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Doc
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Oh fark Im going to have to disagree with sticky, no more chews in Pompey for me now
anyone attached to SAS wear the sand beret, like anyone attached to Airborne wear maroon. SF sigs only get SF pay if they pass UKSF selection, I also think they are mega strick in only allowing lads who have passed selection to serve. If SF sigs get into 264 proper and want to goto 22 as a trooper they can only do so for 3 years and then they have to revert back to 264. One of the quirks of Hereford. (This was the case when my mate was there in the mid nineties but maybe different now)
I nearly got sent to Hereford sickbay via 59 for an attachment and got told I'd have to wear the sand lid with naval capbadge, didnt matter though as I didnt go. I also think the figure on the capbadge has a small strip of harry black across its eyes
anyone know what this new units beret colour is going to be?
Royal Sigs

anyone attached to SAS wear the sand beret, like anyone attached to Airborne wear maroon. SF sigs only get SF pay if they pass UKSF selection, I also think they are mega strick in only allowing lads who have passed selection to serve. If SF sigs get into 264 proper and want to goto 22 as a trooper they can only do so for 3 years and then they have to revert back to 264. One of the quirks of Hereford. (This was the case when my mate was there in the mid nineties but maybe different now)
I nearly got sent to Hereford sickbay via 59 for an attachment and got told I'd have to wear the sand lid with naval capbadge, didnt matter though as I didnt go. I also think the figure on the capbadge has a small strip of harry black across its eyes
anyone know what this new units beret colour is going to be?
Royal Sigs

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Doc
- Guest

So whereabouts on your list is this regiment? Note it's a rifle green beret with a very wide silk band around it?flynn101 wrote:Just thought this might be helpful
United Kingdom
The colours are as follows:
Khaki — Foot Guards, Household Cavalry, Honourable Artillery Company, Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment, Royal Anglian Regiment, Green Howards
Light grey — Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps
Brown — King's Royal Hussars
Black — Royal Tank Regiment
Dark (Rifle) green — Devonshire and Dorset Light Infantry, Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry, Light Infantry, Royal Green Jackets, Royal Gurkha Rifles
Maroon — Parachute Regiment, other troops serving in airborne role (not necessarily jump qualified)
Beige — Special Air Service
Sky blue — Army Air Corps
Cypress green — Intelligence Corps
Scarlet — Royal Military Police
Green — Adjutant General's Corps
Navy blue — all other Army units (except Scottish and Irish line infantry regiments), Royal Navy, Royal Marines who are not commando-qualified
Commando green — commando-qualified Royal Marines, other commando-qualified troops serving in commando units
RAF blue — Royal Air Force (including RAF Regiment)
Members of the Royal Tank Regiment, Army Air Corps, Parachute Regiment and SAS never wear any other form of uniform headgear except the beret (i.e. they do not wear peaked caps). Troops from other services, regiments or corps on attachment to units with distinctive coloured berets often wear those berets (with their own cap badge). Colonels, brigadiers and generals usually continue to wear the beret of the regiment or corps to which they used to belong with the cap badge distinctive to their rank. The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers and Royal Welch Fusiliers wear a coloured feather hackle on the beret.

Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam!
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Doc
- Guest

You can spend months establishing the tradtitions of the British amry then you'll come across some twat like me who'll show you a photograph like this one below which will have significant differences in rank insignia, dress, and blow all your theories out of the water.
The beauty of our regimental heritage.

Only one of these is a corporal - the other is a lance corporal. It doesn't take a genius to work out which is which but why? There's another major uniform difference which isn't so easily spotted but can be seen very well here:

There are other differences as well, and every unit you ever come across will have something in contrast to the 'standard' uniform, accoutrements and insignia.
The beauty of our regimental heritage.

Only one of these is a corporal - the other is a lance corporal. It doesn't take a genius to work out which is which but why? There's another major uniform difference which isn't so easily spotted but can be seen very well here:

There are other differences as well, and every unit you ever come across will have something in contrast to the 'standard' uniform, accoutrements and insignia.
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam!


