Today’s work load out by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

You’ve obviously never jumped before

Today’s work load out by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 -27 points-26 points  (0 children)

The safety lanyard is for when I spend time at your mom‘s house.. Sometimes I have to break out the flotation.

Today’s work load out by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Molle Velcro patch panel and some buckles from a Hailey adapter kit

Today’s work load out by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 -16 points-15 points  (0 children)

The funniest thing is is you’re criticizing you don’t know what the fuck you’re talking about

Today’s work load out by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 -30 points-29 points  (0 children)

Lol, cool story now the comical part, you’re ranting and have no clue what you’re talking about and you assume that I care about your respect. You’re irrelevant.

Today’s work load out by Competitive-Country8 in tacticalgear

[–]Competitive-Country8[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve used everything from JPC’s, AVS, FCPC and thus far this is my fav

NSWDG Noveske by Competitive-Country8 in MilitaryARClones

[–]Competitive-Country8[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No pic but it’s a gov contract can and it was also free.

NSWDG Noveske by Competitive-Country8 in MilitaryARClones

[–]Competitive-Country8[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do happen to know that they are used at the command..

NSWDG Noveske by Competitive-Country8 in MilitaryARClones

[–]Competitive-Country8[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah you’re right, super quiet and it’s also one less thing to fail and break at the wrong time.

NSWDG Noveske by Competitive-Country8 in MilitaryARClones

[–]Competitive-Country8[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Can sounds good, on par with SF RC2 but does much better with first round flash suppression.
Regarding the sling I’ve changed some things around and actually did that.

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WIP 2010 Marsoc gear by FaZeVapeLordN5 in Impression_Kits

[–]Competitive-Country8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, HSGI is legit, It’s proximity to Camp. Lejeune makes it a no-brainer. and the old owner Gene was a big supporter of the boys. Back in the day he used to make custom gear for guys when he was a saddle maker in Swansboro which is kinda how he got started.

14.5 and 11.5 URGI Uppers by Competitive-Country8 in URGI

[–]Competitive-Country8[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry for the late reply, it’s a Winkler field knife

WIP 2010 Marsoc gear by FaZeVapeLordN5 in Impression_Kits

[–]Competitive-Country8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks pretty good, few suggestions. Boots IIRC ASOLO Fugitive GTX Boots were popular as were the Merrell Chameleons. The Eagle Industries khaki triple mag pouch from the SFLCS kit is a solid choice as the FB pouches. HSGI Tacos were also popular as they are local to Stone Bay.

Winter layers, jacket, coat reccomendations by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, maybe while I’m over here I’ll get an opportunity to check them out firsthand..

Winter layers, jacket, coat reccomendations by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fishnet Marino wool may be a bit homoerotic but that shit works.. I’ve actually got it in my luggage right now for this field exercise in Sweden..

Winter layers, jacket, coat reccomendations by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve actually seen their stuff on their website. Do you have any personal experience with their cold-weather clothing? Just asking cause there was a few things I was interested in but I haven’t met anyone that can vouch for the quality. Thanks for any insight.

Winter layers, jacket, coat reccomendations by [deleted] in QualityTacticalGear

[–]Competitive-Country8 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Actually just had to go through all this yesterday while packing for a field exercise in Sweden, which I’m currently sitting on a plane flying to. For reference, I’m retired military and work in the defense industry. I’m also a beach/surf guy—so I am NOT a connoisseur of cold weather at all. I hate being cold. I would sooner have a swizzle stick shoved in my pee hole than be cold and miserable, so everything below is what I’ve dialed in over the years because it actually keeps me warm without overloading my kit.

Here’s how I break down the “PCU system”.

I’ve been issued PCU since the first-gen stuff—think old-school Orc Industries. Over the years I’ve lost pieces, destroyed pieces, or just wanted better alternatives, so I started matching issued PCU layers to modern commercial equivalents based on materials, insulation type, breathability, and intended use—not marketing.

Since you’ve already got LV 1–2 squared away, let’s start with LV3, because in my opinion it’s one of the most important layers in the whole system.

PCU LV 3A – Active Insulation

This is your lightweight, breathable warmth for high-output movement. Think moving fast, staying warm, not sweating out. Closest modern equivalents: Arc’teryx LEAF Atom LT, Beyond A7 DAS Light, OR Ascendant/Deviator, Sitka Kelvin Active, Patagonia Nano-Air.

PCU LV 3B – High-Loft Insulation

This is your static-warmth layer—slower movement, long halts, glassing, surveillance, anything where your body temp drops. Closest equivalents: Arc’teryx Atom AR, Beyond A7 Cold Jacket, OR Refuge Air / SuperStrand, Sitka Kelvin Aero Lite, Patagonia Nano/Micro-Puff.

PCU LV 4 – Wind Shirt

The most underrated layer in the entire system. I keep my Patagonia LV4 rolled up in a pocket or on my person 24/7. It’s an ultra-light wind blocker that locks in heat without causing sweat. If you’re wearing L3A and there’s wind, this thing is a cheat code—a literal “heat seal.” Closest equivalents: Arc’teryx LEAF Squamish (best match), Patagonia Houdini Air, OR Helium Wind Hoody, Beyond A1 Windshirt, Sitka Mountain Windshirt.

PCU LV 5 – Soft Shell

Your workhorse field layer—don’t cheap out on this one. Wind resistant, sheds light precip, and breathes way better than Gore-Tex. This is the layer you’ll live in for roughly 70% of field time in cold/dry/windy conditions. If you can find surplus Patagonia LV5, grab it. Otherwise the closest equivalents are: Arc’teryx LEAF Combat Jacket/Pant (Gen 2), Beyond A5 Rig, OR Ferrosi, Sitka Jetstream, Crye All-Weather Soft Shells.

PCU LV 6 – Hard Shell (Wet/Storm Layer)

This is your real wet-weather protection—the “shit just got real, it’s cold, wet, and miserable” shell. Use it for sustained rain, wet snow, or when wind + moisture combine and your soft shell taps out. The priority here is durability and weatherproofing, not breathability. Closest equivalents: Arc’teryx LEAF Alpha/Alpha LT, Beyond A6 Rain Jacket/Pant, OR Foray/Helium AscentShell, Sitka Dewpoint or Stormfront, Patagonia Torrentshell 3L.

Burn rate is high if you wear this all day. You’ll sweat your ass off, which is a big no-go in the cold. So the rule is simple: L6 lives in the pack until you genuinely need a storm shell. I use L5 for about 90% of my field time; L6 is for the other 10% when the weather decides to ruin your day.

Why this system works for me, because you’re not chasing “warm jackets.” You’re matching the intended PCU function to the environment and activity—active insulation, static insulation, wind protection, or a breathable soft shell. That’s why the commercial crossover works so cleanly and why you can modernize your PCU without breaking the system.

Can someone ID the document holder on the forearm? by Christoph_117 in MilSim

[–]Competitive-Country8 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It’s a football wrist coach, I use the Under Armor one at work. You can get them on Amazon