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FROG GLOVES ARE IN STOCK! Sizes small to XXL!  These things are absolutely amazing for work, shooting and a ton of other tasks. Better yet they come in brand new condition for just $19.99! USMC FROG gloves are one of those pieces of modern military gear that look simple until you understand why they exist. FROG stands for Flame Resistant Organizational Gear, a system developed for the Marine Corps during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The reason was brutal and practical: improvised explosive devices, vehicle fires, fuel burns, and blast-related flash injuries were causing serious burns to Marines. The Corps needed gear that could protect more than just the torso. Hands, face, neck, and arms were especially vulnerable, because those areas were often exposed while riding in vehicles, operating weapons, climbing in and out of trucks, or working around hot metal and burning debris. That is where FROG gloves come in. The FROG system was developed around 2006 and began fielding to Marines in 2007. The system included items like flame-resistant shirts, trousers, balaclavas, and gloves. FROG I focused on core flame protection items like the balaclava, long sleeve shirt, and gloves, while FROG II added outer combat layers such as flame-resistant combat shirts and trousers. The idea was layered protection: not one magic piece of clothing, but a complete system designed to reduce burn injuries from head to toe. (CIE Hub) The gloves are especially important because your hands are usually the first thing exposed in a bad situation. A Marine needs to grab a weapon, open a door, pull a buddy out of a vehicle, climb over debris, handle hot equipment, or keep moving even after a blast. Regular gloves might protect against abrasion, but they are not necessarily built to handle flame, heat, or flash exposure. FROG gloves were meant to combine protection with enough dexterity to still do the job. Most surplus FROG gloves you see today are coyote or desert tan, although shades can vary by contractor and production run. They usually have reinforced palms, textured grip surfaces, adjustable wrist straps, extended gauntlets, and reinforced areas around the palm or knuckles. Some examples are described as flame and cut resistant, and many were made by different U.S. government contractors rather than one single manufacturer. (Venture Surplus) That contractor variation is part of why surplus examples can feel a little different from pair to pair. Some are stiffer. Some have a softer leather palm. Some have slightly different stitching, color, wrist closures, or gauntlet length. That is normal with issued gear. Military procurement is about meeting a specification, not making every item feel identical like a commercial fashion product. The FROG glove also sits in an interesting place between aviation-style flame-resistant gloves and ground combat gloves. Some surplus listings note that certain National Stock Numbers trace back to flying personnel, but the gloves were also adopted into the Marine Corps FROG system as combat-use flame-resistant gloves. That makes sense: aviation gloves had already been designed around flame protection and dexterity, two things ground troops suddenly needed more of during IED-heavy combat deployments. (Tactical Gear Ammo) For collectors, these gloves represent a very specific era of Marine Corps history. They are tied to MRAPs, convoy operations, desert MARPAT, coyote gear, IED warfare, and the huge shift in equipment that happened during the Global War on Terror. Earlier generations of military gloves were often just leather work gloves, wool liners, trigger-finger mittens, or flight gloves. FROG gloves belong to the era where flame resistance became a front-line infantry concern, not just something for pilots or vehicle crews. They are not flashy. They are not covered in plastic armor or aggressive branding. They are not trying to look tactical for Instagram. They are a practical answer to a very ugly battlefield problem.
FROG GLOVES ARE IN STOCK! Sizes small to XXL! These things are absolutely amazing for work, shooting and a ton of other tasks. Better yet they come in brand new condition for just $19.99! USMC FROG gloves are one of those pieces of modern military gear that look simple until you understand why they exist. FROG stands for Flame Resistant Organizational Gear, a system developed for the Marine Corps during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The reason was brutal and practical: improvised explosive devices, vehicle fires, fuel burns, and blast-related flash injuries were causing serious burns to Marines. The Corps needed gear that could protect more than just the torso. Hands, face, neck, and arms were especially vulnerable, because those areas were often exposed while riding in vehicles, operating weapons, climbing in and out of trucks, or working around hot metal and burning debris. That is where FROG gloves come in. The FROG system was developed around 2006 and began fielding to Marines in 2007. The system included items like flame-resistant shirts, trousers, balaclavas, and gloves. FROG I focused on core flame protection items like the balaclava, long sleeve shirt, and gloves, while FROG II added outer combat layers such as flame-resistant combat shirts and trousers. The idea was layered protection: not one magic piece of clothing, but a complete system designed to reduce burn injuries from head to toe. (CIE Hub) The gloves are especially important because your hands are usually the first thing exposed in a bad situation. A Marine needs to grab a weapon, open a door, pull a buddy out of a vehicle, climb over debris, handle hot equipment, or keep moving even after a blast. Regular gloves might protect against abrasion, but they are not necessarily built to handle flame, heat, or flash exposure. FROG gloves were meant to combine protection with enough dexterity to still do the job. Most surplus FROG gloves you see today are coyote or desert tan, although shades can vary by contractor and production run. They usually have reinforced palms, textured grip surfaces, adjustable wrist straps, extended gauntlets, and reinforced areas around the palm or knuckles. Some examples are described as flame and cut resistant, and many were made by different U.S. government contractors rather than one single manufacturer. (Venture Surplus) That contractor variation is part of why surplus examples can feel a little different from pair to pair. Some are stiffer. Some have a softer leather palm. Some have slightly different stitching, color, wrist closures, or gauntlet length. That is normal with issued gear. Military procurement is about meeting a specification, not making every item feel identical like a commercial fashion product. The FROG glove also sits in an interesting place between aviation-style flame-resistant gloves and ground combat gloves. Some surplus listings note that certain National Stock Numbers trace back to flying personnel, but the gloves were also adopted into the Marine Corps FROG system as combat-use flame-resistant gloves. That makes sense: aviation gloves had already been designed around flame protection and dexterity, two things ground troops suddenly needed more of during IED-heavy combat deployments. (Tactical Gear Ammo) For collectors, these gloves represent a very specific era of Marine Corps history. They are tied to MRAPs, convoy operations, desert MARPAT, coyote gear, IED warfare, and the huge shift in equipment that happened during the Global War on Terror. Earlier generations of military gloves were often just leather work gloves, wool liners, trigger-finger mittens, or flight gloves. FROG gloves belong to the era where flame resistance became a front-line infantry concern, not just something for pilots or vehicle crews. They are not flashy. They are not covered in plastic armor or aggressive branding. They are not trying to look tactical for Instagram. They are a practical answer to a very ugly battlefield problem.

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