• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
The Loadout Room

The Loadout Room

Professional Gear Reviews

Hardcore Gear and Adventure

Menu
  • Shooting
        • Pistol
        • Pistol Accessories
        • Rifle
        • Rifle Accessories
        • Shotgun
        • Machine Guns
        • Air Guns
        • Ammunition
        • Optics and Sights
        • Weapon Lights
        • Tips & How-To
        • Concealed Carry
        • Holsters
        • Suppressors
        • Precision Rifle Shooting
        • Firearms Training
        • AR-15 Red DotAR-15 vs AR-10: Choosing the Right Rifle and the Right Glass
        • SIG RattlerSIG Sauer MCX Rattler CO2 BB Air Gun: Big Fun 3 Rounds at a Time
        • Beretta pistolPyramyd AIR’s Beretta 92A1 CO2 Powered Full-Auto BB Pistol
        • m243The M24: America’s Headhunter
    • Close
  • Gear Reviews
      • Mission Gear
      • Camping Gear
      • Survival Gear
      • Medical Gear
      • Adventure & Travel
      • Knives & Tools
      • Overland
      • Disaster Preparedness
      • Footwear
      • Womens Gear & Clothing
        • RyobiBattery Power Stations: So Good, You Can Toss Your Gas Generator
        • Viking-Bags Logo 2Pic of the Day, Viking Motorcycle Bags 45L Tactical XL Bag
        • Hunting in TexasThese 5 ATV Dealers Will Get You Ready For Hunting Season in Texas
        • ac65a540-2ef3-4598-8d11-afdf53f46e94.__CR0,0,970,600_PT0_SX970_V1___Streamlight ProTac Rail Mount HL-X: A Thoroughly Bright Review
    • Close
  • Men’s Lifestyle
      • Fitness
      • EDC
      • Eyewear
      • Watches
      • Electronics & Technology
      • Downtime
      • Mens Clothing & Accessories
      • Manly Skills
      • Style & Grooming
      • Gentleman Drinks
      • Crate Club
        • Viking-Bags Logo 2Pic of The Day, Viking Tool and Handlebar Bag
        • Bison StewEssential Provisions: Clean Fuel for the Hunt
        • RyobiBattery Power Stations: So Good, You Can Toss Your Gas Generator
        • Whipped CoffeeFriday Coffee Break: Dalgona Coffee, Field-Ready
    • Close
  • News
  • Video Demo
  • Buying Guides
  • Shop
  • Advertise
News

DoD spending $1m to study 100-pound soldier load

April 25, 2012 by Jack Murphy 16 Comments

About time if you ask me.  We’ve let risk mitigation consume our lives to the point of getting between our soldiers and victory.  Our Infantry and SOF units should be light, agile, and masters of maneuver warfare.  They should not be stumbling around in so much kit that they can hardly walk or hidden inside some armored vehicle praying that they don’t get IED’d as they race from point A to point B.  At that point, you’ve already lost the war.

A team mate of mine was doing some joint training with the Thai Rangers years ago.  The Thais were amazed at the equipment that American soldiers carried.  There was so much of it they asked, “how do you move while wearing all that stuff?”  My team mate replied, “We don’t.” -Jack

Yes, you could take that headline two ways… I just saw that a team of kinesiology researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst just received a 2.5-year, $975,000 grant through the Navy Health Research Center in the Department of Defense to study how the average 100-pound equipment load carried by soldiers affects their survivability, likelihood of injury and ability to carry out missions.

Have a look at the release from UMASS, AMHERST:

“Load is not a new issue for field commanders to consider,” says Van Emmerik, who is director of UMass Amherst’s Sensory-Motor Control Laboratory. “But while past studies typically focused on how load affects gait and the lower body, we will for the first time look at how the upper body, trunk and head coordinate in a soldier who is burdened by a heavy load, which is a fundamentally different and a more complex situation.”

Doctoral candidate Christopher Palmer, an Army employee who is an expert in motor control and military performance and a key member of Van Emmerik’s team, adds, “To us, gait is just the beginning. We’ll introduce a visual search task and track the coordination of upper body, postural control and visual acuity. No study has yet added all these, plus other factors, together in a realistic way to look at how load affects the soldier’s ability to perceive threats, his or her operational effectiveness and survivability in combat.”

Read the rest at MilitaryTimes.

Share This

More From The Loadout Room

Comments

Primary Sidebar

Most Read

  • Olight Warrior X4 Review: The Best Flashlight My Dad Never Had
    Olight Warrior X4 Review: The Best Flashlight My Dad Never Had
  • SIG Sauer MCX Rattler CO2 BB Air Gun: Big Fun 3 Rounds at a Time
    SIG Sauer MCX Rattler CO2 BB Air Gun: Big Fun 3 Rounds at a Time
  • Battery Power Stations: So Good, You Can Toss Your Gas Generator
    Battery Power Stations: So Good, You Can Toss Your Gas Generator
  • UF PRO Striker TT Combat Pants: Built for the Tropics, Ready for the Fight
    UF PRO Striker TT Combat Pants: Built for the Tropics, Ready for the Fight
  • These 5 ATV Dealers Will Get You Ready For Hunting Season in Texas
    These 5 ATV Dealers Will Get You Ready For Hunting Season in Texas

Find Us on Facebook

The Loadout Room

Recent Comments

  • Jakayla Ali on AR-15 vs AR-10: Choosing the Right Rifle and the Right Glass
  • Ayanna Bond on China unveils laser “assault rifle” that can set your clothes on fire from 800 meters
  • Camryn Burton on AR-15 vs AR-10: Choosing the Right Rifle and the Right Glass

Latest From SOFREP

Headline

Morning Brief: Trump Signals Iran Deal, CIA Targets PLA, Ukraine Disrupts Russian Starlink

News

Evening Brief: NATO Expectations Change, US Boards Sanctioned Tanker, SOCOM Sources Intel

Featured

Navy SEAL Sniper Mindset Tips: Self-Talk

Op-Ed

Growing US Vulnerability Under Trump: Chinese and Russian Perceptions

Military Content Group

© Copyright 2026 Military Content Group · All Rights Reserved.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertisers