CONTENTS: ESEE SAS Tin Best Glide ASE Fishing Kit Best Glide ASE Scout Survival Kit USAF Survival Fire Kit Tactical Gear Electric Lighter Johnson & Johnson Compact Hiking First Aid Kit
Just another top tip. Use a large zip lock bag to line your tin and place all contents in that. Then you can just pull it out and use your mess tin to cook or boil water and don’t spread all the contents on the floor. Plus the zip lock bag becomes a last resort water container. Simples
I actually keep this E/E Tin inside of a small dry bag, so I can collect water with it or dump the contents into it if needed. I will show on my Survival Fanny Pack video coming soon.
The concept of the SAS survival tin has evolved so much from when the book was first published back in 1986. Now any small survival accessories in a tin is labelled SAS. What you have there would be classed as the escape and evasion tin that would be carried on the belt kit but looking at the contents you have combined the two, being the survival tin and the survival pouch. Both are explained on pages 16-18 in the original print of the SAS survival manual. The tin was in a tobacco tin carried in a smock pocket and that was supplemented by the survival or E&E pouch on the belt kit. This gave the operator a 24 to 48 hour support from his belt kit. This was the mentality we were trained in when I served in the Cold War years for the Queen. You live out of your Bergen and fight and survive out of your belt kit. Thanks.
I also carry the small one in a pocket. That’ll be in my first line video and I’ll do a separate video on my small tin too. This one is carried in a fanny pack with other survival items for shelter and cordage.
Great comment. Super fan of having items in the pockets, if it is 2nd line you are more likely not to have it. You may take off your web gear while at camp but more likely to keep your pants on. Escape gear really should be hidden deeper than just a pouch. Put it in seams, tape to belts, sew into clothing including underwear, etc. As you said, let's not get stuck in training from 40 years ago, nor let us get stuck in just what the military has done. Improvise Adapt Overcome...play outside of the rules.
Nice kit, I could get by w it. Throw in some imodium, activated charcoal, laxetivs, antibiotics, dewormer, and a super powerful antifungal cream. I don't typically need anything like that, but when you're surviving off grid out of a tin can... those items count
ESEE got the tin idea from Trangia Mess Tin, they come in two sizes both with or without handles. The small will fit into an ALICE 3 mag ammo pouch if you take off the handle and slide it down the side. The handle version is best so you can boil water and cook it it safely. I carry a ZipLock bag in the top of the tin to dump the contents in that won't be going around my neck or into my pockets. I have mine mounted on a drop leg panel with a Cold Steel SRK. No real experience carrying it that way though.
@@Recon_and_Raid US Army Ranger 11B/B4 2nd 75th retired. I've never seen troops giggle and play in battle. As for your kit some rations are good but concentrate on actual survival items. What pocket are you going to carry that in? It's too deep. It's going to sit in your ruck, the first piece to be ditched. I now teach survival when I'm not making battle blades for our military who are down range.
The SAS Survival Tin is stored in my Fanny pack which doesn’t leave my person. The Brits keep them in their Belt Kits. The tin is full of survival items.. did you even watch the video? There’s no rations in the tin lol where did you deploy to? Soldiers have and always will play pranks down range.
Just another top tip. Use a large zip lock bag to line your tin and place all contents in that. Then you can just pull it out and use your mess tin to cook or boil water and don’t spread all the contents on the floor. Plus the zip lock bag becomes a last resort water container. Simples
I actually keep this E/E Tin inside of a small dry bag, so I can collect water with it or dump the contents into it if needed. I will show on my Survival Fanny Pack video coming soon.
I suggest including scalpel blades, and the plastic handle.
Salt in sachets.
Rest, it good selection. 🙂
The concept of the SAS survival tin has evolved so much from when the book was first published back in 1986. Now any small survival accessories in a tin is labelled SAS. What you have there would be classed as the escape and evasion tin that would be carried on the belt kit but looking at the contents you have combined the two, being the survival tin and the survival pouch. Both are explained on pages 16-18 in the original print of the SAS survival manual. The tin was in a tobacco tin carried in a smock pocket and that was supplemented by the survival or E&E pouch on the belt kit. This gave the operator a 24 to 48 hour support from his belt kit. This was the mentality we were trained in when I served in the Cold War years for the Queen. You live out of your Bergen and fight and survive out of your belt kit.
Thanks.
I also carry the small one in a pocket. That’ll be in my first line video and I’ll do a separate video on my small tin too. This one is carried in a fanny pack with other survival items for shelter and cordage.
@@Recon_and_Raid love this kind of dialogue. Better than all the “it’s a ration pack/not a survival kit” comments. Keep it up brother
Great comment. Super fan of having items in the pockets, if it is 2nd line you are more likely not to have it. You may take off your web gear while at camp but more likely to keep your pants on. Escape gear really should be hidden deeper than just a pouch. Put it in seams, tape to belts, sew into clothing including underwear, etc. As you said, let's not get stuck in training from 40 years ago, nor let us get stuck in just what the military has done. Improvise Adapt Overcome...play outside of the rules.
@canadafree2087 I agree completely. My SERE kit is definitely not just limited to a single tin, that would be very bad.
Great improvement on the sound. you sound great.
Thankyou very much 🙏
Nice kit, I could get by w it. Throw in some imodium, activated charcoal, laxetivs, antibiotics, dewormer, and a super powerful antifungal cream. I don't typically need anything like that, but when you're surviving off grid out of a tin can... those items count
I have since added all of those things. New video update coming real soon. 🙏
ESEE got the tin idea from Trangia Mess Tin, they come in two sizes both with or without handles. The small will fit into an ALICE 3 mag ammo pouch if you take off the handle and slide it down the side. The handle version is best so you can boil water and cook it it safely. I carry a ZipLock bag in the top of the tin to dump the contents in that won't be going around my neck or into my pockets. I have mine mounted on a drop leg panel with a Cold Steel SRK. No real experience carrying it that way though.
I carry the scout survival tin in my pants pocket. Plus some other stuff I’ll make a video about very soon.
Neat little compact kit one missing item I can name is a tourniquet
Check out my other videos, lots of TQ’s everywhere 🤠
I also suggest potassium permanganate for sterilisation of water and medical use.
Added ✅
Get some!
That's not a survival kit that's a ration pack
Wrong. www.nam.ac.uk/explore/art-staying-alive-mcnabs-survival-kit
ua-cam.com/video/LN0xCBVRO2M/v-deo.html
Not in focus ?
Looks good on my end
@@Recon_and_Raid Sorry but it is Not in focus fades in and out
Everyone else said it looks good
@@Recon_and_Raid OK if everyone said it looks good, I use a 21" monitor on a desktop PC and watch youtube every day for hours, Strange?
@colinsynstar not strange at all.. we’re all mad here 😂
a lot of little items - no water no food no reserve ammo no big waste plastic bags 5x - sorry some a lot of shit
This is literally just one piece of kit. Check my other videos for ruck and assault pack setups please.
Try getting to the point, not playing soldier and screaming and giggling like little girls
The clip you’re making fun of was taken in Afghanistan..
@@Recon_and_Raid US Army Ranger 11B/B4 2nd 75th retired. I've never seen troops giggle and play in battle. As for your kit some rations are good but concentrate on actual survival items. What pocket are you going to carry that in? It's too deep. It's going to sit in your ruck, the first piece to be ditched. I now teach survival when I'm not making battle blades for our military who are down range.
The SAS Survival Tin is stored in my Fanny pack which doesn’t leave my person. The Brits keep them in their Belt Kits. The tin is full of survival items.. did you even watch the video? There’s no rations in the tin lol where did you deploy to? Soldiers have and always will play pranks down range.
Ranger Fieldcraft and Survival runs the same kit: ua-cam.com/video/LN0xCBVRO2M/v-deo.html
@@Recon_and_Raid Leave him alone, he's mad because he was in the Air National Guard.