*Guys, Primary Arms is hooking up my subscribers! If you want to get FREE shipping and a free gift such as a FREE or discounted (depending on which scope) scope mount for the variable scopes, or a free anti-reflection device for the prisms optics, just follow the links I have posted below on the scope of your choice. YOU MUST follow these links or you will not get the free or discounted mount/anti-reflection device and free shipping from the standard Primary Arms website.* PA CYCLOPS 1X PRISM (BLACK): bit.ly/2BREKZn PA CYCLOPS 1X PRISM (COYOTE/FDE): bit.ly/2BRfhiX PA Advanced Micro Dot w/ push button: bit.ly/2LX39Nd PA Advanced Micro Dot w/ rotary knob bit.ly/2CjTCjr PA Micro dot (Budget red dot) bit.ly/2Ci99k3 Holosun HS503G RDS W/ ACSS bit.ly/2r7gCd3 PA 3X Magnifier bit.ly/2r3XAV2 GG&G flip to side magnifier mount: bit.ly/2EN5uv3 PA 1-6X24 FFP ACSS RAPTOR 5.56 / 5.45 / .308 BLACK bit.ly/2jW0V4O PA-1-6X24 FFP ACSS RAPTOR 5.56 / 5.45 / .308 WOLF GRAY bit.ly/2IidvtX PA 1-6 FFP ACSS RAPTOR 7.62x39 / 300 Blk out bit.ly/2IIAnC5 PA 1-8 PLATINUM FFP RAPTOR 5.56 bit.ly/2zqXYBo PA 3X Compact Prsim Scope ACSS 5.56 GEN II (Black) bit.ly/2OzAQqA PA 3X Compact Prism Scope ACSS 5.56 GEN II (Coyote) bit.ly/2OAEekN PA 3X Compact Prism Scope ACSS 7.62x39/300 Blkout GEN II (Black) bit.ly/2KdtaXD PA 3X Compact Prism Scope ACSS 7.62x39/300 Blkout GEN II (Coyote) bit.ly/2n3AgVv PA 1-8X Scope with Patented ACSS 5.56 / 5.45 / .308 Reticle bit.ly/2SPbNob PA 1-6X24mm SFP Riflescope with Patented ACSS 5.56 / 5.45 / .308 Reticle Gen III bit.ly/2BD73bB PA 1-6X24mm SFP Riflescope Gen III with K.I.S.S. Reticle bit.ly/2SUbxEo PA 1-6X24mm SFP Riflescope with Patented ACSS 22LR Reticle bit.ly/2N8fj7P PA 1-6X24mm SFP scope w/ACSS 300BLK/ 7.62X39 Reticle bit.ly/2N6Qut9 PA 1-6X24mm SFP Riflescope Gen III with Patented ACSS 22LR Reticle bit.ly/2N8fj7P Trijicon ACOG TA31 4x32 Scope with RED Dual Illumination ACSS Reticle TA31-R-ACSS bit.ly/2EQIMhg Trijicon ACOG TA31 4X32 Scope with RED Dual Illuminated ACSS AURORA RECTICE bit.ly/2T6uZuz Trijicon ACOG TA31 4X32 Scope with GREEN Dual Illuminated ACSS AURORA RECTICE bit.ly/2FRTmIQ Trijicon TA44 ACOG 1.5X16S TALL BASE (GREEN ACSS reticle) bit.ly/2DkC72H Trijicon TA44 ACOG 1.5X16S TALL BASE (RED ACSS reticle) bit.ly/2rdEu1O Trijicon TA44 ACOG 1.5X16S SHORT BASE (GREEN ACSS reticle) bit.ly/2EQge7G Trijicon TA44 ACOG 1.5X16S SHORT BASE (RED ACSS reticle) bit.ly/2FMdLMO Camouflage painting stencils: PA Tiger Stripe Stencil: bit.ly/2Dqzafa PA Multi Terrain pattern stencil: bit.ly/2Izaxkt PA Flecktarn stencil: bit.ly/2DwfMxb PA Digital camouflage stencil: bit.ly/2W0PvOP BIG THANKS to Dimitri and Primary Arms for making this all possible! Also don’t forget to check out and subscribe to Bruce’s channel: ua-cam.com/channels/wfzznRRdLUHwKiMTND49Jg.html Also check out my buddy John who is the owner of UW Gear and his UA-cam channel at Alpha Charlie concepts: ua-cam.com/users/AlphaCharlieConcepts
Thanks, Brent! Just ordered a cyclops prism scope with the ACCS reticle. As far as I know, these are the only links to get a deal on new items (I got a free sunshade with mine). This is my 4th Primary Arms product and it won't be the last either.
Having been trained in threat recognition, I was able to spot Brent probably 70% of the time before he got shots off in the video except for when behind very dense concealment or micro terrain, however I could only spot Scott about 40% of the time sometimes in light concealment like grass. Dying the old UCPs is definitely an ingenious way to improve the performance in a specific environment
As a Canadian soldier I went down to Georgia a couple times with the US National Guard. Doing night patrols with them in UCP I learned one surprising benefit: we were at no risk of getting separated from the Americans in the dark.
Don't forget they copied your homework but somehow made it even worse that's the UCP camo in my opinion but the USMC did it better with their marpat camo
@sonar357 yeah, but the army tested it too. They even tested it against the old patterns, something like marpat, and even multicam. That's what makes it so dumb
@@arturg.j.167 Actually, it's even dumber than that: Marketability! The U.S. Army was on the verge of adopting a pattern called Desert Brush Stroke when all of a sudden, the USMC rolls out MARPAT. Suddenly the USMC had this sexy cool camo, and the U.S Army didn't want to look behind the times with a more traditional looking camo. So UCP gets rushed to production under EXTREMELY shady circumstances (we're talking a turnaround time for testing of less than a year - it took something like half a decade of testing for Desert Brush Stroke) and suddenly the U.S Army has its own, super sexy, super futuristic camo that they slap on all of their marketing, safety of its soldiers be damned.
@MentrySK not after it is faded... the pixilation digital patterns are slightly different but you cant tell the difference at a distance unless you know what it is. Russian camouflage is made by a nation, this is customized converted and hardly any difference at distance.
@@lorenzodemonteclaro1301 I do have a few sets, SS-Leto, Oreh, Digital Flora, Berezka and Yagel, they all work really well in woods, except for Oreh but that looks really good
The worst pattern the Army ever adopted. Amazing how Bruce transformed it, that dyed color blended in perfectly in that environment. Apple green rit, got it.
@@joeblow9657 I've heard of some guys trying to dirty em up with mud but that's it still didn't work to good in the sun .really is odd why they chose that crappy camo
They're actually fairly effective in mountainous transitional environments where woodland/multicam/MARPAT and desert patterns would stand out too much. theres actually a picture floating around of an Army infantryman behind cover in UCP and it does a good job blending in the environment.
Add vinegar to the dye if you are dying gear, the acid in the vinegar is necessary for the nylon gear to absorb the dye. about one cup vinegar, give or take, for a bottle of dye.
wyomarine not everything comes from stores big man. You can make your own which is usually of thicker/ stronger consistency (from my experience). I don’t know why this has to be a point of contention for you, and I don’t know how you can compare vinegar to physical activity or gunpowder but you did.
The weird thing about UCP is it's actually great in breaking up shape, especially at distance. It's just that you're eyes turn it into a bright grey blob (which don't really exist in nature). It's really cool to see the disruptive pattern and shading's effectiveness combined with colors that actually exist.
@@fridrekr7510cadpat is too green, it works in tundra. It's great for Canada because that's all Canada is, but in the U.S. Marpat is king because of the brown shape making it more versatile for places like Alabama swamps, Montana mountains, South Dakota plains etc
The problem was never the pattern, it was the colors chosen. When new, UCP works decent in brownish grasslands and desert (especially once you get a bit dirty), great among rocks and obviously very well in urban/concrete areas. When they get worn and faded, they lightened up too much and you get the washed out look that Brent is demonstrating. Had the Army chosen a better color scheme we'd probably still be wearing it.
The pattern isn't that great, it's too small. Basically you look like a solid color bloob pass 30m. Same for MARPAT, CADPAT although their color is much better. Ironically the Chinese 07 digital camo avoided this though their woodland pattern has lots of gray and looks ugly as f*ck.
This is perfect. I retired about 5 years ago and still have 5-6 sets of these. Once they are dyed they make perfect camo for the spring/summertime in the Southeast US and great color for turkey hunting. Thanks
The UCP just needs to be darkened a tad. It's not that bad. It's just MARPAT! I got to admit though it kinda blends in well. Where the sun hits the foliage. But Afghanistan doesn't look like this.
Elliot Huh? Right! That’s what I meant. It worked with the highlights. And I agree, in Afghanistan, this camo was just silly. Put, like you said the pattern is the same as MARPAT and Cadpat.
@@lwysparagon8109 Right there is no such thing as a Universal Camo Pattern.. I thought urban at least here in the States would be more of a gray color.
The UCP reflects everything; that's good when it's reflecting surrounding foliage, bad when in the open. Both of you are high-speed operators that practice a culture of camouflage and I thank you for the inspiration. Maybe a test of tie-dyed blue jeans and long sleeve shirt in loam and green? See how far you can push improvised disruptive camouflage for the Red Dawn Deplorables.
Been a fan for years - thanks for recognizing us Airsofters in this! A LOT of us take camo seriously as our engagement distances are frequently TINY, and there's a reason why real world tactics work, even for us
It's because it's a video. Camouflage appears to be much more effective in pictures and videos. I have personal experience with this. The detection time is about the equivalent of real world double-triple the distance.
It's because its' a video. 2d. In real life, you're able to accurately gauge distance through sight, and as such shadows and colours would make an object like a human stick out a lot more than it would on a 2d video. Camouflage on uniforms wasn't meant to be used at this kind of distance anyway. At this distance, it's a case of praying they don't spot you. The only way you're going to avoid detection at this kind of distance is if you're in a very concealed position, the enemy's line of sight is limited or they're blind as a bat. Even if you've got a ghillie suit on or lots of fauna attached to your uniform to break up your shape, you've just got to hope there's somewhere nearby that you can blend in with.
Digital paterns are designed to mess with cameras, monitors and other similar equipment (NVGs etc). It's always gonna be much more effective because we're watching it being filmed by a camera, processed by a compression algorithm and displayed on a monitor. All of that combined has less color space than real life (shades of green become same color), there's no depth perception, and shadows are not true to real life.
Hey guys I have experience at dying nylon gear and rit dye for synthetic colors needs to be set by heat and vinigar. And the rit company recently came out with dye specifically for synthetic fabrics. It will take a bit more for the webbing on the gear. The buckles will take a dye as well but they take longer. If you're able to remove the buckles from the gear. If you are looking to dye the buckles a nice OD green, use the black dye. It turns the foliage green into OD green. Its just a waiting game. Even paint on some metal such as snaps will turn colors. Dying fabric is both art and science. I love it. Hope this helps anyone who is on the fence about dying their gear.
Wow... I wore these in the Army and we hated them. Sad that they're so bad you can fix them with dye. You should try a tie-die method with green and brown.
The regular UCP does still work better than my expectations though the dyed version is better in every way. The dyed UCP reminds me of a lighter colored Digiflora.
They recognized the strengths. The regular UCP usually sat in the better lit areas because it's reflections match there better. The Dyed UCP mostly stayed in the shadow areas.
Actually I'd say it's the opposite. I think the ordinary ucp works well in shadows because it's so light in color. Where in light it tends to glow more. The dyed stuff looks quite well in light or mixed shadows because it doesn't turn so dark. That's actually one of my complaints with m82 woodland it tends to look very dark in shadows and seldom are the shadows in normal woods quite that dark. Maybe in a jungle environment etc but not in my typical woods. Same reason I think multicam works quite well being a lighter color pattern doesn't make sense but it works pretty well in mixed lighting.
this is once again great content aimed at providing effective and low cost solutions to the prepper and minuteman community. thanks for this excellent work. I personally have looked into the dying option to create a better signature match for the ubiquitous and low cost ACU USGI equipment. very cool!
I would absolutely love a new video on dyed UCP VS Multicam tropic in the deep spring/early summer, and also how this dyed camo has held up over the last few years.
Probably the most efficient way to blend i to the environment quick and very effectively is find a muddy puddle of water, roll into it, then roll on leaves and you're set. That's exactly how my uncle did it in Vietnam. They were issued the od green fatigues which still didn't blend in, so they did exactly as I stated before heading into the bush to look for Charlie.
I said on another comment, they worked for us in Iraq on a multi day patrol, cuz you got blasted and dusty from the helos on infil to a nice faded brown the first night!
The Darker colour is a big improvement I can pick it as long as there is not too much vegetation in front. Brett what your wearing the Flash at 9 min 27 is like nothing seen since Hiroshima. I'm positive you pulled a dozen Spy sattelites off course.
The green almost perfectly matches the environment, although I think something like a Sap green, green tea ice cream, Navy Green (check the pantone scale for that), would look even more perfectly blended. Also, I would love to see that green camo field tested and paired with some walnut brown colored pants.
My biggest takeaway here? In dense woodland, concealment in the brush is far more effective than any camouflage pattern. I was stationed at Twentynine Palms and don't have much experience in the woods in cammies. But that vegetation makes for amazing concealment even in that ridiculous ACU uniform.
2d picture. You'd spot both of them straight away if you were there in person regardless of what camo they were wearing. It's just not possible to hide at that distance with uniform camo, you'll need a lot more concealment as you correctly pointed out. Uniform camo was meant more to be used at a distance anyway. Like 100-200m and beyond. This close up, your body shape, shadows and movement will give up your position straight away. Watching them conceal themselves on this video shouldn't be used as a testament to how it would work in real life. But that's not to say that the whole thing is bogus. You can see with your own eyes when they're standing up how well the dyed green works in the environment.
The standard undyed UCP worked better than I expected in this environment. Although, it was often masked by the over-exposed light on the camera sensor. A higher resolution with a better sensor might more accurately describe how the human eye would observe these patterns with this light. UA-cam's compression doesn't help either though. You guys always do a pretty good job breaking up your human triangle shapes and silhouettes, so even with crummy patterns, I often take a minute to locate the tree cancer.
I remember that you mentioned dying the UCP in your original effectiveness video, but never thought you or Bruce would actually put aside the time to do it. Great surprise and now I also have a good video to give me instructions on how to do it. Gotta find myself a set and try making it into BRUCP, definitely kicks ass in lush green environments.
Bruce did a great job. The color reminds me some of the varied hues of CADPAT, the apple green seems to be just the right color. It would be nice to see a video on an apple green dye applied to a gray BDU with a little black or brown to mimic tree bark lines.
SEAKPhotog to properly dye nylon you have to either use an Acid dye or a disperse dye. Both also require heat to set the dye in. Not to mention surface treatments on nylon can prevent the dye from properly binding. So you need to take care of that as well.
@@kolinmartz thanks for the response but I wasn't clear with my question: I was curious how/why the dying process impacts the IR properties of the uniform.
I saw a picture a while back of soldiers in the sandbox and their UCP was almost died brown by the desert. They blended in really well and I thought "huh so it works ok when it's dyed." Not sure why this hasn't happened before. I like the way UCP looks but not as a camo.
I just realized with the color of the UCP you can dye it any shade of color, which is very useful as you could dye for any enviroment you intend to match
This video makes me think twice about UCP. There were only a couple of scenes where I could see it rather quickly, but even then it wasn't bad. I think it had to do with the brightness of the sun, Brent's camo paint, painted rifle and sniper veil. Outline was broken up really well and he set up in good places. I'd give the dyed set a 90 and UCP a 75. Great video!
They both work surprisingly well when the sun is able to come directly through the clouds and provide some contrast on the leaves, but when it's overcast or in a dense area with no direct light, the non-dyed stuff stands out.
Great video and cool idea! It would be interesting to see UCPs dyed the lightest beige available. Maybe Rit Sandstone. Taupe or formula colors would yield some near Multicam colorations.
Never knew why the U.S. Army ever accepted that color to begin with unless they were fighting at a gravel pit,..real sad isn't it ??? It's amazing what a little dye can do,..Great job guys !!!
Damn what a coincidence, just a few days ago I was thinking "what if UCP was dyed brown or green, would it work better" lol, great video as always Brent! Keep the quality videos coming! EDIT: kind of reminds me of Russian digital Flora
ACU to a medium green Taupe 2 tsp Black 1 tsp Dark Green 1/2 tsp Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp Adjust the amount of dye and a cup of vinegar per gallon to the quantity of water and cloth.
@@steven1001 No pictures, but a warning, don't substitute any other rit dyes(like tangerine) for the named dyes. the results could be 180 degrees from what you want. Just try a single pouch , to start. *For a tan/brown look try 1 tsp of black and 1 tsp dry sunshine orange.* PS black and tangerine will yield.......*purple*
@@steven1001 I don't know if you have seen this post yet. it will give you some more details. IOO% nylon pouches are easy to dye using regular rit dye, just add a lot of vinegar, 1 cup per gallon or more. I have a lot of nylon pouches to experiment on and the easy way to try a color is to take a disposable aluminum turkey roaster pan and put it on the gas BBQ to heat the water( I put a false bottom in the roaster pan made out of a cut down disposable lid) and add a lot of vinegar, salt and some dish soap. The water is hot, but not boiling, add the dye and mix well, add the item to be dyed(already wet) and stir, then turn it over to expose all sides to the dye. Keep the item moving to give the dye a chance to color the item and you should see a color change in just a few minutes(it helps to have a wet undyed item to compare it too). When it seems to be a little darker than the color you want rinse the item in a bucket of cold water, dry(it will dry lighter) and hope for the best:-) ACU to a medium green Taupe 2 tsp Black 1 tsp Dark Green 1/2 tsp Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp Adjust the amount of dye to the quantity of water and cloth. PS larger items will need a big pot and a lot more dye for it to work well. you can go from light to dark ,but never the reverse.
I have seen a few of this videos, being a fan of the old woodland camo I wear issued back in early 04 when I was in. I thought this would be to bright, I was wrong. Even sitting side by side at the end the dyed camo was doing a great job. And like you said you get the high speed things already on the uniform. Great video.
In some of those scenarios, the dyed UCP stood out a bit more because it appeared to be a giant patch of green sitting randomly in the scene. I think that if there was some additional colors running across to break it up, it would be perfect.
I was successfully able to dye Nylon gear using Jacquard Kelley green acid dye mixed with some apple green rit, came out phenomenal and matches Bruce's pattern quite well
I was just thinking about this very topic yesterday. I was looking at the green grass and woodline behind my house and wondering why there is not a pattern or color that matches. Then I see this video today! Well done
I was infantry in iraq from 2004- 2007... the guys wearing the ucp were hardest to see at night. When patrols would approach, you would see the other uniforms first.
I have I live here in LA Calif. used dark brown. Makes you color a strange pink is orange color brown. Also try Kelly green makes the color more of a olive drab color like a Vet. Nam uniform with pattern. But you can use dark brown on the flick vest and pouches nylon die leave in for a longe time makes a nice dark brown color.
This works too regular rit dye with a lot of vinegar in the hot water and agitate. ACU to a medium green Taupe 2 tsp Black 1 tsp Dark Green 1/2 tsp Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp Adjust the amount of dye and a cup of vinegar per gallon to the quantity of water and cloth
The regular rit dye will dye nylon gear well. It specifies it can be used for cotton and nylon. Using the the hottest water recommended is key and vinegar mentioned below is helpful but not always needed. Be careful how much dye you use. It can be difficult finding that happy median. The instructions are in fine print on the inside of the boxes or on bottles. And can be obscured and easy to miss but has useful info. Also look in books and the net for tips ect. For other materials,clothing and gear you can use the rit synthetic dye for polyester,rayon and some others. UCP can be dyed into a digital brown just as an idea. Hope this is useful to some of you out there.
Wow! very well done with a lot of contrasted view and exposure to the camouflage. Movements are great and even the sound testing is well done. Real movements done by a real professional. Look at the attention of details like terrain, inclination and explanation. Well-explained. Good job!
The army spend millions of dollars to copy Marpat makes a great couch camo dude in north Texas dyes it and makes it better for 10 dollars yep sounds right
@@Brent0331 here's an idea 4 ya & your camo testing buddy in this video Dye the Grey Universal Camouflage Pattern in2 a real/true Multiterrain all season Universal Camouflage Pattern using Tan, Dark Green & Cocoa (Chocolate) Brown or Regular Dark Brown then test that pattern!
I tried the apple green on my MOLLE pack and it works so much better and looks better as well. SO far attempts to create a darker green replicating OD haven't been as successful. Really appreciate your videos, Semper Fi!
ACU to a medium green Taupe 2 tsp Black 1 tsp Dark Green 1/2 tsp Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp Adjust the amount of dye +(1 cup of vinegar per gallon) to the quantity of water and cloth.
I have dyed my UCP with Terracotta brown, a reddish brown. In order to blend in in urban areas, where reddish brown bricks walls were used. These are very popular in my country the Netherlands. Also it was a night camo. Not for IR or image intensifiers night vision equiptment, but for the naked eye. In low light conditions the color red is the one the eye sees, because it is next to infra red. Which the eye can not see. Also handy when illimunated with orange glow sodium lights.
I think Renaissance Marine has dyed nylon gear like nylon Malice Rucksaks, etc...I know he dyed some 3 color desert fatigues with a green Rit dye and at least the one pair looked REALLY good. So yeah, Renaissance Marine has done stuff like this, but again Bruce's UCP fatigues look awesome in that environment !
Better than that awful "blend in with nothing" all grey ACUs that were forced on the Army in 2006...they were only useful if the Army decided to occupy the Moon.
How it went down was the Marines decided, "hey, time for a new camo. Bdu is about 2 decades old and we need to keep up with technology and research", so they adopted desert and woodland versions of cadpat. Army looked at the Marines cool new uniforms and wanted new uniforms too, but heaven forbid the army does the same thing after the Corps has done it. Army also wanted to one up the Marines by adopting a "universal" camo, but that entire concept is flawed from the start. So army starts testing 5 or 6 new camo patterns that were actually decent, and were holding a competion for new army camo pattern. Ucp wasn't a part of any of this. What eventually became scorpion was selected as the winner of this competition. Out of nowhere, ucp is introduced, and is adopted citing test results of its IR signature blending in and there fore being supior for night operations against a neere peer opponent. Guess what? Most military operations are done in daylight. To the suprise of nobody, ucp failed miserably in just about every environment during daylight. To remedy this, since we were still very much active in the middle east at this point, army starts issuing scorpion uniforms to troops deploying to Afghanistan. Congress is watching this entire time and sees the money wasted on trying to develop a universal camo pattern, and passes an act that the army is no long allowed to spend money on camo pattern development and any new pattern the adopt has to be an existing pattern or ots from the private sector. Jump forward almost a decade, army is still stuck with a standard issue camo pattern that literally doesn't work any where. So, due to congress telling them to stop camo development, the army ends up adopting multicam as is camo pattern, still stuck on the failed concept of one pattern for every environment.
@@isaachousley325 the Marine woodland digital and desert camo patterns are excellent....I know they must have laughed their asses off after seeing the ACU in 2006...I remember back at Ft. Hood we went on our first FTX wearing our newly issued ACUs...we stood out like ghosts in the woodline...lots of fun pics were taken showing how "great" our ACUs blended in with the environment out in the field.
@@isaachousley325 The idea of universal camo is about as funny as a universal haircut for men and women (yeah yeah I know, Terminator Dark Fate...) or ketchup being a universal flavor for all food, including ice cream and milk and sushi.
Just did a molle ii medium bag, with some vinger, salt, BOILING water, and one bottle of the green stuff. Boiling for 75minutes, with 5 times where I re-arranged the bag. Worked out very well. Hang dried it outside for a day, first I dumped cold water all over it. Now that it's dry, I will wash it in cold water.
*Guys, Primary Arms is hooking up my subscribers! If you want to get FREE shipping and a free gift such as a FREE or discounted (depending on which scope) scope mount for the variable scopes, or a free anti-reflection device for the prisms optics, just follow the links I have posted below on the scope of your choice. YOU MUST follow these links or you will not get the free or discounted mount/anti-reflection device and free shipping from the standard Primary Arms website.*
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BIG THANKS to Dimitri and Primary Arms for making this all possible!
Also don’t forget to check out and subscribe to Bruce’s channel: ua-cam.com/channels/wfzznRRdLUHwKiMTND49Jg.html
Also check out my buddy John who is the owner of UW Gear and his UA-cam channel at Alpha Charlie concepts: ua-cam.com/users/AlphaCharlieConcepts
Thanks, Brent! Just ordered a cyclops prism scope with the ACCS reticle. As far as I know, these are the only links to get a deal on new items (I got a free sunshade with mine).
This is my 4th Primary Arms product and it won't be the last either.
I bought a 1-6x24 ACSS because of your well detailed video.
Brent0331 I can spot you in the grass at times but it’s had when ur hiding behind s tree
The son of God is willing to forgive you all, DON'T reject his gift
Having been trained in threat recognition, I was able to spot Brent probably 70% of the time before he got shots off in the video except for when behind very dense concealment or micro terrain, however I could only spot Scott about 40% of the time sometimes in light concealment like grass. Dying the old UCPs is definitely an ingenious way to improve the performance in a specific environment
As a Canadian soldier I went down to Georgia a couple times with the US National Guard. Doing night patrols with them in UCP I learned one surprising benefit: we were at no risk of getting separated from the Americans in the dark.
Don't forget they copied your homework but somehow made it even worse that's the UCP camo in my opinion but the USMC did it better with their marpat camo
@@chloetaylor2713that's because the Marines had their scout-snipers test the patterns
@sonar357 yeah, but the army tested it too. They even tested it against the old patterns, something like marpat, and even multicam. That's what makes it so dumb
@@burgeryoufoundbehindthegrill its pretty obvious it was a reason to spend money
@@arturg.j.167 Actually, it's even dumber than that: Marketability!
The U.S. Army was on the verge of adopting a pattern called Desert Brush Stroke when all of a sudden, the USMC rolls out MARPAT. Suddenly the USMC had this sexy cool camo, and the U.S Army didn't want to look behind the times with a more traditional looking camo. So UCP gets rushed to production under EXTREMELY shady circumstances (we're talking a turnaround time for testing of less than a year - it took something like half a decade of testing for Desert Brush Stroke) and suddenly the U.S Army has its own, super sexy, super futuristic camo that they slap on all of their marketing, safety of its soldiers be damned.
Everybody gangsta until the grass stands up and starts speaking English.
BAHAHAHA.
Lmao! 😅😅👍🏾
😩😬
🤣🤣🤣
You imagine taking a break and sit on that pile of grass and you heard a voice telling you get the fu@# off
Once dyed green it kinda looks like the Russian Digital Flora pattern...?
Except russian EMR is way darker
@MentrySK not after it is faded... the pixilation digital patterns are slightly different but you cant tell the difference at a distance unless you know what it is. Russian camouflage is made by a nation, this is customized converted and hardly any difference at distance.
And this is why the US isn’t going the route of re-dying old UCP uniform and gear.
khkenny 2 Russian camo is good camo
@@lorenzodemonteclaro1301 I do have a few sets, SS-Leto, Oreh, Digital Flora, Berezka and Yagel, they all work really well in woods, except for Oreh but that looks really good
The worst pattern the Army ever adopted. Amazing how Bruce transformed it, that dyed color blended in perfectly in that environment. Apple green rit, got it.
I think you should patten it. The Government loves to spend billions on stuff like this. Bruce I think Shark Tank needs your idea!
I'm surprised that soldiers didn't dye their UCP uniforms brown/khaki like the Brits did in India over 100 years ago
@@joeblow9657 I've heard of some guys trying to dirty em up with mud but that's it still didn't work to good in the sun .really is odd why they chose that crappy camo
Wulfz lair the only way they would work is if they were faded out.
Joe Blow and it’s against regulations.
As a Vietnam era vet, I always said these uniforms work well only around gravel an nothing more, great idea to dye these suckers.!
Thank you for your service.
They're actually fairly effective in mountainous transitional environments where woodland/multicam/MARPAT and desert patterns would stand out too much. theres actually a picture floating around of an Army infantryman behind cover in UCP and it does a good job blending in the environment.
I u sure ur a vet tho? People lie about that
@@hoodsmandan3541 my DD214,says so ,my ETS,date states so and all my VA.benefits back it up.!
I personally think the pattern works in Urban Areas. Please Crored me if am wrong those.
Add vinegar to the dye if you are dying gear, the acid in the vinegar is necessary for the nylon gear to absorb the dye. about one cup vinegar, give or take, for a bottle of dye.
Thanks for the tip from 911rescuediver.com
How much vingar, does it matter if I were to use a lot?
@a steinmann the question was more pointed to if using more then recommended will impact the dye
wyomarine because I may use more potent vinegars in my household.
wyomarine not everything comes from stores big man. You can make your own which is usually of thicker/ stronger consistency (from my experience). I don’t know why this has to be a point of contention for you, and I don’t know how you can compare vinegar to physical activity or gunpowder but you did.
The weird thing about UCP is it's actually great in breaking up shape, especially at distance. It's just that you're eyes turn it into a bright grey blob (which don't really exist in nature). It's really cool to see the disruptive pattern and shading's effectiveness combined with colors that actually exist.
the camo youre looking for is called MARPAT
yeah thats what im saying, UCP wasnt really a failure bc we figured out what pattern was the best at breaking up shape@@bolan4185
@@bolan4185*CADPAT
@@fridrekr7510cadpat is too green, it works in tundra. It's great for Canada because that's all Canada is, but in the U.S. Marpat is king because of the brown shape making it more versatile for places like Alabama swamps, Montana mountains, South Dakota plains etc
@@fiskersproductions Tundra? CADPAT works great in the lush temperate forests. MARPAT is a copy of CADPAT anyway.
The problem was never the pattern, it was the colors chosen. When new, UCP works decent in brownish grasslands and desert (especially once you get a bit dirty), great among rocks and obviously very well in urban/concrete areas. When they get worn and faded, they lightened up too much and you get the washed out look that Brent is demonstrating. Had the Army chosen a better color scheme we'd probably still be wearing it.
I use it for for hunting and fly fishing it is comfortable and durable.
*CADPAT has entered the chat*
The pattern isn't that great, it's too small. Basically you look like a solid color bloob pass 30m. Same for MARPAT, CADPAT although their color is much better. Ironically the Chinese 07 digital camo avoided this though their woodland pattern has lots of gray and looks ugly as f*ck.
@@Nathan-jh1ho The Chinese camo looks exactly like it was made in china. lol. It looks like the paint job a dollar store toy would have.
@@DaveSmith-cp5kj They have other patterns that seem pretty good, but the "07 Woodland", looks awful
This is perfect. I retired about 5 years ago and still have 5-6 sets of these. Once they are dyed they make perfect camo for the spring/summertime in the Southeast US and great color for turkey hunting. Thanks
In the woods, even the un dyed UCP worked better than I’d have ever given it credit for.
The UCP just needs to be darkened a tad. It's not that bad. It's just MARPAT! I got to admit though it kinda blends in well. Where the sun hits the foliage. But Afghanistan doesn't look like this.
Elliot Huh? Right! That’s what I meant. It worked with the highlights. And I agree, in Afghanistan, this camo was just silly. Put, like you said the pattern is the same as MARPAT and Cadpat.
@@elliothuh669 My idea is just swap the colors between two area, Foliage Green (Dark Grey) and Urban Tan (sand). Should yield much better result.
@@lwysparagon8109 Right there is no such thing as a Universal Camo Pattern.. I thought urban at least here in the States would be more of a gray color.
Tyler In deep shadowed woods UCP is actually effective
The UCP reflects everything; that's good when it's reflecting surrounding foliage, bad when in the open. Both of you are high-speed operators that practice a culture of camouflage and I thank you for the inspiration.
Maybe a test of tie-dyed blue jeans and long sleeve shirt in loam and green? See how far you can push improvised disruptive camouflage for the Red Dawn Deplorables.
So this is the new BRUCP?
Hahaha, hohoho.
I'll show myself out...
🥁
Honestly with all this dudes knowledge of camo id be interested in a pattern he designed
lol
Been a fan for years - thanks for recognizing us Airsofters in this! A LOT of us take camo seriously as our engagement distances are frequently TINY, and there's a reason why real world tactics work, even for us
The UCP was more effective than I thought it would be.
It's because it's a video. Camouflage appears to be much more effective in pictures and videos. I have personal experience with this. The detection time is about the equivalent of real world double-triple the distance.
It's because its' a video. 2d. In real life, you're able to accurately gauge distance through sight, and as such shadows and colours would make an object like a human stick out a lot more than it would on a 2d video.
Camouflage on uniforms wasn't meant to be used at this kind of distance anyway. At this distance, it's a case of praying they don't spot you.
The only way you're going to avoid detection at this kind of distance is if you're in a very concealed position, the enemy's line of sight is limited or they're blind as a bat.
Even if you've got a ghillie suit on or lots of fauna attached to your uniform to break up your shape, you've just got to hope there's somewhere nearby that you can blend in with.
Digital paterns are designed to mess with cameras, monitors and other similar equipment (NVGs etc). It's always gonna be much more effective because we're watching it being filmed by a camera, processed by a compression algorithm and displayed on a monitor. All of that combined has less color space than real life (shades of green become same color), there's no depth perception, and shadows are not true to real life.
Hey guys I have experience at dying nylon gear and rit dye for synthetic colors needs to be set by heat and vinigar. And the rit company recently came out with dye specifically for synthetic fabrics. It will take a bit more for the webbing on the gear. The buckles will take a dye as well but they take longer. If you're able to remove the buckles from the gear. If you are looking to dye the buckles a nice OD green, use the black dye. It turns the foliage green into OD green. Its just a waiting game. Even paint on some metal such as snaps will turn colors. Dying fabric is both art and science. I love it. Hope this helps anyone who is on the fence about dying their gear.
Looks like a Digital-A-Tacs or something. I think it works pretty well.
Wow... I wore these in the Army and we hated them. Sad that they're so bad you can fix them with dye. You should try a tie-die method with green and brown.
You should throw some pink and purple in there aswell
Good idea
The regular UCP does still work better than my expectations though the dyed version is better in every way.
The dyed UCP reminds me of a lighter colored Digiflora.
They recognized the strengths. The regular UCP usually sat in the better lit areas because it's reflections match there better. The Dyed UCP mostly stayed in the shadow areas.
Actually I'd say it's the opposite. I think the ordinary ucp works well in shadows because it's so light in color. Where in light it tends to glow more. The dyed stuff looks quite well in light or mixed shadows because it doesn't turn so dark. That's actually one of my complaints with m82 woodland it tends to look very dark in shadows and seldom are the shadows in normal woods quite that dark. Maybe in a jungle environment etc but not in my typical woods. Same reason I think multicam works quite well being a lighter color pattern doesn't make sense but it works pretty well in mixed lighting.
Dyed looks like CADPAT.
this is once again great content aimed at providing effective and low cost solutions to the prepper and minuteman community. thanks for this excellent work. I personally have looked into the dying option to create a better signature match for the ubiquitous and low cost ACU USGI equipment. very cool!
Military dude :Shows off fancy UCP Camo Pattern
Me :time to find waldo
No
Gosh darn
@@waldo5066 go fuck yourself Waldo
@@waldo5066 Hey Waldo, remember when you challenged the Germans to find you on D-Day? Good times.
Nathan Tan Where’s Bravo?
Adapt, improvise, overcome. Great stuff
I would absolutely love a new video on dyed UCP VS Multicam tropic in the deep spring/early summer, and also how this dyed camo has held up over the last few years.
Probably the most efficient way to blend i to the environment quick and very effectively is find a muddy puddle of water, roll into it, then roll on leaves and you're set.
That's exactly how my uncle did it in Vietnam. They were issued the od green fatigues which still didn't blend in, so they did exactly as I stated before heading into the bush to look for Charlie.
I said on another comment, they worked for us in Iraq on a multi day patrol, cuz you got blasted and dusty from the helos on infil to a nice faded brown the first night!
Jon Long Then it should have been a faded brown from the get go .
*That's awesome. It's basically just CADPAT, but cheaper. Looks very cool, too.*
Do you mean the pattern itself or the colors? Cause the pattern is basically the same as Cadpat but the colors are pretty different.
@@techmoso4880 Yeah CADPAT also has black in it, so it's similar but not the same
CADPAT is very bright and has larger pixels but yeah it does look strikingly similiar
Army. Watch me make the worst camo ever.
Air Force: Hold my beer.
Navy....not so fast, wait till you see these blueberries
The navy uniform was terrible, man overboard would be SOL.
@@480JD yeah the best was when Beyonce wore it in that Battleship movie
@@480JD I think they wanted SEALs to wear it in water ops, but it didn't work well or they didn't buy it ha ha.
The NAVY camo is really good in water lol
I miss blueberries
After this video released I showed it to my buddy and now he's gone full Martha Stewart just using up our old ACUs and dying them.
Ha
Seems ABU's that are dyed should achieve similar results. Apple Green Tiger Stripe.
I was thinking the same, ABUs should look even better! On top of it I'm thinking brown dye instead of green
Or both, you can use green and brown dyed if your careful.
tried the basic brown rit dye a couple years ago, did not turn out well. they have other "browns" that might work better.
The question do uniforms still have IIR properties and if so does the die effect it?
Brent this proves you hang with the best quality of people! Great video again!
The Darker colour is a big improvement I can pick it as long as there is not too much vegetation in front. Brett what your wearing the Flash at 9 min 27 is like nothing seen since Hiroshima. I'm positive you pulled a dozen Spy sattelites off course.
yfelwulf I was not aware that UCP shines. That was dreadful to look at
@@Jack-me7kl one of the reasons people hated it. Ya look like a pile a fuckin tin cans in sunlight w/ darker background
The green almost perfectly matches the environment, although I think something like a Sap green, green tea ice cream, Navy Green (check the pantone scale for that), would look even more perfectly blended.
Also, I would love to see that green camo field tested and paired with some walnut brown colored pants.
Really good idea, i did it with the german desert uniform ... Nice effect!
Tropetarn is actually a pretty good pattern In my opinion
Flectarn I believe and it is pretty effective for their environment.
@@easternrebel1061
I also love that pattern.
I’ve seen people do this with browns and dark earth colors for fall environments, always seems to work really well
I call it poor man’s Atacs looks good and was affective!
The ATACS-FG isn't for only rich man. Lots of them available at affordable price from China. It's not different in the field.
Looks more like digital flora than ATACS
I absolutely love this color! It blends in so well here in North Carolina. I like all your videos but, I want to see more about Apple Green UCP.
Me too
My biggest takeaway here? In dense woodland, concealment in the brush is far more effective than any camouflage pattern.
I was stationed at Twentynine Palms and don't have much experience in the woods in cammies. But that vegetation makes for amazing concealment even in that ridiculous ACU uniform.
2d picture. You'd spot both of them straight away if you were there in person regardless of what camo they were wearing. It's just not possible to hide at that distance with uniform camo, you'll need a lot more concealment as you correctly pointed out. Uniform camo was meant more to be used at a distance anyway. Like 100-200m and beyond. This close up, your body shape, shadows and movement will give up your position straight away.
Watching them conceal themselves on this video shouldn't be used as a testament to how it would work in real life. But that's not to say that the whole thing is bogus. You can see with your own eyes when they're standing up how well the dyed green works in the environment.
The standard undyed UCP worked better than I expected in this environment. Although, it was often masked by the over-exposed light on the camera sensor. A higher resolution with a better sensor might more accurately describe how the human eye would observe these patterns with this light. UA-cam's compression doesn't help either though. You guys always do a pretty good job breaking up your human triangle shapes and silhouettes, so even with crummy patterns, I often take a minute to locate the tree cancer.
I remember that you mentioned dying the UCP in your original effectiveness video, but never thought you or Bruce would actually put aside the time to do it. Great surprise and now I also have a good video to give me instructions on how to do it. Gotta find myself a set and try making it into BRUCP, definitely kicks ass in lush green environments.
Bruce did a great job. The color reminds me some of the varied hues of CADPAT, the apple green seems to be just the right color. It would be nice to see a video on an apple green dye applied to a gray BDU with a little black or brown to mimic tree bark lines.
This is Awesome, like why pay for another uniform, when you can dye ucp & make it better for less.
The re-dying process ruins the ir properties of the uniform.
Kolin Martz yeah but hey, at least dyed UCP works better than non dyed.
@@kolinmartz really? How so? Don't doubt you, just curious how it works.
SEAKPhotog to properly dye nylon you have to either use an Acid dye or a disperse dye. Both also require heat to set the dye in. Not to mention surface treatments on nylon can prevent the dye from properly binding. So you need to take care of that as well.
@@kolinmartz thanks for the response but I wasn't clear with my question: I was curious how/why the dying process impacts the IR properties of the uniform.
You should have given that marine some crayons to eat so he wouldn't have been so grumpy about wearing the army uniform. 👌
Shots fired.
That was so stupid to say but I guess this thought still is in the minds of some...All I'd care about is if it worked or not...
I saw a picture a while back of soldiers in the sandbox and their UCP was almost died brown by the desert. They blended in really well and I thought "huh so it works ok when it's dyed." Not sure why this hasn't happened before. I like the way UCP looks but not as a camo.
My Marine woodland digitals work fairly well.
But my desert ones are nearly bleached solid white from the sun. Lol
I just realized with the color of the UCP you can dye it any shade of color, which is very useful as you could dye for any enviroment you intend to match
I was just talking about this w/ a guy yesterday. Another great video and its always great to have Bruce in there too! Thanks Team!
This video makes me think twice about UCP. There were only a couple of scenes where I could see it rather quickly, but even then it wasn't bad. I think it had to do with the brightness of the sun, Brent's camo paint, painted rifle and sniper veil. Outline was broken up really well and he set up in good places. I'd give the dyed set a 90 and UCP a 75. Great video!
Brent is just a camouflaging expert. He could make British redcoats blend in
They both work surprisingly well when the sun is able to come directly through the clouds and provide some contrast on the leaves, but when it's overcast or in a dense area with no direct light, the non-dyed stuff stands out.
and here we see the indigenous green hillbilly tree frog 🐸 slowly making it’s way through the jungle
LMAO
Would like to see that side by side against MARPAT. Would guess it would do well.
first of all a greeting from Italy and two I bought everything to create it at home .. thanks texas for the idea
Great video and cool idea!
It would be interesting to see UCPs dyed the lightest beige available. Maybe Rit Sandstone. Taupe or formula colors would yield some near Multicam colorations.
Crazy how well that blends
ARMY: We can design the absolute worst camouflage in history!
AIR FORCE: Hold my ABU’s!!
I'll take em' All..
Then Dye them. I like the ABU idea but in use it needs to be darker.
The ABUs with that light blue are horrendous!
troym33 - Navy - Have you not seen the “blueberries?”
The pattern is good, the color palette is terrible.
Let's not forget about the Navy's blue abominations. Why are they trying to blend in? You are on a ship in the ocean
Never knew why the U.S. Army ever accepted that color to begin with unless they were fighting at a gravel pit,..real sad isn't it ??? It's amazing what a little dye can do,..Great job guys !!!
Damn what a coincidence, just a few days ago I was thinking "what if UCP was dyed brown or green, would it work better" lol, great video as always Brent! Keep the quality videos coming!
EDIT: kind of reminds me of Russian digital Flora
It blends when it gets muddy or dirty.
ACU to a medium green
Taupe 2 tsp
Black 1 tsp
Dark Green 1/2 tsp
Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp
Adjust the amount of dye and a cup of vinegar per gallon to the quantity of water and cloth.
Rat Route do you have any pics of what the after math looks like, sounds interesting and a nice way to make it better
@@steven1001 No pictures, but a warning, don't substitute any other rit dyes(like tangerine) for the named dyes. the results could be 180 degrees from what you want.
Just try a single pouch , to start.
*For a tan/brown look try 1 tsp of black and 1 tsp dry sunshine orange.*
PS black and tangerine will yield.......*purple*
@@steven1001
I don't know if you have seen this post yet. it will give you some more details.
IOO% nylon pouches are easy to dye using regular rit dye, just add a lot of vinegar, 1 cup per gallon or more.
I have a lot of nylon pouches to experiment on and the easy way to try a color is to take a disposable aluminum turkey roaster pan and put it on the gas BBQ to heat the water( I put a false bottom in the roaster pan made out of a cut down disposable lid) and add a lot of vinegar, salt and some dish soap.
The water is hot, but not boiling, add the dye and mix well, add the item to be dyed(already wet) and stir, then turn it over to expose all sides to the dye. Keep the item moving to give the dye a chance to color the item and you should see a color change in just a few minutes(it helps to have a wet undyed item to compare it too). When it seems to be a little darker than the color you want rinse the item in a bucket of cold water, dry(it will dry lighter) and hope for the best:-)
ACU to a medium green
Taupe 2 tsp
Black 1 tsp
Dark Green 1/2 tsp
Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp
Adjust the amount of dye to the quantity of water and cloth.
PS larger items will need a big pot and a lot more dye for it to work well.
you can go from light to dark ,but never the reverse.
I have seen a few of this videos, being a fan of the old woodland camo I wear issued back in early 04 when I was in. I thought this would be to bright, I was wrong. Even sitting side by side at the end the dyed camo was doing a great job. And like you said you get the high speed things already on the uniform. Great video.
In some of those scenarios, the dyed UCP stood out a bit more because it appeared to be a giant patch of green sitting randomly in the scene. I think that if there was some additional colors running across to break it up, it would be perfect.
I was successfully able to dye Nylon gear using Jacquard Kelley green acid dye mixed with some apple green rit, came out phenomenal and matches Bruce's pattern quite well
Ya' know I would actually like to see a vid comparing the UCP with green dye and the older O.D. green.
I was just thinking about this very topic yesterday. I was looking at the green grass and woodline behind my house and wondering why there is not a pattern or color that matches. Then I see this video today! Well done
What a great upload, thanks y'all! Appreciate the insight into getting some good looking bdus at a discount!
I was infantry in iraq from 2004- 2007... the guys wearing the ucp were hardest to see at night. When patrols would approach, you would see the other uniforms first.
Just hit me the way Bruce dyed it looks very close to Singapore’s uniform pattern.
Just went and got one set of U.C.P.s for 20 bucks. Planning to get 2 more sets. Thanks guys. Keep up the great videos.
Nice! Thanks for watching.
I have I live here in LA Calif. used dark brown. Makes you color a strange pink is orange color brown. Also try Kelly green makes the color more of a olive drab color like a Vet. Nam uniform with pattern. But you can use dark brown on the flick vest and pouches nylon die leave in for a longe time makes a nice dark brown color.
This works too regular rit dye with a lot of vinegar in the hot water and agitate.
ACU to a medium green
Taupe 2 tsp
Black 1 tsp
Dark Green 1/2 tsp
Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp
Adjust the amount of dye and a cup of vinegar per gallon to the quantity of water and cloth
The regular rit dye will dye nylon gear well. It specifies it can be used for cotton and nylon. Using the the hottest water recommended is key and vinegar mentioned below is helpful but not always needed. Be careful how much dye you use. It can be difficult finding that happy median. The instructions are in fine print on the inside of the boxes or on bottles. And can be obscured and easy to miss but has useful info. Also look in books and the net for tips ect. For other materials,clothing and gear you can use the rit synthetic dye for polyester,rayon and some others. UCP can be dyed into a digital brown just as an idea. Hope this is useful to some of you out there.
This seems good if I ever wanted to play an advanced type of Hide and Seek
Wow! very well done with a lot of contrasted view and exposure to the camouflage. Movements are great and even the sound testing is well done. Real movements done by a real professional. Look at the attention of details like terrain, inclination and explanation. Well-explained. Good job!
The army spend millions of dollars to copy Marpat makes a great couch camo dude in north Texas dyes it and makes it better for 10 dollars yep sounds right
I just dyed this stuff with some Coffee brown color and it worked extremely awesome as a autumn camouflage just wanna tell. Greetings from germany
Never thought I'd see the day I'd see a Marine in UCP for so long.
You just need a PT reflective belt to complete the look of "HERE I AM!" Army.
Ha
@@Brent0331 here's an idea 4 ya & your camo testing buddy in this video Dye the Grey Universal Camouflage Pattern in2 a real/true Multiterrain all season Universal Camouflage Pattern using Tan, Dark Green & Cocoa (Chocolate) Brown or Regular Dark Brown then test that pattern!
@@Brent0331 If it makes ya happy I'll be saving Gray/Grey UCP strictly 4 concrete jungles do it's Gray/Grey & White Color Scheme!
I have to admit I was surprised by how well the UCP did, but the picks suit was definitely better in those surrounding. Great video!
looks like lil bit like mexican army uniform,blends pretty well good job¡
I tried the apple green on my MOLLE pack and it works so much better and looks better as well. SO far attempts to create a darker green replicating OD haven't been as successful. Really appreciate your videos, Semper Fi!
ACU to a medium green
Taupe 2 tsp
Black 1 tsp
Dark Green 1/2 tsp
Dry Rit Sunshine Orange 1/2 tsp
Adjust the amount of dye +(1 cup of vinegar per gallon) to the quantity of water and cloth.
The green looks good but it’s still a bit to bright for the shadows. Might try a bit darker green or mix it.
I have dyed my UCP with Terracotta brown, a reddish brown. In order to blend in in urban areas, where reddish brown bricks walls were used. These are very popular in my country the Netherlands. Also it was a night camo. Not for IR or image intensifiers night vision equiptment, but for the naked eye. In low light conditions the color red is the one the eye sees, because it is next to infra red. Which the eye can not see. Also handy when illimunated with orange glow sodium lights.
Great stuff, now I'm curious what dying UCP with a coyote shade would work out like.
Great idea
The best dye I've had good results with is Apple Green. This is a really good and pratical idea for people on a budget.
I still can't help but wonder what UCP would look like if you dyed it
Brown, tan or black.🤔🤔
That green color fits JUST RIGHT to the environment...
The old European woodland pattern was the best.
This is great! Nice job with the dye! Thanks for doing a direct comparison between the two shades of camo.
Holy shit, That looks amazing
That's awesome! These military action heroes were really look like real-life LVN Action Heroes!
For the Marines watching, "forest green" is the crayon flavor to use for the dye.
SF brothers!
The Broke Mountain Biker 😏
Brent, another great video! I even replayed it and still couldn't find you guys. S/F.
Works pretty good bro!! Although, I also would’ve thought of this if I wasn’t at 1S either lol!!!!!
BURN!
I think Renaissance Marine has dyed nylon gear like nylon Malice Rucksaks, etc...I know he dyed some 3 color desert fatigues with a green Rit dye and at least the one pair looked REALLY good. So yeah, Renaissance Marine has done stuff like this, but again Bruce's UCP fatigues look awesome in that environment !
*Everybody's gangsta until the trees start walking*
I've done this. It works pretty well. The hard part is getting the nylon gear to take the dye. it tends to stick to the lighter color.
Good idea to reuse UCP...but it's basically Cadpat when greened up.....they use the same digital pattern....as does Marpat...just different colours.
Desert marpat dyed is even better in summer. Also more versatile, as properly dyed it has lots of brown. More contrast.
any desert pattern will do
i use acid dyes now, no salt, just vinegar. You should dye nylons now like gear and ECWCS Level 5 softshells brown/tan. Looks great in nightvision.
Better than that awful "blend in with nothing" all grey ACUs that were forced on the Army in 2006...they were only useful if the Army decided to occupy the Moon.
"if the Army decided to occupy the Moon" - Say, now there's an idea... let's do this!
@@30AndHatingIt Sorry, Space Force already has it covered.
How it went down was the Marines decided, "hey, time for a new camo. Bdu is about 2 decades old and we need to keep up with technology and research", so they adopted desert and woodland versions of cadpat. Army looked at the Marines cool new uniforms and wanted new uniforms too, but heaven forbid the army does the same thing after the Corps has done it. Army also wanted to one up the Marines by adopting a "universal" camo, but that entire concept is flawed from the start. So army starts testing 5 or 6 new camo patterns that were actually decent, and were holding a competion for new army camo pattern. Ucp wasn't a part of any of this. What eventually became scorpion was selected as the winner of this competition. Out of nowhere, ucp is introduced, and is adopted citing test results of its IR signature blending in and there fore being supior for night operations against a neere peer opponent. Guess what? Most military operations are done in daylight. To the suprise of nobody, ucp failed miserably in just about every environment during daylight. To remedy this, since we were still very much active in the middle east at this point, army starts issuing scorpion uniforms to troops deploying to Afghanistan. Congress is watching this entire time and sees the money wasted on trying to develop a universal camo pattern, and passes an act that the army is no long allowed to spend money on camo pattern development and any new pattern the adopt has to be an existing pattern or ots from the private sector. Jump forward almost a decade, army is still stuck with a standard issue camo pattern that literally doesn't work any where. So, due to congress telling them to stop camo development, the army ends up adopting multicam as is camo pattern, still stuck on the failed concept of one pattern for every environment.
@@isaachousley325 the Marine woodland digital and desert camo patterns are excellent....I know they must have laughed their asses off after seeing the ACU in 2006...I remember back at Ft. Hood we went on our first FTX wearing our newly issued ACUs...we stood out like ghosts in the woodline...lots of fun pics were taken showing how "great" our ACUs blended in with the environment out in the field.
@@isaachousley325 The idea of universal camo is about as funny as a universal haircut for men and women (yeah yeah I know, Terminator Dark Fate...) or ketchup being a universal flavor for all food, including ice cream and milk and sushi.
I subscribed to Bruce's channel. I checked it out and it was good to go.
TY Sir.
First time I've ever seen camo that fooled me, that's some predator shit right there.
What a great idea! I will look at all my old ACUs differently from now on! Thanks guys
Wow, that's as good as ATACS FG and almost as good as Pencott Greenzone.
So happy to see this tested out! I’ve seen people dying this camo, excited to see it tested out. Once again, great job.
now it looks like the singapore SAF uniform
Just did a molle ii medium bag, with some vinger, salt, BOILING water, and one bottle of the green stuff. Boiling for 75minutes, with 5 times where I re-arranged the bag. Worked out very well. Hang dried it outside for a day, first I dumped cold water all over it. Now that it's dry, I will wash it in cold water.
My favorite part was when he said gucciflage