And Coastie09 makes a good point. Mil Spec doesn't mean the best. Militay requirements are for certain MINIMUM standards.
I couldn;t agree more that "mil-spec" is not necessarily the best in certain products (but it is in paracord). Any maker can take military specifications and, as long as they understand the reasoning behind the specs, make the product even better.
However, I couldn;t disagree more that military specifications are for certain "minimum" standards. I suspect you didn;t actually mean that but rather mis-phrased your sentence, intending to say that to meet "mil-spec" you must
comply with certain minimum standards .
When military specifications are set out for any product, especially for something as important and crucial as paracord, engineers design the product specifications, calling for certain "minimums". Those that bid on making the product or that offer it for sale later to the military must
meet or exceed the mil-spec guidelines. The military will purchase from a manufacturer that is exceeding minimum guidelines in the mil-spec, but that doesn;t mean that the mil-spec calls for a "minimum" product.
Speaking only about paracord, I would wager you WILL NOT get a better product that does not meet or exceed mil-spec. Could a company make it better and not advertise it as meeting "mil-spec"? Of course, but it would be pointless. If they did, they would market it under a different name and advertise how much better it is than mil-spec paracord.
If you want the best paracord, buy mil-spec (and hope it's not fraudulently labeled <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> ).