• exu
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    15915 hours ago

    Military grade is bullshit marketing. Basically anything is military grade

    • @[email protected]
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      4813 hours ago

      It depends, sometimes milspec is very demanding. For example, crayons need to be non-toxic even if you eat the entire box.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 hours ago

        Specifically in electronics there are actually milspec versions of some microchips, different from the consumer grade ones (they have a wider range of operating temperatures plus I also believe higher resistence to electromagnetic radiation and mechanical vibration, similar to microchips “for automobile automotive use”), but I suspect that when it comes to actual consumer electronics devices the words “military grade” are not a protected tag (as in, electronic devices said to be “military grade” are not forced by regulation to have certain characteristics) so those words are generally marketing bullshit.

      • @[email protected]
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        4614 hours ago

        Military grade means literally nothing. Actual military equipment is “mil spec”, and not something the average consumer needs, or can afford, in most cases.

        Even when military spec equipment is made by the lowest bidder, this stuff still has to be blast proof, bullet proof, work from -60°C to +85°C, be water/dust resistant, and many other requirements depending on what is being made.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 hours ago

          You can definitely get plenty of Mil spec shit, just not what you really expect. My hat is a Swedish army cap worn by some dude named Albert Kempf in Tunisia circa 1991.

          • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost
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            26 hours ago

            Is it possible to show the hat? I kinda wanna see that hat and how it looks after such a long period of use.

            • @[email protected]
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              45 hours ago

              Note it probably hasn’t had constant use cause I only got it a couple months ago, before that it was at a surplus store in Idaho falls. Now it is in SoCal, before Idaho though it could’ve been in a crate for all I know.

          • @SpendsTimeUsefully
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            410 hours ago

            Fair enough, I was thinking more in the direction of electronics, mechanics, etc

            • @[email protected]
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              410 hours ago

              I also have a 1960s wire field phone that they would use in Vietnam. I am still trying to figure out how to get it working with an Aux jack.

    • @[email protected]
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      311 hours ago

      “Military grade” means that it went through one extra round of inspection before it was sent out as far as I’m aware. This round of inspection is basically just putting it through certain weather conditions to simulate “will this survive a deployment”

      • @[email protected]
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        1410 hours ago

        literally Military Grade is just marketing fluff with no standard. Mil-Spec is the real term for meeting military specifications. think ceramic and gold instead of plastic and tin for computer chips.

        • @[email protected]
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          810 hours ago

          Okay I just double checked and you’re totally right. When I was in the military someone had told me there was actually regulations around “military grade” and they were just different from milspec. Technically military grade is supposed to refer to milspec but in the private world they don’t check if it’s actually true or not