Originally posted by bryan gibson:
Large merc outfits that have been diuscussed here were the FFL, Germanies Outlander units, Hessians and so on...these were nationally supported units. Mercenary in that they were not regular troops, but in most respects like the FFL...funded, supported, and operated like a regular out fit.
The Canadian cases from WWI are interesting though - here people like Timothy Eaton and Lord Strathcona raised *mostly at their own expense* units that they equiped but which got subsumed into the national army during the war, sometimes with minor or moderate re-equipping (converting cavalry to armoured cars, for instance). In the case of Eaton, he did big things for anyone injured or who served or who was killed (for the families). So these were not really paid for by the state, but they fought for the state.
In essence, what I'm getting at is they all support a uniform standard as well as kit and dress, for the reasons of logistics, just as would any large unit.
This is the point. Any large unit that can afford to will (cultural reasons perhaps withstanding) harmonize logistics for efficiencies.
Some 'warrioresque' cultures may have merc units that do have individual differentiation in kit, willing to live with the logistical issues.
In other cases, their will be 'issue' gear, and then mercs with other resources (or those forces to find them when company resources aren't enough) will supplement with their own gear.
Let me give you a non-Merc real world example. I knew a Vietnam Vet - 3 tours, one as military police, two infantry. He explained to me about all the problems they had with the M-16. So they tended to acquire other gov't issue weapons: M3 grease guns, .45 Thompson (quite popular), M-14, etc. Then someone found out and they were of course supposed to be using the jam-jam-alot M-16. He told me they cleaned them often 4 times a day, and in a firefight there would be a clear lull where the M-16s started to go out of service. He explained the M-60 gunner used to take up the slack because that's when the enemy (being no idiot) would push. Anyway, some brass hats found out about the use of other issue weapons from prior times, and confiscated them all. But the problems with the M16 had not gone. So other solutions were required. Soldiers 'acquired' other weapons. My friend had his family send him a Remington pump action. They actually shipped him ammo in boxes from home as part of his regular mailings. He carried this to supplement the M-16.
So, that's the kind of thing you'd see with Mercs. If issue had 'issues' or issue was sparse, they'd pick up their own kit from somewhere. In a different but related vein, wealthy mercs could well buy extra things like advanced optics or NVGs, better than standard fatigues (smart fabrics), body armour, etc. They'd still *mostly* look uniform, but they'd have extra bits. Not to be flashy, but to make the dirty, sweaty, dangerous job easier or safer.
performance. Company memos and announcements, maybe?
Why can I see a wall in the front office of the Merc unit with plaques reading 'Mercenary of the Month: Sgt. John Williams, 1st Pltn, 3 Sqd' and the like....?