I've been using rubber bands to hold tourniquets on my gear for quite a while now. This works great since they are relatively secure until you pull on them, the rubber band breaks, and you have your tourniquet in one uncomplicated motion no matter which hand you grab it with. Just grip it, rip it, and go. However, if you were to snag it on something and the rubber band broke, you would be SOL (unless you carried spares). Also, rubber bands don't do well in dry, hot, sunny environments like NV.
So, I started looking at different tourniquet holders online. The
Blue Force Gear Tourniquet Now is probably the cheapest option but it seemed to me that there was a decent chance of the tourniquet snagging on one of the elastic bands on the way out. Another problem I saw was that you have to pull it out from the top or bottom meaning you have to grab a smaller area of the tourniquet and pull it all the way up or down. Granted, not quite a fine motor function, but slightly more complex than just grabbing it and ripping it out of a rubber band.
The
Marz Tactical Tourniquet Pouch has the same issues mentioned above, now with a pistol mag pouch style flap to deal with. $20 was also a little much since I needed at least two.
215 Gear's
Tourniquet/GP Holder seems like a really good option and is probably what I would go with if I were to buy one. Just flip a tab and the tourniquet is free. To me, $12 seems pretty fair so I really don't have anything bad to say about this design other than that it is still a two step process instead of just grab and go.
So I dug through my box of random gear parts to see what I could come up with, and I think the outcome worked out pretty well for using items that all of you likely have laying around.
What you will need:
About 8" of elastic shock cord (550 would probably work too, just have to tweak the fit)
1 EA cord-lock
Tie a simple knot in one end of the cord and put both ends through the cord-lock -
Pass the looped ends through your MOLLE webbing as shown in the picture below. The end with the knot should be the loop on the bottom (this will help retain the assembly if the tourniquet is ripped off accidentally or for use) -
Put the looped ends around each end of your tourniquet with the cord lock it the middle behind the tourniquet to minimize snagging -
Now, when you grab the tourniquet with either hand and give it a firm yank, the un-knotted end of the cord will pull through the cord lock and unthread itself from the MOLLE webbing. In the picture below you can see how having the knotted side on the bottom will help retain the assembly -
In can also be placed in an empty storage configuration by looping each of the open ends back around the cord-lock as shown -
This design certainly accomplished my initial requirement of "grip it, rip it, and go" so I have since added one to my belt (as shown) and also my chest rig, and each works flawlessly.
I hope someone out there will find some use in this write-up. Please let me know if you have any suggestions for improvement.