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Issued British Pattern 58 Harness

Issued British Pattern 58 Harness

Issued British P58 Yoke / Harness

The backbone of British infantry loadout for three decades. The 1958 Pattern (P58) webbing system was the standard-issue personal load carrying equipment of the British Army from its introduction in the late 1950s through to the late 1980s, seeing service from the jungles of Borneo and Aden through the streets of Northern Ireland and ultimately the South Atlantic during the Falklands War of 1982. It was only replaced by the PLCE (Personal Load Carrying Equipment) system beginning in the late 1980s, and even then phased out gradually.

The Harness

This is the yoke, the load-bearing harness that sits across the shoulders and connects the P58 belt, ammunition pouches, and kidney pouches into a single integrated system. Its job is weight distribution: transferring the combined load of a soldier's basic fighting order from the hips and waist across the broader surface area of the shoulders and back. Without the yoke, the belt sags; with it, the whole system carries cleanly.

The harness is constructed from woven olive drab cotton webbing, the same hardy material used throughout the P58 system, with brass hardware at the connection points. Adjustment is handled through a series of metal friction buckles, allowing the yoke to be fitted to the individual soldier's torso length and shoulder width. The two shoulder straps converge at a central rear connection point that also accepts the large pack or kidney pouches.

The P58 System

Pattern 1958 webbing succeeded the Korean War-era Pattern 1944 equipment and was itself designed around the lessons of postwar counterinsurgency campaigns. It is a chest-and-belt rig: the yoke and belt work together to carry a standard loadout of two ammunition pouches at the front, kidney pouches at the rear, a water bottle pouch, and various ancillary attachments depending on role. The system saw its hardest test in the Falklands, where British soldiers tabbed across East Falkland carrying full fighting order in conditions the equipment was not originally designed for and it held up.

For collectors, re-enactors, and military surplus enthusiasts, the P58 system remains one of the most complete and historically significant British load-carrying rigs available. Yokes in good condition are increasingly difficult to find as the surplus supply of genuine issued equipment diminishes.

Condition

Issued condition, these have been used. Expect general wear consistent with service use: minor fading, small marks, and the kind of honest patina that comes from a piece of kit that was actually worn. Hardware is functional. Webbing is sound.

  • Issued British Army P58 / Pattern 1958 webbing yoke
  • Load-bearing shoulder harness for the 1958 Pattern personal load carrying system
  • Compatible with P58 belt, ammunition pouches, kidney pouches, and large pack
  • Woven olive drab cotton webbing construction
  • Brass friction buckle adjustment hardware
  • Saw service from the late 1950s through the Falklands War (1982) and beyond
  • Replaced in service by the PLCE system from the late 1980s
  • Issued condition — genuine British Army surplus

A simple harness for harnessing your harnessing needs. 

$1.75

Original: $4.99

-65%
Issued British Pattern 58 Harness

$4.99

$1.75
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Description

Issued British P58 Yoke / Harness

The backbone of British infantry loadout for three decades. The 1958 Pattern (P58) webbing system was the standard-issue personal load carrying equipment of the British Army from its introduction in the late 1950s through to the late 1980s, seeing service from the jungles of Borneo and Aden through the streets of Northern Ireland and ultimately the South Atlantic during the Falklands War of 1982. It was only replaced by the PLCE (Personal Load Carrying Equipment) system beginning in the late 1980s, and even then phased out gradually.

The Harness

This is the yoke, the load-bearing harness that sits across the shoulders and connects the P58 belt, ammunition pouches, and kidney pouches into a single integrated system. Its job is weight distribution: transferring the combined load of a soldier's basic fighting order from the hips and waist across the broader surface area of the shoulders and back. Without the yoke, the belt sags; with it, the whole system carries cleanly.

The harness is constructed from woven olive drab cotton webbing, the same hardy material used throughout the P58 system, with brass hardware at the connection points. Adjustment is handled through a series of metal friction buckles, allowing the yoke to be fitted to the individual soldier's torso length and shoulder width. The two shoulder straps converge at a central rear connection point that also accepts the large pack or kidney pouches.

The P58 System

Pattern 1958 webbing succeeded the Korean War-era Pattern 1944 equipment and was itself designed around the lessons of postwar counterinsurgency campaigns. It is a chest-and-belt rig: the yoke and belt work together to carry a standard loadout of two ammunition pouches at the front, kidney pouches at the rear, a water bottle pouch, and various ancillary attachments depending on role. The system saw its hardest test in the Falklands, where British soldiers tabbed across East Falkland carrying full fighting order in conditions the equipment was not originally designed for and it held up.

For collectors, re-enactors, and military surplus enthusiasts, the P58 system remains one of the most complete and historically significant British load-carrying rigs available. Yokes in good condition are increasingly difficult to find as the surplus supply of genuine issued equipment diminishes.

Condition

Issued condition, these have been used. Expect general wear consistent with service use: minor fading, small marks, and the kind of honest patina that comes from a piece of kit that was actually worn. Hardware is functional. Webbing is sound.

  • Issued British Army P58 / Pattern 1958 webbing yoke
  • Load-bearing shoulder harness for the 1958 Pattern personal load carrying system
  • Compatible with P58 belt, ammunition pouches, kidney pouches, and large pack
  • Woven olive drab cotton webbing construction
  • Brass friction buckle adjustment hardware
  • Saw service from the late 1950s through the Falklands War (1982) and beyond
  • Replaced in service by the PLCE system from the late 1980s
  • Issued condition — genuine British Army surplus

A simple harness for harnessing your harnessing needs. 

Issued British Pattern 58 Harness | Pipedream Apparel