Posted on Nov 15, 2014
SGM Senior Adviser, National Communications
11.6K
32
30
3
3
0
Ca06b676
Military people face a lot of inspections--personal, equipment, weapons, quarters, you name it. Military people are ingenious with shortcuts and solutions...please share some of yours, even if you think they are obsolete they might help a modern soldier, or just bring a smile to an older one!
Posted in these groups: 28f70264 TipsLeadership abstract 007 Leadership93df41c6 Inspections
Avatar feed
Responses: 18
CW5 Desk Officer
5
5
0
First tip is to have a buddy check you over - you, your equipment, whatever's being inspected.

Second tip - now essentially obsolete - is to put a high (spit) shine on those boots and low quarters. I would tell you my secrets, learned in the 82d (for guard mount) and at the Old Guard (for everything) ... no, I guess I won't tell.
(5)
Comment
(0)
SGM Senior Adviser, National Communications
SGM (Join to see)
>1 y
I used Coconut Oil for an instant shine! Learned that in Panama!
(1)
Reply
(0)
SFC Boots Attaway
SFC Boots Attaway
>1 y
CW5 (Join to see) , you and I both know that we will NEVER tell the Honor Guard secret to a perfect spit shine without using a floor wax. Right Monty?
(1)
Reply
(0)
CW5 Desk Officer
CW5 (Join to see)
>1 y
Amen, Boots. Amen.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SPC Jeffrey Reese
SPC Jeffrey Reese
>1 y
Any one that used Floor wax was an idiot! That just ruined their boots! Cotton balls Lincoln Black boot polish or Kiwi Black, neutral, a Bic lighter, cotton balls, Ice water, cotton T-shirt will get you a great base and a very good start to a spit shined boot!
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SGT 94 E Radio Comsec Repairer
4
4
0
Great question, SGM (Join to see)! I'm looking forward to reading others' responses.

For ASUs (service uniform):

- After the first time your uniform passes inspection, use Saran Wrap and a Sharpie to create a template for setting up your uniform the next time. While your uniform is still set up, just lay a 2-foot-wide piece of clear plastic wrap over the chest area of the uniform and use permanent marker to outline your name plate, unit awards, ribbons, badges, etc. The next time you need to set up your service uniform, use the template to ensure every element is lined up to inspection standard.

- Keep belt buckles and other shiny objects wrapped in plastic wrap until literally the hour of inspection to prevent scratches and smudges. Keep Q-tips and cotton balls handy to shine them up (bring extra cotton balls for your buddies).

- At Fort Campbell, I kept my jump boots' high gloss by slipping them into knee-high stockings before placing them in their storage box. You can get the knee-high stockings at Walgreens for less than a dollar.


Oh, and for room/latrine inspections, after the area has been cleaned, use Pine Sol in a spray bottle to hit up the doorways and latrine walls. If it smells clean, it IS clean!
(4)
Comment
(0)
SPC Donald Moore
SPC Donald Moore
>1 y
Plastic wrap can stretch or shrink or get lost. The best way is to have a good ruler and check all the measurements every time you have change it. Know (or look it up) how your gear is supposed to be set.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SGT 94 E Radio Comsec Repairer
SGT (Join to see)
>1 y
SPC Donald Moore, I know the measurements to set up my uniform, but there's a certain way that it must be adjusted to look good on each female's form. It's not as cut and dried as it is for males.
(1)
Reply
(0)
SFC Michael Houlihan
SFC Michael Houlihan
>1 y
Setting up a uniform is too easy. Get AR 670-1 look up the placement of each item write it on a 3X5 card. Get a ruler measure each item then attach to uniform. Much easier then plastic and markers.
(0)
Reply
(0)
SGT 94 E Radio Comsec Repairer
SGT (Join to see)
>1 y
SFC Michael Houlihan, I'm not sure what assumptions you're making, but I can assure you that I already do all of the things you mentioned, except writing them on a 3x5 card... I don't have to write them down because I know them from memory. If you had ever read the regs regarding female uniforms back when you were still in, and if you'd actually helped a female set up her uniform, you'd have seen that there's a huge amount of variance depending on the size/shape of her chest on any given day, in relation to her waist size. It can vary a great deal.

All but one of my Soldiers has been male, and I am well-versed in setting up their ASUs. I've actually set up the males' uniforms while they were still on the hangar, because the reg is very precise in regard to where items are placed in relation to pockets and such. For females, it's a totally different story.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
SGM Senior Adviser, National Communications
3
3
0
Here's a secret I never figured out until just before I departed from Korea in 1979. I volunteered to be the barracks sergeant there as an E5(P) because none of the E6s wanted it--they were too busy having a good time in the 'ville. It was a pretty sad situation...but the barracks Sergeant got his own room...with a bathroom in a new barracks...so I jumped at it. I'm no saint, but it was a crazy place where your "houseman" laid out your TA50, you paid people to clean your weapon and carry your tray at the mess hall...totally screwy from my point of view...but hey, I was in Seoul not 1st ID...and could go to Itaewana on the weekends....
Well, when we had inspections the dogs came through looking for pot. We knew it was there as we could often smell it in between the morning kimchi and the open sewers outside. Some rooms had 2, 4, or six people in bunks. KATUSA soldiers had 6 or 8 in one room. The dogs would enter a room, whine, and act nervous, but nothing would be found anywhere.
Until one day. Because animals like humans, rarely look up. The dog handler barely noticed some clear fishing line in a corner of the white walls, hanging from the ceiling. And he pulled it. Overhead, inside the nice new suspended ceiling, attached to the fishing line, was a small packet of marijuana. When the CO and dogs showed up in one room, a fellow in the next room would pull his end of the fishing line, shifting the pot to his room's ceiling. The same thing happened in reverse when the CO and dog left and entered the other room. Went on for nearly a year. Pretty Slick!
(3)
Comment
(0)
SFC Brian Mattson
SFC Brian Mattson
>1 y
study all the time But always invest in a extra uniform, LCE/LBE, Helmet Cover, and boots and always keep them inspection ready and if you needed help in achieving this standard come see me, I will help you get there also have you Class A's Ready
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close