Tourniquet Holster
$44.99
If you carry a gun, you should carry and have training on tourniquet use – from gunshot wounds to motor vehicle crashes you can easily save a life as bleed-out takes 3-5 minutes with first responder times averaging 7-10 minutes or more.
YOU are the 1st Responder! Don’t blow it off, this is an essential piece of gear.
- Aircraft grade Kydex
- Security strap optional
- Dual-point user-adjustable retention
- Black anodized fastening hardware
- Dozens of color options
- Multiple belt clip options
- Designed for use with the SOF Tourniquet (AKA SOF-T)
- Tourniquet(s) not included, but may be added during configuration
- Description
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Description
The Detroit Holster TOURNIQUET HOLSTER is designed to securely hold the popular, DOD certified, SOF Tourniquet (aka SOF-T) on a belt, bag, or most any Molle attachment. After much research, we chose the Made in the USA SOF-T due to its quality and very compact size vs. the competition.
Made with our .08” aircraft-grade Kydex in dozens of colors and textures, it is superior to most plastic junk on Amazon and is resistant to sweat and solvents. The smooth interior helps prevents snags and the optional synthetic laser-engraved 1” soft loop adds an extra level of security and protection.
We are one of the few manufacturers offering this product in nearly every color and with numerous belt clip configurations as well as user-adjustable retention. We also do custom work combining it with magazines, multi-tools, etc.
The bottom has an opening to drain water should you go for a swim and like all of our products, they are hand-made to order in Michigan by Americans.
DETROIT HOLSTER also sells the SOF-T tourniquet as well as a high-quality, dedicated traumatic bleeding IFAK kit all available on our website.
Learn more:
American warfighters were being shot and blown up with IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices), causing medical professionals to further reassess the need for treatment. They studied wound data and learned some interesting things:
Only 6 percent of deaths occurred due to airway obstructions, but 60 percent died from hemorrhage or bleeding out, according to the Fundamentals of Combat Casualty Care (2012). Accordingly, priorities shifted. Circulation became the number one priority, reordering the old list to ABC to CAB: circulation, airway, and breathing. Battlefield physicians and medics realized that care immediately after an injury greatly contributed to the survivability of the patient. Tourniquets were distributed and used liberally, greatly increasing survival rates among the injured.
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