures while shouting about their need to defeat the box monster from the planet .... box.
I kid you not. I saw the report and close up shots on CNN. I like this one better:Please tell me you're joking.
In an effort to develop a warrior system to meet the Army's transformation goals for the Objective Force, the U.S. Army Soldier Systems Center (Natick) is leading a new Army-wide research effort called Objective Force Warrior. The proposed concept for Objective Force Warrior will upgrade Land Warrior and enhance warfighter lethality and survivability by bringing many of the ideas of the Future Warrior concept to reality in the 2010-2012 timeframe. "We're looking for a revolutionary change with the way soldiers fight at the small unit level," said John Munroe, Warrior System Integration Team leader at Natick. "What is revolutionary is still to be determined. It will be a combination of technology advances and fighting capability."
The concept system fits into the Army chief of staff's vision of a mobile, versatile and lethal Objective Force for 2010 and beyond. Objective Force Warrior will be one of the primary pillars in the warrior-centric Objective Force, integrating with and complementing capabilities of the Future Combat System (FCS)-the Objective Force's family of combat vehicles-to change the way the U.S. military will fight in the coming decades.
Although fielding of the Land Warrior system is still 2 years away, a prototype of its successor, the Objective Force Warrior, was demonstrated at the Pentagon on 23 May 2002 by project managers of the Army Materiel Command's Natick Soldier Center in Natick, Massachusetts. The Objective Force Warrior program was developed at the direction of Army Chief of Staff General Eric K. Shinseki. According to project engineer Dutch Degay, developers tossed out the current system of individual equipment and designed a new integrated, holistic system from the "skin out."
The Objective Force Warrior system, which is scheduled for fielding in 2008, integrates and improves on the electronic capabilities inherent in the Land Warrior system. For example, soldiers will not have to wear cumbersome night-vision or infrared goggles or heavy laser training components on their helmets. These and other features, such as thermal sensors, video cameras, and chemical and biological sensors, are integrated fully in the helmet. The helmet also has a visor that acts as a "heads-up display monitor" equivalent to having two 17-inch computer monitors in front of the soldier's eyes. The uniform system is a multifunctional garment that incorporates physiological sensors that allow the soldier, his chain of command, and nearby medics to monitor the soldier's blood pressure, heart rate, internal and external body temperature, and caloric consumption rate. Commanders and medics will be able to access the information through a tactical local area network. The system's built-in climate-control system has a spacer fabric with "capillaries" that blow hot or cold air through the system.
The Objective Force Warrior system is powered by fuel cells and weighs approximately 50 pounds, compared to 92 to 105 pounds of equipment soldiers on combat patrols typically carry today. Many of the system's built-in functions eliminate the requirement to carry extra equipment, and the climate-control feature reduces the need for extra clothing. The outer garment has some biological and chemical protection capabilities, decreasing the requirement for extra protective gear.
Other mission-essential equipment not built into the individual soldier system will be carried on a small, remote-controlled wheeled vehicle called a "robotic mule," which is part of the Objective Force Warrior system. Each squad will have one mule that not only will take some of the load off the individual soldier but also will act as a weapons platform, generate and purify water, and recharge batteries. The mule has day and night thermal, infrared, and forward-looking imaging systems, as well as chemical-biological sensors. It will be able to communicate with unmanned aerial vehicles to give squad members a 360-degree image of the battlefield.
Objective Force Warrior will have "full-spectrum capabilities," meaning troops can use it for any mission from peacekeeping to high-intensity conflicts, and many new capabilities are in store to provide that flexibility. An envisioned ultra-lightweight, multi-functional protective combat ensemble and stealth technology will enhance survivability. An onboard physiological and medical sensor suite will increase performance and sustainability. Hybrid fuel cell and advanced rechargeable batteries would supply the soldier's power needs for at least 72 hours.
Soldier situational understanding would improve by developing a helmet with integrated sensory enhancements, networking with manned and unmanned ground and aerial vehicles, and using a rugged squad communications system. To dominate in combat, the warrior will use an ultra-lightweight family of weapons with advanced fire control distributed across the team and optimized for urban combat. The Future Combat System will aid in synchronizing direct and indirect fire.
As new technologies become available and practical, the concept of the Objective Force Warrior will undergo major upgrades beyond 2010, especially with nanotechnology. Nanotechnology is the ability to manipulate materials on an atomic or molecular scale. The Objective Force Warrior demonstration program is scheduled for fiscal year 2002-2008, then transitioning to Project Manager-Soldier Systems in fiscal year 2008 for system development and testing, and fielding in the 2010-2012 timeframe.
Ever seen Future Fighting Machines? This guy frequently crops up when they go on about future Yank products of death and the narrator always takes the piss out of it.Darth Wong wrote:Please tell me you're joking.Vympel wrote:See that lump on his right wrist? That's his weapon. Mini smart missiles or some such nonsenseDarth Wong wrote:Why isn't the Power Ranger carrying a rifle?
The wrist gun isn't real. It's a four-barreled pistol now with mini-heatseeking rockets. I shit you not, they even have an animation on how these will take out infantrymen and tanks.
The rockets can fire round corners and from the animation they had they can outmanouevre Culture Knife Missiles!jaeger115 wrote:The wrist gun isn't real. It's a four-barreled pistol now with mini-heatseeking rockets. I shit you not, they even have an animation on how these will take out infantrymen and tanks.![]()
Rockets?? Taking out an infantryman? The heat-seeker device will have to be pretty sensitive to take out a soldier covered in Kevlar armor
You're lying. We don't have tech that advanced!The rockets can fire round corners and from the animation they had they can outmanouevre Culture Knife Missiles!
You bloody heretic, be effectorized by Grey AreaAdmiral Valdemar wrote: The rockets can fire round corners and from the animation they had they can outmanouevre Culture Knife Missiles!
They decided to scrap the arm pod, and turned the weapon into a hand-held system.Sea Skimmer wrote:Considering what some US military programs concept art looked like compared to the real thing, I wouldn't even begin to take the power ranger seriously. Anyway, I've seen a guy in the same suit posed with a small submachine gun, MP-7ish.
They decided to scrap the arm pod, and turned the weapon into a hand-held system.Sea Skimmer wrote:Considering what some US military programs concept art looked like compared to the real thing, I wouldn't even begin to take the power ranger seriously. Anyway, I've seen a guy in the same suit posed with a small submachine gun, MP-7ish.
We need armor that can do that. Perhaps armor with that kind of fabric woven over it.Hell, the fabrics of the suit are suppose to be able to change colors in order to blend into the environment
ooh...boltguns!Balrog wrote:Yeah, it's a little pistol-type thingie, which can fire regular bullets or 4 15mm heat-seeking rockets.
The view inside the helmat's suppose to provide a 180 degree HUD utilizing sensors in the suit to give a better picture of the surrounding battlefield.
Hell, the fabrics of the suit are suppose to be able to change colors in order to blend into the environment
Actually, there is a big R&D project about using nanotechnology in paints to cover armored vehicles in so they to can "blend in with their surroundings"jaeger115 wrote:We need armor that can do that. Perhaps armor with that kind of fabric woven over it.Hell, the fabrics of the suit are suppose to be able to change colors in order to blend into the environment
They could run almost as fast as a Hummer, carry infinite ammo, and in sufficient numbers, take out an M1 Abrams with small-arms fire. Sounds about as realistic as most powered-armour ideasHis Divine Shadow wrote:The GDI and NOD soldiers from C&C2 didn't look that unrealistic, anyone?
That's why I hate most RTS games.They could run almost as fast as a Hummer, carry infinite ammo, and in sufficient numbers, take out an M1 Abrams with small-arms fire. Sounds about as realistic as most powered-armour ideas
I didn't mean the ingame action, but the cut-scenes.Darth Wong wrote:They could run almost as fast as a Hummer, carry infinite ammo, and in sufficient numbers, take out an M1 Abrams with small-arms fire. Sounds about as realistic as most powered-armour ideas