Re: Does price hurt your authenticity?
Well I added up the CW cost of my kit using the actual prices the army charged as listed in CRRC2.
And what I would have been issued or acquired on my own came to about 5 months of a private's salary. And that didn't include personal incidentals. (or the fact that some of the real issue items were junk)
Now the government isn't providing any of my gear so it isn't exactly a wash but it is obvious that it wasn't cheap to get a soldier into the field and then keep him there.
The problem we modern reenactors face is that nobody but us foots the bill, you do need an absolute minimum kit to take the field and most of us have a limited budget.
The question becomes not do you compromise (unless you're willing to spend an extended time to get into the field) but what items is it smartest to compromise on?
And yes I know it could cost more in the 'long run' (trading out lesser itmes for better) but what you are dealing with is not necessarily absolute dollars but what is referred to in business as 'cash flow'. When are the dollars available to be spent?
And financing them on a credit card (to get it ALL NOW) might actually cost more due to interest charges in the long run.
There is the plus side of ecomonics though that will work in the favor of future generations of reenectors. As the demand for high quality items continues to increase, manufacturing 'scale' will start to kick in and also competition for the dollars spent. Both forces will tend to drive prices down (in relative terms).
Sort of a reenactor's 'Moore's Law'.
Well I added up the CW cost of my kit using the actual prices the army charged as listed in CRRC2.
And what I would have been issued or acquired on my own came to about 5 months of a private's salary. And that didn't include personal incidentals. (or the fact that some of the real issue items were junk)
Now the government isn't providing any of my gear so it isn't exactly a wash but it is obvious that it wasn't cheap to get a soldier into the field and then keep him there.
The problem we modern reenactors face is that nobody but us foots the bill, you do need an absolute minimum kit to take the field and most of us have a limited budget.
The question becomes not do you compromise (unless you're willing to spend an extended time to get into the field) but what items is it smartest to compromise on?
And yes I know it could cost more in the 'long run' (trading out lesser itmes for better) but what you are dealing with is not necessarily absolute dollars but what is referred to in business as 'cash flow'. When are the dollars available to be spent?
And financing them on a credit card (to get it ALL NOW) might actually cost more due to interest charges in the long run.
There is the plus side of ecomonics though that will work in the favor of future generations of reenectors. As the demand for high quality items continues to increase, manufacturing 'scale' will start to kick in and also competition for the dollars spent. Both forces will tend to drive prices down (in relative terms).
Sort of a reenactor's 'Moore's Law'.
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