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#72160 - 08/28/06 07:16 PM TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
jamesraykenney Offline
Enthusiast

Registered: 03/12/04
Posts: 316
Loc: Beaumont, TX USA
Does anyone have any experience with the TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK?

I keep one in my kit to handle things that a little first aid kit can not...
In fact, I carry one even when I do not carry a small first aid kit...
My thinking is that, if something is minor enough for the tiny first aid kits to handle, then it can probably wait, and if it is too major for them, then it probably can not wait...

What does everyone think about this?
I have been carrying it all the time in my semi-every-day-carry bag... Meaning it goes ALMOST everywhere I go(except lunch, which is {of course} the place where I stand the most chance of a major injury).
I have never looked in it because it is vacuum packed and I do not want to break the seal, so does anyone have any experience with this piece of kit?
Their web site is http://www.tac-pack.com/ and I just noticed that they are SUPPOSED to soon have a version for the outdoors...
You can buy them directly, but Countycomm has them for the 501+ quantity pricing...

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#72161 - 08/28/06 08:27 PM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
billym Offline
Addict

Registered: 12/01/05
Posts: 616
Loc: Oakland, California
expensive. Probably less than $5 in materials for $18.

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#72162 - 08/28/06 08:37 PM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
jamesraykenney Offline
Enthusiast

Registered: 03/12/04
Posts: 316
Loc: Beaumont, TX USA
True, but I do not have an industrial vacuum packer...
It is hard to tell in the pictures just how flat this thing is...

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#72163 - 08/28/06 09:27 PM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
billym Offline
Addict

Registered: 12/01/05
Posts: 616
Loc: Oakland, California
So you are judging the quality by how flat it is?


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#72164 - 08/28/06 09:52 PM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
jamesraykenney Offline
Enthusiast

Registered: 03/12/04
Posts: 316
Loc: Beaumont, TX USA
No, I am judging the packability by how flat it is...

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#72165 - 08/29/06 12:09 AM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
aligator Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 07/08/06
Posts: 96
Loc: NY
Sir; I don't have any experience with the Tac-Pack personally. I view it as a specialty item designed as a "blow-out" kit for senarios where you have to carry your stuff invisably ( exective protection ect ). It seems to me that when you try to microsize, you are forced to compromise either in quantity or variety. I have a personal aid bag thats about the size of a large grapefruit. It is designed to be an EDC kit that can handle anything, on a remedial basis, from band-aids and splinters to GSW/knife wounds and surgical airways. Compromises have to be made as I've yet to figure out how to carry an ER in the field. I think most people are faced with common illness and injuries (thank God) much more frequently then they are life threatening situations. If you are planning to use this kit as part of your survival preps, I would offer that the minor stuff that takes care of it's self can become infected and potentially life threatening. Tend to the "small" stuff so it stays small. "all bleading stops eventually" Respectfully; Jim

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#72166 - 08/29/06 12:40 AM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
MartinFocazio Offline

Pooh-Bah

Registered: 01/21/03
Posts: 2203
Loc: Bucks County PA
I'm of the same mind set - first aid, in my opinion, isn't a boo-boo kit for splinters and minor burns, or coping with constipation. That's second aid.
First aid is keeping someone from bleeding out, keeping them breathing and holding the line against further trauma. So that's why, when I'm out and about in NYC, the traditional FAK stays in the computer bag, but on my person is a TAC-PACK like kit

1. Bleed-X
2. Tegaderm Transparent Dressing
1. Pair Purple Nitrile Gloves
1. 6x6 Sponge
2. 4x4 Sponge
1. Roll 2" Guaze (flattened)
1. Roll Flat Duct Tape (better than medical tape)
1. N95 Mask
1.. Vionex Hand Wipe (not carried on airplanes)
24" 550 cord
1 medic shears.

If you can't stop the bleeding, pack stuff in the puncture, tie off the amputation, all the benedryl in the world won't matter. My kit fits in a tiny little pouch, is airline-proof (yes, you can bring medic shears on board) and bleed-x is a powder.

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#72167 - 08/29/06 03:22 AM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
It says it's three-quarters of an inch thick.

It seems overpriced to me.

I like Martin F's pack better, except for the duct tape, which I would replace with 1" wide waterproof adhesive tape (I had to get it from my vet). I am also considering something like a folded piece of plastic wrap to temporarily seal a deep chest wound, but it's hard to peel apart when your hands are shaking.

Sue

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#72168 - 08/29/06 05:48 AM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
jamesraykenney Offline
Enthusiast

Registered: 03/12/04
Posts: 316
Loc: Beaumont, TX USA
Well, I finally found a review over at Military Morons.
The picture there shows the contents much better than the company site does.
Maybe I will add a Adventure Medical Pocket Medic in another pocket.

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#72169 - 08/29/06 12:16 PM Re: TAC-PACK TRAUMA PACK
Glock-A-Roo Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 04/16/03
Posts: 1076
Similarly, the CinchTight bandage from H&H Associates is now available in a vacuum sealed flat pack format. Saves a lot of space and slips into a coat pocket or pants pocket easily.

But, remember that any vacuum packed item that you EDC on your person will eventually get a pin-hole and lose the vacuum seal. It will then take up more space but will still be more compact than if you just carried it loose in a ZipLoc.

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