M05

This article is about the military camouflage patterns. For the football club, see 1. FSV Mainz 05. For the group of drugs, see ATC code M05. For the highway, see M05 highway (Ukraine). For other uses, see M5.

The M05 family of military camouflage patterns are used by the Finnish Defence Forces on uniforms and other equipment. The pattern is licensed by the Finnish Defence Forces and has recently become available to the public as of 26 September, 2016.[1] The first M05 items were issued to troops around 2007, and have nearly universally replaced the M91 pattern in service use.

Woodland pattern

M05 woodland pattern
Finnish soldiers wearing M05 with a CV90.

The basis of the planning of the new pattern are various photographs of Finnish forests taken by the Finnish Forest Research Institute. The photographs were then digitally edited by the VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland's Information Technology Institute and concentrated into a 4-colour pattern representative of a Finnish forest. Dark charcoal grey, was added to the pattern in order to represent shadowed areas in a forest.

The pattern was field tested several times, leading to small changes. The new pattern was considered to be significantly better than the old M62 and M91 camouflage patterns.

The woodland pattern is used on at least the following FDF equipment:

Snow pattern

M05 snow pattern

The snow pattern is a 2-colour version of the M05 woodland pattern. The pattern has been observed to disrupt a soldier's profile so that the new suit cannot be detected at a few dozens of meters' distance in dense snowfall.

The snow pattern is used on the following FDF equipment:

Cold weather pattern

M05 cold weather pattern

On the cold weather suit (Pakkaspuku) the woodland pattern's light green colour has been replaced by grey, which is a more common colour in the autumn and winter.

The cold weather pattern is used on the following FDF equipment:

Urban camouflage pattern

At the same time Finnish Defence Forces made new grey-brown camouflage pattern for urban areas, but it is not yet used in clothing or gear.

Desert camouflage pattern

M04 Desert pattern

Originally taken in use before other gear of M05 family and is officially called M04 although pattern has the same basic features and looks as other M05 family patterns. The first M04 items were taken in use around 2003 by Finnish contingent of UN peacekeeping mission in Eritrea (UNMEE) as a test pattern called K2004.[3] K2004 garments were printed into heavier cloth than current M04 that is printed to Ripstop cloth.[4] Currently the pattern is used by FDF international forces in Afghanistan (ISAF). It was also used UN operations in Chad and Central African Republic (MINURCAT) and Lebanon (UNIFIL II).[4] Also Finnish officers serving in arid climate as UN Military Observers use M04 pattern equipment.

The desert pattern is used on at least the following FDF equipment:

Russian 'lookalike'

The commercially produced Russian 'Yeger' camouflage pattern, first came to public notice during the 2008 South Ossetia war where it was seen being worn by MVD Internal Troops.[5] 'Yeger' is a four-colour camouflage, comprising irregularly outlined black, dark green and light green blocks on a wood brown background. It is very similar in appearance to Finnish M05 woodland camouflage pattern.

The resemblance between 'Yeger' and M05 woodland has given rise to numerous claims that Russia has copied the Finnish camouflage pattern. The claims were outlined by Helsingin Sanomat in an article titled "Russians under suspicion for having purloined camouflage design of Finnish Defence Forces" [6] and Taloussanomat in couple articles.[7][8] Also US newspaper The New York Times made a story about the claims November 20, 2008.[9]

According to military camouflage pattern and uniforms collectors page kamouflage.net the resemblance between the two camouflage patterns is undeniable; however, there are also significant differences between them. As an example kamouflage.net gives that:

According to kamouflage.net, it cannot be said that Russian 'Yeger' is a direct copy of Finnish M05 in the same way that Chinese Type 03 Plateau Camouflage is a direct copy of German Flecktarn, in which case there is a direct correspondence between the shapes of the two camouflage patterns. As and end state kamouflage.net states that, "Russian Yeger pattern is at most an Finnish M05 'lookalike'".[10]

Polish website rus.mil.pl which specialises on Russian military, however writes that 'Yeger' is an identical copy of M05 pattern-wise: its aspect ratio and the resolution of the colour spots are identical to M05. They also criticize that the previous comparisons by kamouflage.net are based on poor quality photographs, while they themselves compared the Russian-produced uniform itself to the M05.[11]

References

Notes
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.