Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled "How to Set Up Your Battle Belt" and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/how-to-set-up-your-battle-belt/.
As usual good article, I will say having a range to practice like that is great. Something not available to everyone.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled "How to Set Up Your Battle Belt" and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/how-to-set-up-your-battle-belt/.
I'll have to see if I have some room for a blade or multi-tool pouch.
Good for hunting, range trips and competition; one thing though, keep the muscle memory tuned up with the way you go to Kroger/shopping unless you wear the battle rig there too as there is a big difference in feel/access/performance without the rig. Would not want to get caught in a self defense situation having to suddenly function without the battle rig. In other words, end the training session with a practice round in the manner you usually are equipped for self defense on the street.............
I have some tactical equipment for the zombie apocalypse. My gear for classes is far more minimal. Shotgun stuff I have velcroed, Slung shotguns and a dump pouch full of loaded cards. Plus usually a sidearm. Handgun stuff I just have my carry gun and some extra mags. I haven’t done much with carbines yet but I am looking at chest rigs or sub loads that incorporate mag pouches for the ARs and shell cards. Which I think cards and PMags will fit nicely in the same size pouches. Belt worn holster and mag pouches for the handguns. I think a chest rig and handgun stuff on the belt would work well for 3 gun. Zombie apocalypse rig would incorporate those as well as a few bags and my back pack.^ Absolutely critical, and I love it that you brought this up. As with the above, I was disappointed that an article which was targeted at average-Joes/Janes like myself - to explain to us why a battle/war-belt would be useful particularly in the training context - skipped over this.
Consistency is key for me.
For me, to be "in full kit" in my everyday life? It's probably gonna be the zombie apocalypse. Otherwise, it's all LARP.
I use the battle/war-belt to help me learn in class. But for me, the realization is that has to be cross-applicable, in some way, to my actual daily life as an average-Joe legally concealed-carrying citizen.
So my handgun in its OWB holster sits right over where it would otherwise be on me in my daily life, IWB. Sure, a bit of a drop and offset would likely make me a bit faster (or at least a little less awkward ), but having that gun -which is most likely the only gun that I'd be carrying at that moment- start off in a different place when I'm training versus when I'm living my daily life? For me, that's a no-go.
My blow-out kit sits over my right hip just as my daily EDC blow-out pouch sits in my right hip pocket.
Yes, concessions are made for learning - I carry more mags. I carry a note pad. I have a water bottle holder and a dump pouch. I spent the money to take a class: I should be maximizing my learning.
But my goal is to be able to take that learning back to my life. And towards that, it's my belief that consistency is critical.
Hey! GunSpot here. That mag holder is a Kydex holster made by Grant (guy in the video) There are similar ones made by Haley Strategic they are camo and have retention inside them although they have a soft shell.Hi. Who makes the AR mag holder in your article? I have been looking for something similar and having a hard time finding anything.
Hey! GunSpot here. That mag holder is a Kydex holster made by Grant (guy in the video) There are similar ones made by Haley Strategic they are camo and have retention inside them although they have a soft shell.
@TSiWRX^ That Colby belt looks very interesting, @Talyn - I think it looks very similar to a traditional padded patrol belt setup, but is much improved in materials and construct. Please let me know how you like it once you've put some time on it.
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I have to admit, my first instinct was to dismiss this concept completely. I tend to train for normal daily threats, when the gear of the day is most likely concealed carry.
However after thinking about it a while I see where something on this order might actually be of use. Granted the possible needs for such a tool are rather specific, things like home defense where the invaders are still outside the wire, or some type of societal collapse.
When one by one, malfunctions/surprises/ send remaining options south and the last option is hand to hand; knives, gloves/knucks/chains/bats/hammers/screwdrivers, let ur imagination be the guide, are all on the table and useful, even a blanket over an intruders head gives a moment of advantage. I'm down with flash bangs and smokes; I know my way about (and out of) the house better than the perp that just came in. When/if things degenerate to hand to hand combat, the adrenalin blast will astonish you and you'll be capable of things you had not thought of....................Towards the last.....from my response in the in-linked thread - https://www.thearmorylife.com/forum/threads/battle-belt.690/#post-13659
^ That's what I keep in the bedroom -our "safe-room"- inside a quick-access safe(ty storage device). It's near-instant access to a WML-equipped handgun that's ready-to-go, a spare mag for both it and my AR (which is also stationed in the bedroom), a handheld light, a utility knife , and a tourniquet (rest of the medical supplies are in the nightstand with our bedroom fire-extinguisher and main handheld light).
It's nothing fancy, just a plain-Jane Bianchi "police duty belt" with a comfy padded insert that's supplemented with belt-keepers: it's literally something that I could throw on over my boxers and do business with.
The setup of this kit replicates that of my range/training setup, both in terms of hardware as well as how they are positioned.
The idea for me is that when I wake up to the house alarm going off and the dog barking and the wifey and child yelling, everything that I need to have with me is consolidated and ready-to-go, and can leave my hands free for other needs once it's donned.