I applaud that.
Over the past 30 years, some of the equipment we had in the beginning compared to some of the stuff they're being issued now, which is just state-of-the-art, excellent, load-bearing kit.... But back in the day when you were wearing a jump ruck on some of the older things, things were not balanced on your body...the boots and so on and so forth. These things do literally add up on the person's skeletal frame.
If you get to that it would eliminate a lot and help you get to the “yes” answer to my colleague's point a lot faster. As we understand, sometimes “no” is the thing.
When you do say no, can you give us just a broad general example of why?