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This review is of the Outdoor Research Women’s Cirque pants, and is done through the experiences of Mrs Stick covering 30 days of use ranging from lounging around the house, to 6500″ up the side of Mt Rainier in the winter. 

Outdoor clothing for females has been traditionally men’s clothing shrunk down into size extra small, and then magically labeled for women.  At least that is how my wife, and most other women I’ve talked to have looked at it.  The problem with this is that women aren’t the same as men, they aren’t built the same, they don’t look the same, and they don’t look at clothing the same way most guys do.  The problem in her mind is the need for outdoor winter wear which is functional for snow shoeing, hiking and other winter activities, while still allowing for a look that flatters the female form. 

Her mission, which became my mission, was to find outer wear that looked good, and was as functional as it looked.  Click the image for more pictures, specs, and 30 days with the OR Cirque pants. 

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The term bandolier originated in the 1570s, and meant shoulder belt.  The advent of firearms saw the bandolier change from a utilitarian item, into  ammunition carrying attire.  Enter 2012, and  Grey Ghost Gear is bringing the bandolier back with a more modern, and low profile twist. 

I’ll point out that I was dubious about the elastic involved, but I figured I would give it a fair test when it arrived.  My test was simple, I pulled four PMAGs out of the back of my cruiser, and hung it over the passenger seat for a shift.  I figured with the way I drive, combined with the magazines hanging in a manner so they would be most likely to fall out, that I would be picking them off my floor within 30 minutes.  It never happened, not only didn’t they fall out, but they didn’t slide or shift at all.  If you saw a city cop driving around with a bandolier, that was me.  After a few days, I became convinced these weren’t going to just fall out regardless of how I drove or what curbs I ran over. 

I figure there are two purposes for this bandolier, one is ammo storage in vehicles, packs, armories or bags.  The second is low profile carry of magazines.  On my next set of days off, I set off in civies wearing the bandolier and 4 fully loaded PMAGs.  While wearing a hard shell jacket, it was just about impossible to tell I had this on.  I wasn’t about to walk the streets wearing a man dress or anything, but I felt the concept was close enough.  Guys who are trying to keep a low profile in certain lines of work understand what I mean. 

The downside to this bandolier is that you really need to use PMAGs, and Grey Ghost Gear was pretty upfront with that.  The heavy elastic grabs the ribbing of the PMAGs, but without that ribbing, it wouldn’t function the same.   Grey Ghost sent us an email and gave us a price update of 4-Mag Bandolier – $39.95, 6-Mag Bandolier – $44.95.  I admit, I thought these would be slightly cheaper, but it was explained to me the material costs are what keep this more expensive.  This makes sense, as a cheaper specified material would reduce cost, while reducing quality.  We’ve all seen stretched out elastics before, and I don’t want any part of cheap stretched gear which doesn’t hold form.  

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So I’ve made no attempt to hide my excitement about this bottle. The boys at Hydro Flask gave me this 18-ounce, narrow-mouth bottle at Outdoor Retailers last month, and I’ve carried it around like a Precious ever since.

I love it so much (don’t roll your eyes) that I feel it deserves some kind of cornball haiku:

Oh so cold, you’re hot//Double-wall and stainless steel//Theft by cube-mate, RAWR

No one has actually taken mine yet, mostly because they’d have to pry it from my not-so-cold-because-the-bottle-is-so-well-insulated hands.

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The MagPod is a simple, durable replacement floorplate for the PMAG that turns a mag into a stable shooting support. It’s made by the same folks that make the Multitasker. There’s nothing tricky about it, no buttons, no adjustments, just a tweak to the floorplate geometry that squares your rifle up and offers always-on stability that’s a surrogate for a light bipod or a Grippod. It’s made of sturdy glass reinforced nylon and has an overmolded Santoprene insert up front for added grip on slick surfaces. Installation is easy; just pop the floorplate off your PMAG and slide the MagPod on it its place.

How well does it work? I had an opportunity to run hundreds of rounds through a MagPod equipped PMAG over the course of a few weeks. In short, it works. I was surprised that shooting from the mag had no effect on feeding/cycling on either AR used during the evaluation. The first rifle was a Smith & Wesson M&P15 VTAC and the second, a Mega Arms lower with a Daniel Defense 16” upper. Both cycled flawlessly with the MagPod. I was so determined to cause a malf, that I sat on the range dumping rounds ‘till my right thumb was sore from loading and my left hand was sweating from the smoking barrels.

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A good shoe/sock combination is essential when you’re putting in long miles on tough terrain. Very few things put the brakes on a good run or hike quicker than blisters or soggy, achy feet.

Our friends at OFFduty featured FITs Socks Company’s performance socks in their fitness gift guide last month, so I snagged a pair to see how the trail version would hold up as the miles piled on. And the verdict? These are worth their $17.99 price tag.

See why we like these so much after the jump …

PT365 is our sister blog about fitness written by ultrasuperdodechedronic marathoner Sara Davidson.

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Sneaking in an item before the start of SHOT, we recently received several pair of pre-production gloves as the latest offering from SKD Tactical.  We spoke with the SKD crew last summer, and they were hard at work on these.  Their goal was a glove that gave a similar feel to shooting without gloves.  That is a tall order, but from my initial impressions they came in pretty close to the mark.  I’ve done a bunch of dry fire drills, searching, and weapon manipulation.  I do NOT have enough time with these in an operational or training capacity to comment on them from a real world point of view, but we received a few samples so we will get them into the hands of  guys who do dirty deeds for a living and report back with a long term and functional review.

Check out the grey insert for specs, and note the features such as “Ballistic Nylon Padded Knuckles – Reinforces people skills”.  I’ll have to include that line in my next use of force report and see how it goes over.  The SKD guys have good humor and so far it looks like the gloves are pretty good as well.  We’ll let you know more about them after we work on our people skills. 

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http://www.skdtac.com/

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The newest two piece free floating rail from Midwest industries is made in the USA, simple to install, and has a street price of around $150 for the carbine length model.  We received one of these awhile back, but didn’t have a weapon to mount it on.  When a friend on the teams came up and asked me if I would swap out an A1 receiver to a flat top upper receiver, he jumped on the offer when I volunteered to upgrade his weapon with this rail as well.  I’ll point out this isn’t one of the team weapons, its a personal AR that has been around for awhile.

The Midwest Industries MCTAR-20G2 is the carbine length model we are looking at.  Specs from the manufacturers website show “Weight 9.0 oz, Length 7 inches, Width 2.3 inches, Height 2.43 inches”.  This makes this rail a little wider and heavier,  but substantially cheaper than most other rails on the market.  Installation of the rail does NOT require you to remove the barrel, the pictures below only show the barrel removed because we removed the old upper which it came with. 

The first step of any weapon work is clearing the weapon, if you don’t understand that, you probably shouldn’t be touching weapons anyway.  Next, grab your trusty Dremel or similar cutting tool, and chop the Delta ring cap off. The easiest way to do this is typically to make a cut on each side and chop it in half.  This allows access to the spring underneath, you can grab that spring with a pair of pliers and get rid of it, you won’t need it anymore.  Now take the upper and lower rail sections and position them in place.  You can see from the pictures the barrel nut lines up with a cutout in the rail.  Your last step is to use the included thread locker and allen wrench, and tighten the screws down.  Ensure you are keeping the upper rail lined up with the upper receiver.  If you have problems, take a straight edge and press the rail and upper down on it while you tighten the screws. Now you are done.  This rail is a very affordable way to get into a free floating rail for your AR15/ M16/ M4 variant. 

Check out the manufacturers website for more information.  http://www.midwestindustriesinc.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=category.display&category_id=422

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FirstSpearOAGRE
Greetings. I’m J.L. Bourne, active duty military officer and the guy who penned the “Day by Day Armageddon” novels. Recently, I was invited to consult for a major cable network documentary on how to survive a zombie apocalypse. I know, it sounds crazy, but hear me out. 

The parameters and ROE determining my gear loadout looked like this:

  • I am a few weeks into a zombie apocalypse
  • No support assets available — I am on my own
  • My plan was to avoid contact, engage viciously when necessary and break contact as soon as possible
  • Practice expedient means of vehicle ignition and structure entry outside of contact
  • Maintain the ability to scale up and scale down profile based on evolving mission criteria

Sans the first bullet point, sounds like this scenario might cover more than just a zombie apocalypse, eh?

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Grey Ghost Gear started out as a clearing house for tactical gear, but quickly moved into producing its own line of nylon equipment.  Recently they have expanded from a few assault packs into chest rigs, three day packs and pouches.  However, as interesting as that may be, its not what this article is about.  Six months ago, Grey Ghost Gear dropped a new assault pack into our laps with the caveat of needing to keep it quiet until they were ready for a release. 

What makes the new Grey Ghost Gear LiteLok Pack stand out is the material.  LiteLok is a material developed by Duro Industries and Glen Raven Technical Fabrics.  The claim to fame for this material is it weighs 30% less than typical 500D nylon.  Duro Industries states “LiteLok® exhibits excellent breaking strength and outstanding abrasion resistance performance.”  That certainly sounds good on paper, but how does it hold up in real life? 

http://www.greyghostgear.com/packs/lightweight-assault-pack-2-1

Click the below picture to jump to the rest of the article. 

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When I slipped into them for the first time, I was pleasantly surprised at the comfort and fit of the new women’s RD Tactical Utility Pant by Magnum Essential Equipment. On earlier trips to Iraq and Afghanistan, I had settled for mens tactical pants that worked fairly well, but were always a little high-waisted, outdated in their shape and lacking in customized features like organizational pockets.

These Magnums – one of only about four companies that has ventured into making women’s tactical pants – were cut generously in the seat and legs and fit comfortably at my hip without dipping into an impractical “low rise” category more suitable for skinny rock stars.

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