Gotta love and respect the passion he has for getting it right. I remember him telling the story a few years ago about not being able to save the dude he was working on because the med kit was a cluster fu@k.
It’s about time someone did a purpose built system for this. I had to piece together my kit that consists of MOLLE seat covers with tear away Velcro panels, Dark Angel trauma kits, and a quick release Tactical Tailor Removable Operator Pack among whatever MOLLE pouches I want attached to the seat covers. And one of the trauma kits is visor mounted. And it may not be a huge deal to most, but one of my requirements is to have American made gear. But this is nice and well thought out. Very functional and all in one.
Krylon red on the bag will answer your obscure problem, and for the re-re talking about a panels inside the bag......it's just a bag, buy a panel to mount anywhere instead of trying to mount a bag 🤣🤣 it's just a bag
Such valuable gear. Look at the stats, how many car crashes compared to how many gun battles? So many times more likely to need a TQ, wound packing, etc. in the car than a gun or extra magazine. Doing the real work, love it. Oh and don't call me a weirdo, you're the one that put Ricky in the 80L. 😝
I've been slowly buying your equipment overtime. It's always made with quality, precision and I really like you can use almost everything in multiple ways. Thanks for your educational video and classes you offer. I appreciate that you come to Arizona often. Plan on taking a bunch of your course this year.
This is great information on how to transition gear for different missions! This has helped me a great deal organizing between my personal truck, police car, camping and hunting, or just grabbing my bag and jumping into my wife's car. Now I'm building up my wife's car and son's car. The ability to have it in the vehicle and detach asap and get away from the vehicle or run to assist in a collision is perfect! Thanks for explaining the why and what to put in the bags!
My girlfriend bought me something very similar to this for Christmas, still in the process of buying everything to fill all the bags and I love that they have straps for me to carry whichever bag I want on a hike or if I had to leave my vehicle behind. This is the video I needed
i was doing some snow shooting yesterday at the end i sparked my J off my Ar hot Barrel. felt like a real operator. Good Content Mike, this save's lives. I carry all the things
I love these systems. I feel everyone should have some kind of an emergency kit in their vehicle. Kits like these are great options for people who are not sure of how to build their own. The organizational ability of systems like this one (one of the best I've seen) can even make a seasoned survivalist rethink their own packs.
I'm not particularly into over landing, but I'm certainly a car guy. It's really cool to have a car guy and a gun guy on a channel. Other than logistics, it's just cool to have my whole language all together.
I have to agree. I was an ER trauma nurse x 30 yrs. A friend, that was a paramedic, and I would talk about this....you need gear in the front seat, back seat and trunk or bed of truck. Truama medical in the front for you and so on. My truck bed has chains, recovery strap, shovel-axe-saw, rope, plastic sled, jumper cables, tarps, boots and truck stuff. Back seat has blankets, a large pack with gear and front seat has medical.
damn this is sick. if i didn't live in the city i'd be all over this. but if i had this in my car it would be stolen fast. still an inspiration to discreetly pack my car with gear.
@@thatrealba I don't think I could fit a massive duffel bag under my seats. As I originally said, I discreetly pack my car with gear, but I really don't see the duffel bag as a good move in the cities.
I have everything except 2 visor panel, 40 liter duffle bag, and 1 bugout bag; those are coming to my gear next! The equipment is well built and excellent quality! I highly recommend this gear!!🇺🇸🇺🇸
Mike, I'm a fan of most of the products Fieldcraft Survival has put together and a lot of your info is straight up awesome! With regards to the bag setup with duffels, though, I'm a little confused by it. I get the back of the seat panel that converts to a backpack, makes total sense; and I get the visor attachments for med kits, also makes total sense. But the duffels are what get me. If I have to leave the car for a few hours or days to get back home or to safety if I'm stranded, a dedicated backpack with better setup to carry gear comfortably makes more sense to me, such as Goruck GR3 (45L big backpack). The duffel just seems uncomfortable to carry long-term, even with backpack straps. Could you go over a full car setup at some point covering all the real-world items you would realistically carry in your car on a daily basis? In my own vehicle, I have a dedicated med kit for 4x casualties for something like a mass shooting. I have a wool blanket, water, emergency food, light, and battery pack for emergencies where I need to stay in the car (think the I95 crisis a few months back in northern VA where people were stranded overnight in their cars in freezing weather). And I have a get-home backpack with the purpose of keeping me alive for up to 3 days if I have to walk somewhere to safety. The backpack includes sleeping bag, sleeping mat, poncho, fire gear, full change of clothes, rain jacket, knife, saw, battery, light, caffeine packets, water filters, etc; basically a "catch all" camping bag that could realistically keep me alive for a few days outside while I get home. What would be a rational reason to use a duffel system instead of the GR3 backpack setup like I described? I love the work you and your team do! Been watching you for over a year now. Just want to have a better understanding of your thought process behind the duffel system since you have a ton of real-world experience I don't have.
I have the 80L that I keep in my locked truck bed. I carry a bunch of my crap in there: clothing, extra shoes/socks, food, tools, emergency road side gear, tomahawk, yada yada. I like how sturdy it’s proven to be and that I can take it out and throw it in the back of my SUV or any car when needed. I’ll definitely be picking up few more pieces of this kit.
I’m telling you! Please come on the YuSkool Podcast next time your training in Ceres. 25k+ downloads for Central Valley CA and this is SOOO important and vital information to share with our listeners. I’m gonna email you again. We tried and missed the last time but gotta make this happen! Love this set up.
Awesome stuff, Mike. Your guys gear always goes above and beyond the basic kit and I can see how you think ahead for all of these situations you've been in, or seen happen. Great stuff yet again, 👏.
First off fantastic video 👍 here’s my challenge. Living in central Arizona, In the summer it’s going to be 115 outside and about 170 degrees in my parked truck. The thing I run into is everything is dead from the heat and I need to carry like a backpack every day. Have you been in a really hot place before? I keep rifles, sleeping bags and stuff like that in the truck, but most medical aid or food stuff is going to be ruined
If I didn't already have a similar set I have pieced together over the years I would order this today. Great gear. Love where Fieldcraft is going. I predict some big collaboration soon
Quality of the kit looks over seas Definitely the ifaks should be brighter even though he has identifiers When kit building build your own kit around your skill level
I am definitely going to buy this piece of kit. I have a storage facility with ammo, MREs and water to last a year, but I don’t have anything I can carry in my SUV.
I'd love to have all this stuff. My excuse is I can't afford to do so. I'd say that's true with alot of people that want to be this organizingly prepared but can't.
Get one thing at a time, even if takes a few months to save up for that one thing. If you never start, you will never get there. You don't have to use Fieldcraft stuff. Use what you can afford what will do the job. Mike would tell you the same damn thing. I have a pretty badass blowout kit that would rival Mike's blowout kit, and I pieced it together one item at a time, over time, and it's in a bag from EBay because that's what I could afford to save up to get. Just start, man.
Can put this together with cheap back pack, small duffel, small fabric pouches, and a trip to Joanns fabrics for Velcro you sew onto the pack and pouches.
Finally a good, purpose built system. I was running on under armor duffels for kit, and fanny packs filled with trauma gear clipped around on the backs of seat headrests
Would love to see bags that connect to a bike in case roads are shut down. A while back during construction season, there was a stretch of the highway that always had accidents. I was able to pull over to the nearest gas station and bike the remaining 5 miles to work with no issues. Walking 5 miles would be much more of a time investment. I’d buy fieldcraft panniers, frame bags and handle bar bags in an instant
Side note - I'm actually beginning to study your communication tone structure and style. I teach people how to communicate effectively in shitty situations, and I've just caught myself listing more intently to 'What you say and How you say it'.
@@mbb12 you're not a poker player are you?... I know a Matt that's an Aussie, but has a different last name (than what you show on your profile)...you have a similar build as him tho...
Like it, but does everything have to be black? What purpose does the black color serve. Seems like it just blends in with every other bag. Just a thought. Still want one tho
also realistically a bad color for camo! shows up under NODs & it sticks out in nature as nothing in nature is naturally black. Even at night stuff is still the same color as in daylight just darker. I'd prefer a multicam or grey option
What really sucks @Mike Glover, is that my "Work Truck" is an '06 single cab 2500 HD.. Cab is full of tools to keep them out of the elements.. But, full MFAK in a 50 can behind the seat, and some "EDC" items.. Amazing set ups my Friend, truly appreciate your "goodies" available here... Will be looking into this. Mind your "topknot" and vigilant as always.. ;)
I personally want to thank you for your Prior Service Mike.. I am a "tail ender" for the first sand box fun.. Your intel and guidance is amazing, as well as all of your instruction to "handle" the situation. Keep up the Amazing work (Not calling you "Sir" because you work for a living.. IE: Richard Marcinko phrase), I look forward to any and All future posts from this channel, as well as your "Actual". Stay safe, and stay aware.
The all black looks clean, but you need to have different colors for different bags.. If you have to send someone to grab a particular bag while its dark saying "grab the black bag" might have a little more guidance to it lol
They are great bags. But I’d like to see more info on the gear you’d fill it with. And just my perspective, my recovery gear would just stay in my truck bed box. No need to pack that stuff away from my vehicle. It’s either gonna get me or another vehicle recovered or would get ditched with vehicle and left behind.
I was with ya until you said you’re not advocating for thermite grenades…. I think they should go where the knife was tethered cause we know what kids will do lol, in all seriousness love the content and the products Mike
You know the Grateful Dead isn’t on tour anymore but damn I would still love to have that Vanagon. Im so fucking jealous right now. That Targa you got is dope af also.
I really want this set up but almost 800 dollars is a tough pill to swallow I have a couple improvised bug out bags at home especially given the wildfires we have around here every year
Honda Civics were never cool....but I get your point. It's not about cool, it's about be prepared for anything. I love this gear setup, it a complete system that has what you need.
@@shekharmoona544 lol if you gotta spin your engine to 8500 rpm to make any decent power you got the wrong engine. Remember HONDA stands for History Of No Decent Acceleration.
Alright. I’m going to throw something out there because you da man. Challenge time. Your a Type 1 diabetic. Have to have insulin. Insulin has to be cool to store for long periods. How do you prep when attached to a primary requirement like a refrigerator?
whats a "long period"? my insulin is either in my backpack or in me and it always works. I think for the pens they say you dont need to refrigerate them after the first use and its good for 30 days.... but novolog is novolog, so idk why it matters if its in a plastic pen or a glass vial.
3 minutes without oxygen. Fun info- it's technically 3 minutes of no circulation of oxygenated blood to the brain. Deep see divers can hold their breath for 24 minutes. Since their heart is still pumping blood they've trained to have optimal oxygenation, their fine until their other blood gasses build up. But if your heart stops, you've got 3 minutes to get it pumping again before you start getting brain damage. That's why chest compressions are so important. As long as that blood is pumping they have a better chance. But, most people don't train their lung capacity to that limit and usually when you run out of breath in a bad situation it's replaced with something like H2O, CO2 or CO that we can't convert to O2. So listen to Dr Mike and learn how to do CHEST COMPRESSIONS CHEST COMPRESSIONS CHEST COMPRESSIONS
I saw the range bag insert in a different video during one of the last sales you did on these bags and have trying to find it on your website. You mentioned it in this video, but I still can't find it on the website.
The Sinn watch isn't pronounced like it looks. the s is actually a z sound so instead of sounding like sin it's actually zin. at least that's what I was told when I bought one and that's how a lot of watch youtubers pronounce it as well. they're not cheap by any means either. I mean compared to something like Rolex or A Lange & Sohne they are but still pricey. usually anywhere between $1500 and $4k depending on model. On a side note these setups look pretty nice. not something I would personally buy as I like to build my own kits but certainly liking the visor attachments and would definitely be interested in a pair of those.
Awesome! No reason not be prepared now, except being about to afford it lol. I'm sure it's totally with it, just not in the cards right now, not for me anyway.