THE IDEAL CANTEEN POUCH

Have you seen all the 1-quart canteen pouches available on the Web?
I initially made the assumption that all these other 1-quart canteen pouches are being offered as an alternative to the original. I was wrong. Many of them are not large enough to hold the canteen with its cup and stove attachments.
Subsequently, I have been searching high and low for the ideal canteen pouch, without success, but in my search I believe I have arrived at the ideal design.
As all descriptions need to start somewhere, I will use the photos below of Tactical Tailor’s Canteen Utility Pouch as my base-model, since theirs is the closest to ideal that I have found.



Here is their quote: “The Tactical Tailor Canteen Utility Pouch is designed as a general purpose pouch that will fit a standard 1qt canteen (without cup) or most 1 litre water bottles. It has an adjustable quick release buckle, Velcro closure, and attaches with two long Malice Clips (included). The pouch measures 8.5"H x 5"W x 3"D. Available in OD, Tan, Multicam, ACU, Ranger Green, MARPAT Woodland and MARPAT Desert.” It sells for $23.50 http://www.tacticaltailor.com/index.asp?PageAction=VIEWPROD&ProdID=144

As you can see from the product description, the Tactical Tailor design’s main drawback is that it does not fit the canteen cup and stove. The military intended for the canteen, the canteen cup, and the canteen cup stove to be stacked together and carried in the same pouch.

While I think (other than size), Tactical Tailor’s pouch is an ideal base-model, here is a list of some specific things I like about the Tactical Tailor pouch:
1. Fixed position female buckle piece to facilitate easy one-handed flap closing.
2. Adjustable buckle strap.
3. Non-black hardware, so it is non-reflective to night vision.
4. Overlapping lid-type closure flap (so mud, debris, and airborne contaminants are positively kept off of canteen and out of pouch, and also so the pouch can be used to securely hold things other than a canteen if needed).
5. MOLLE attachment on back, so ride height is adjustable, and so it is compatible with other MOLLE gear.

I want this pouch to be maximally useful, and the one that soldiers and other outdoor enthusiasts would choose first if given the option. I believe that the Tactical Tailor pouch needs the following improvements to make it the perfect canteen pouch:
1. Large enough to hold both the canteen cup and the Natick stove (photos below) that fit around the canteen cup. All three pieces (canteen, cup, stove) should slide in/out easily together.



2. Attachment straps (similar to the one in the photo below; RS Tactical Gear [theirs too does not accommodate the cup and stove]), but that go all the way around to the back, so a small pouch can be carried on the front and/or sides. The attachment points will be for one or more pouches to hold iodine or chlorine dioxide tablets and/or other water purification materials, trioxane or other fuel, one or more lighters, spoon, etc. The stitched-on pockets that I have seen on some pouches are not versatile or secure. They are either the wrong size and/or they do not close positively enough (I don’t like Velcro closures, except as a back-up to an already existing positive closure, in which case it can be silenced when necessary with another piece).



3. A grommet water drainage hole on the bottom. I’m debating the usefulness of this. I think the Tactical Tailor pouch has one, and in which case I say leave it there.
Suggestions/Comments?
4. I am also considering a top hole with flap closure to accommodate a drinking tube (photos below). I don’t want to compromise the top flap though, so if done it would have to be well thought out, and besides, I think the drinking tube could be bent underneath the top if the top is fitted loose enough, so I am leaning toward “No” here.
Suggestions/Comments?



This canteen pouch design, even without improvements #3 and #4, would be the best (in my opinion) canteen pouch available, as it most importantly, incorporates the entire canteen water/cook-set system and provides for all its needs in one pouch assembly (with accessory pouch(es) attached), as any alternative military 1-quart canteen pouch should.
I have discussed these ideas with Tactical Tailor, and while they can do a custom pouch, it will cost $150 for the prototype. They also told me that after I approve the prototype, additional pouches will cost $25-$30 each, for as many as I want. That seems reasonable to me. I only need help covering the cost for the prototype. If you want a pouch as I have described, let’s get together and put in a group order with Tactical Tailor.
Suggestions/Comments???