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Competition, Tactics & Training
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Pawnee Winter Run n' Gun - 2016
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<blockquote data-quote="Surveyor1653" data-source="post: 2849002" data-attributes="member: 5197"><p>2ea OLAES bandage (4" at a minimum, then add 6" bandages if you have a need for your uses. They're nice to have for larger wounds.)</p><p>SWAT-T then a </p><p>CAT</p><p>Trauma shears</p><p>2ea chest seals of some flavor (HyFin is good and very easy to find for not a lot of Don)</p><p></p><p>That's the bare bones and will work very well for the vast majority of things you'll encounter where modern medicine is moments away. If you potentially have the need to work on others with whom you don't share DNA or a bed (you take a lot of shooting classes or are otherwise a Samaritan at heart) then you should probably buy a couple pairs of gloves. They don't have to be sterile. They're for you, not them. They'll get gobs of antibiotics shortly and infection is the least of their concerns at the moment.</p><p></p><p>After you've satisfied the basics in your kits (plural <img src="/images/smilies/smile.png" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":)" title="Smile :)" data-shortname=":)" />) you can start to add other things as budgets allow like hemostatic gauze, etc. Most people carrying an NPA or an ARS needle have no idea how to use them. They just have them because they came in the kit when they bought it for more than they could have spent building it themselves. They're good tools that fulfill their own purposes, but require training to use correctly.</p><p></p><p>I would also add an inexpensive (NOT read: Cheap) headlamp and one set of spare batteries for same.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Surveyor1653, post: 2849002, member: 5197"] 2ea OLAES bandage (4" at a minimum, then add 6" bandages if you have a need for your uses. They're nice to have for larger wounds.) SWAT-T then a CAT Trauma shears 2ea chest seals of some flavor (HyFin is good and very easy to find for not a lot of Don) That's the bare bones and will work very well for the vast majority of things you'll encounter where modern medicine is moments away. If you potentially have the need to work on others with whom you don't share DNA or a bed (you take a lot of shooting classes or are otherwise a Samaritan at heart) then you should probably buy a couple pairs of gloves. They don't have to be sterile. They're for you, not them. They'll get gobs of antibiotics shortly and infection is the least of their concerns at the moment. After you've satisfied the basics in your kits (plural :)) you can start to add other things as budgets allow like hemostatic gauze, etc. Most people carrying an NPA or an ARS needle have no idea how to use them. They just have them because they came in the kit when they bought it for more than they could have spent building it themselves. They're good tools that fulfill their own purposes, but require training to use correctly. I would also add an inexpensive (NOT read: Cheap) headlamp and one set of spare batteries for same. [/QUOTE]
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