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Alpha Industries M65 Field Jacket

AbbaDatDeHat

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With the built in hood, they are stiff enough to want to stay up. It takes some work to make them fold down. I think we wore them folded down, but that is so long ago, I can't really remember.

I just checked mine from 1966, and it is folded down. So, that's the way I wore it then (what little I wore it), and how I wear it now. After 54 years, it's nice and soft and wants to stay down.
Hey Peacoat:
I’m curious...i know you were an Officer. Did you guys ever have your field jackets starched shiny and almost like cardboard?
B
 

Doctor Damage

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With the built in hood, they are stiff enough to want to stay up. It takes some work to make them fold down. I think we wore them folded down, but that is so long ago, I can't really remember.

I just checked mine from 1966, and it is folded down. So, that's the way I wore it then (what little I wore it), and how I wear it now. After 54 years, it's nice and soft and wants to stay down.
Did you ever use the built-in hood?
 

Peacoat

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Did you ever use the built-in hood?
No. I only wore it for two months in basic and for four or five days during Survival/Escape and Evasion training at the end of flight school. Neither of those states (Louisiana and Alabama) had weather cold enough for the hood.

So, although mine is over 50 years old, it is excellent condition. New condition, actually, except that it has softened over the years.
 

Doctor Damage

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While listening to a podcast I'm idly trawling around on e-bay and saw this tag for an M-65 coat liner -- check out that manufacturer!!

1507.jpg
 

Peacoat

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Hey Peacoat:
I’m curious...i know you were an Officer. Did you guys ever have your field jackets starched shiny and almost like cardboard?
B
No, never did that. Only wore it in basic and for a few days during escape and evasion/survival training. Nor did I ever see one starched the way you described. We wore flight jackets, which the infantry, armor and artillery generals hated. In fact they disliked almost everything about us.

I was in aviation units which was really nothing like the regular Army. We were laid back and only worried about things that mattered, such as keeping the helicopter well maintained, full of fuel and flying in areas that were free of rocks and other ground debris. Another concern of ours, while in RVN, was never missing a hot meal and never running out of cold beer at the O Club. Let Airborne worry about starching their work uniforms.

Did Marine Corps Officers starch their field jackets? Actually I am surprised you guys got field jackets. They were probably WWII surplus because the Navy spent the money on peacoats and other nice and warm things for their guys. The Marines got what was left over. We were pulling for you guys, but it never did any good.

Semper Fi/De Oppresso Liber
 

AbbaDatDeHat

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No, never did that. Only wore it in basic and for a few days during escape and evasion/survival training. Nor did I ever see one starched the way you described. We wore flight jackets, which the infantry, armor and artillery generals hated. In fact they disliked almost everything about us.

I was in aviation units which was really nothing like the regular Army. We were laid back and only worried about things that mattered, such as keeping the helicopter well maintained, full of fuel and flying in areas that were free of rocks and other ground debris. Another concern of ours, while in RVN, was never missing a hot meal and never running out of cold beer at the O Club. Let Airborne worry about starching their work uniforms.

Did Marine Corps Officers starch their field jackets? Actually I am surprised you guys got field jackets. They were probably WWII surplus because the Navy spent the money on peacoats and other nice and warm things for their guys. The Marines got what was left over. We were pulling for you guys, but it never did any good.

Semper Fi/De Oppresso Liber
Hey P:
Had to laugh thinking back to then.
I figured the starch was a Marine thing. I recall it was usually the upper rank officers like Colonels that did the shiny starch thing with field jackets. They usually had an entourage of lessor shiny guys around them making sure they didn’t get dirty or ruffled. Lol
Everybody else except shitbirds had starched utilities which did look sharp in garrison but i saw no need.
My two M-65s are still going strong after 45+ years.
Just about everything we ever got said Property of the US Army as hand me downs but hey, i’m sure that’s all changed. Lol
Semper Fi P
Be well and safe.
Bowen
 

Peacoat

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Hey P:
Everybody else except shitbirds had starched utilities which did look sharp in garrison but i saw no need.
My two M-65s are still going strong after 45+ years.
Just about everything we ever got said Property of the US Army as hand me downs but hey, i’m sure that’s all changed. Lol
Semper Fi P
Be well and safe.
Bowen
Well now, that puts things in a different light. It means that the Navy spent all of its money on its own sailors, and had to scramble to find a few crumbs for the Corps. So, go to the Army and buy its surplus for 10 cents on the dollar. Problem solved.
 

Doctor Damage

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I think, there could be a difference between the vintage 100% cotton-M65 and the NyCo-M65 in terms of the collar strength?
The weave of the cloth used in the shell changed periodically, or by manufacturer or contract. Some cloth was a twill, other cloth was a non-twill (yeah, I'll dig through my books to find the proper name for what I've seen), and some appeared to be almost a rip-stop. The properties of each, including thickness, was different. I'll have to post some photos.
 

Peacoat

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The weave of the cloth used in the shell changed periodically, or by manufacturer or contract. Some cloth was a twill, other cloth was a non-twill (yeah, I'll dig through my books to find the proper name for what I've seen), and some appeared to be almost a rip-stop. The properties of each, including thickness, was different. I'll have to post some photos.
Yes, the properties of each may have been different, but I think the overriding factor was the bulk of that hood in the collar. The collar has to be rolled down over the pocket containing the hood to make it stay down. And the ends of the collar had to be trained to stay down. That could certainly be affected by the properties of the fabric.

I don't remember our Drill Sergeants (Don Heath and Leonard Rowan) giving us much grief about the position of the collars, so they must have been relatively easy to train.
 

Doctor Damage

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The weave of the cloth used in the shell changed periodically, or by manufacturer or contract. Some cloth was a twill, other cloth was a non-twill (yeah, I'll dig through my books to find the proper name for what I've seen), and some appeared to be almost a rip-stop. The properties of each, including thickness, was different. I'll have to post some photos.
Here's some photos of four different types of weaves on military jackets. In order (zoomed in) they look like a twill, a canvas, a basket weave, and almost a shantung. Photos suggest that all of the military jackets in camo came in the basket weave cloth, irrespective of age.

twill.jpg
canvas.jpg
basket.jpg
shantung.jpg
 

Ernest P Shackleton

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Of those, I would think the basket weave would be best for wind and rain. A tighter weave. I'm surprised they haven't come up with a knock-off, cheaper to manufacture ventile type fabric.
 

Ernest P Shackleton

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I see no difference between Canvas and Basket-weave. Both Panama-weave with the doubled weft and warp.
I hear the term "Basket weave" for the very first time.
Those photos show a clear difference to me. The thread count, if that is a proper term, seems much higher in the basket weave (3rd photo). I'm just using the terms DD used. I believe I have both fabrics, and if you quickly run your fingernails over them, they sound quite different.
 
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Those photos show a clear difference to me. The thread count, if that is a proper term, seems much higher in the basket weave (3rd photo). I'm just using the terms DD used. I believe I have both fabrics, and if you quickly run your fingernails over them, they sound quite different.

I watched again, but with no other result. The collar is vertical Canvas. The lower parts look like diagonal Canvas.

Of course, the weave can be tighter or wider. But I never saw Canvas with more than doubled weft and warp.

1. Levi's type III Canvas
2. 1997s Wrangler Canvas
3. 2019s Storebrand Canvas (coarse and fine)
4. 2019s Canvas baseball cap (maybe single warp, double weft)
 

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Doctor Damage

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I should have said I was going to check a good reference book I have and that the labels I used were preliminary... so time for some clarifications to what I posted earlier!!

I checked this afternoon and what I called 'basket weave' is almost certainly poplin, although the last mil-spec document for these jackets refers to the cloth as oxford ("cloth, oxford, cotton warp and nylin filling"). Poplin and oxford are similar and the differences are more for tailors and designers to fuss about, not regular joes like us. (I used 'basket weave' simply because I couldn't think of poplin earlier this afternoon. I should never have used that term, it's a very specific type of cloth and looks much different.)

Shantung is a rough sort of silk cloth with those lumps of thread which make random bumps, so obviously the fourth photo I posted is not a shantung, although visually there is a resemblance. I guess that one's just an example of a particularly poor quality run of cloth.

None of the photos I posted nor any in my photo file show a really serious gabardine/twill, i.e. the unmistakable diagonal ridges. Some kinda have it a bit, but none of blatant. For what it's worth, the reproduction jackets I've seen, mainly Rothco and Mil-Tec, use a gabardine/twill with clear diagonal ridges.
 

Doctor Damage

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...The collar has to be rolled down over the pocket containing the hood to make it stay down...
Does the hood stay inside the collar or can it drop down the back of the coat between the shell and the liner? I only ask because in some photos the hood is clearly rolled up inside the collar and in others the collar is so thin the hood either was removed or shoved down the back. I have an Israeli bomber jacket in which the foldaway hood goes down the back. In the two photos below it looks like the hoods might be down the back.

1432.jpg 1522.jpg
 

Doctor Damage

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I watched again, but with no other result. The collar is vertical Canvas. The lower parts look like diagonal Canvas.

Of course, the weave can be tighter or wider. But I never saw Canvas with more than doubled weft and warp.

1. Levi's type III Canvas
2. 1997s Wrangler Canvas
3. 2019s Storebrand Canvas (coarse and fine)
4. 2019s Canvas baseball cap (maybe single warp, double weft)
That red cloth you posted looks like the basket weave in cotton the interweb is throwing up. Anyways, I used the term mistakenly in my post.
 

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