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Triple Aught Design Fast Pack Edc 20 Review

Triple Naught Design FAST Pack EDC

   02.09.xvi

Triple Aught Design FAST Pack EDC

I'm not a "bag" guy.

Until recently, I owned a single rucksack—a new-production, USMC rucksack bought from the PX for me past my brother-in-constabulary. I've used this pack to send food, water supplies, and even 50 fully-loaded G3 magazines. I can appreciate its rugged construction and padded shoulder straps, just my depth of appreciation for fabric containers ends at that place.

I always feel like a Bud Low-cal drinker trying to hold a conversation with a sommelier on the finer points of wine pairings whenever a geardo tries to talk with me about rucksacks. So y'all tin can imagine my horror when I was tasked with reviewing a pack from loftier-end outfitter Triple Aught Pattern.

When my new FAST Pack EDC arrived on the big brownish truck, the first thing I noticed was its heft. There'due south no mistaking the handsome rucksack for a Chinese-fabricated impersonator. Information technology feels like I could carry lead bullets in the thing.

A cursory glance over the production revealed triple stitching throughout and paracord-secured excess strapping. On the top of the pack's rear face up is a huge velcro rectangle for mounting morale patches, simply the residue of the back is practically drowning in two-inch MOLLE straps.

The name of the game with high-end packs and rucksacks is modularity. Patently quality has to be nowadays, merely companies like Triple Zippo Blueprint reach the betoken of diminishing returns on overbuilding their products, so they must innovate. At first glance, the uninformed similar myself see a simple, black backpack. Information technology seems a piffling more tactical than something out of a REI catalog, but otherwise the aforementioned.

The EDC is smothered with MOLLE webbing for attaching just about any compatible pouch or accessory you can think of.
The EDC is smothered with MOLLE webbing for attaching just almost any compatible pouch or accompaniment you can think of.

Once I had a chance to fully utilize the seemingly countless features of the EDC, I started to appreciate everything that went into its design and construction. For example, on long-distance hikes, I don't similar slinging my burglarize over my shoulder as my pick tactical slings tend to dig into my flesh after an hour or so. The EDC features a small flap called the transporter tail that alone totally sold me on the pack.

Imagine something like a lobster tail fastened to the bottom of the bag that lays across the webbing on the front. When not in use, this petty tail is held in place by a pair of straps that proceed information technology flush with the rest of the bag. The combination of these features allows them to function in unison as a rifle scabbard.

The transporter tail supports the buttstock of the rifle while the straps that previously secured the flap foreclose information technology from moving around. It's an ingenious characteristic that is totally unobtrusive when not used. This tail tin can also be used to secure a hydration organisation like a Camelbak bladder.

More cool additions are the two downward pockets on either side of the transporter tail at the bottom of the purse. At the deepest function of the inside of these pockets is a small D-ring. This is designed to permit the wearer to attach a carabiner and some paracord to either a knife, flashlight, fire starter, or anything else a hiker might need speedily. The location of the pocket allows you to reach the zipper and contents without taking the EDC off your back.

The author making full use of the FAST Pack EDC's transporter tail.
The author making full use of the FAST Pack EDC's features.

On the other side of these pockets facing skyward is another gear up of zippered pockets perfectly suited to a standard water bottle, suppressor, or medium-sized flashlight. Continuing up, I noticed a strange rolled portion of the pack that I initially believed was a poncho or weatherized liner to drapery over the entire pack.

Upon closer inspection, I realized it's a split container designed for sensitive electronics like tablets or laptops. The reinforced cloth used in its construction is also waterproof, even if the residue of the back is soaked.

To further examination out the pack, I took in on a brief v-mile hike with my warbeast chihuahua Peanut and intentionally overpacked to run into how it held up. I filled the back with my heavy-duty aluminum laptop, an HK MP5K with five loaded magazines, ii Glock 17s with six loaded magazines, an Osprey 45 suppressor, a Ruger MKIII LITE with a Griffin Armaments CheckMate suppressor, and a CMMG PDW9 secured by the transporter tail. I also shoved a bunch of surplus G3 xx-round magazines to introduce uncomfortable angles and boosted heft.

In total, the pack weighed shut to 38 pounds. With a like loadout, my sometime USMC pack would accept abused my back after walking 100 yards and my laptop would have zero finish left on it subsequently the hike.

In testing, the pack was comfortable and didn't identify any additional strain on my back. The shoulder straps were well-padded, and allowed the pack to sit comfortably high on me, allowing good freedom of motility. The pack stayed adequately slim even when fully loaded, assuasive me to navigate the often narrow paths of South Carolina'south swamp lands without worrying near getting snagged.

Two suppressors in a pocket of the FAST Pack EDC.
Two suppressors in a pocket of the FAST Pack EDC.

While hiking with nearly forty pounds of gear is never as enjoyable as doing so unburdened, the Triple Aught Design pack did a fantastic shop of equally distributing the weight. Other packs I've used in the past with a laptop compartment tend to let it slam into the wearer'southward back without concern for their condolement. The thick padding on the FAST Pack EDC did wonders for reducing this.

While I still savor my one-time USMC pack, I have to say I would trust my life and supplies to the Fast Pack over it any day. It'southward not the cheapest product around at most $340 retail, just for hikers and shooters looking for a diehard rucksack to serve as a multi-day pack or bug-out bag with enough features and attachment points to accommodate everything they need and more, the Fast Pack EDC has no equal.

Avatar Author ID 587 - 1082671603

Jim Grant

Try as I might, I only can't be a one-gun human being. I honey everything and anything shooting-related, so I oftentimes crook on my comport gun. Though my favorite mistresses are Soviet weapons and anything from the 2d World War. I savour placing anything only expressionless last in competition and being outdoors. When I'm not practicing for 3-gun matches in South Carolina, you tin can find me hiking or running with my 12-pound warbeast, Peanut. Either that or curled up past the burn with a adept military arms volume.

huddlestonthatock.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.outdoorhub.com/reviews/2016/02/09/triple-aught-design-fast-pack-edc/

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