January4, 2007:
Making life easier for the troops is often expensive. Take the issue
of lights in tents. Command posts and administrative operations in the field
often operate out of tents. Normally, light is provided by banks of fluorescent
light tubes or incandescent light bulbs. But these are tough to store for
transport because the glass in them is fragile. So the U.S. Army has started
using electroluminescent panels. These are basically fabric panels that, when
plugged in, light up. You can leave them attached to the tent fabric when you
take the tent down. But the panels don't put out as much light as fluorescent
light tubes, and are much more expensive. For example, a electroluminescent
panel that would put light equivalent to a hundred watt incandescent light bulb
would be half a square meter (about 780 square inches) in size, and cost
several hundred dollars. But in a combat zone, any amount of effort and hassle
you can reduce, makes the troops more capable in the face of the enemy.