- Joined
- Apr 25, 2019
- Messages
- 4,166
- Points
- 234

I worked in army logistics, mate. I saw MG3's in mint condition sent off to the scrapper, whilst the unit in which I'd completed my basic training had to make do with worn-out machine guns with production stamps from the 1970s. I saw countless man-hours poured into the maintaining of engines, the changing of batteries, even washes of vehicles that had never seen an exercise ground.2- Because mothballed equipment is often only partly serviceable i.e it needs generaly an important overhaul/maintenance to get ready, something that is expensive by itself. For example, for an armored vehicle, all hydraulic have to be checked, any air in the system has to be chased away and hydraulic fluids have to be reloaded, engines have to be checked, track system has to be greased and overhauled.
Also procurements are often industrial pork barrels and mothballed vehciles are often coming from tranches not needed and intended to be sold/scrapped later
It's probably not gotten better since. The worst part being, most of this mismanagement is the fault of tinpot napoleons (as we used to call them) that wouldn't show any initiative or critical thinking and inflated their importance by declining requests just because they could.