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Deluxe - 4 Person Emergency Survival Kit - Back pack Kit

  • Based on 194 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Earthquakestore

Arrives Sunday, Jan 26
Order within 13 hours and 1 minute
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Features

  • Gear designed to help keep you protected in the event of an emergency
  • Food and water has a 5 year shelf life, U.S. Coast Guard approved
  • Designed for any type of emergency, including hurricanes and floods
  • Be ready for any emergency at home or work

Description

Great all around emergency survival kit for home, work, car, etc. Kit includes: 1 - Backpack 4 - 2400 Calorie Food Bars 4 - Solar Blankets 24 - Pouches of Waters 4 - Dust Masks 4 - Ponchos 1 - Flashlight 2 - Alkaline "D" Batteries 1 - 2 Person Tent 1 - 50' Nylon Cord 1 - 12 Hr. Light Stick 1 - 54 Piece First Aid Kit 50 - Water Purification Tablets 50 - Waterproof Matches 1 - Utility Knife 1 - 5 N 1 Whistle 1 - AM/FM Radio with Batteries 1 - Camper's Stove 1 - Pair Leather Palm Gloves

Material: Canvas


Brand:


Item Weight: 18 Pounds


Included Components: Whistle, Knife, First Aid Kit, Gloves, Emergency Food, Flashlight, Light Stick


Number of Pieces: 1, 54


Manufacturer: Mayday Industries


UPC:


Material: ‎Canvas


Brand: ‎AmericanMedSupply.com


Item Weight: ‎18 Pounds


Included Components: ‎Whistle, Knife, First Aid Kit, Gloves, Emergency Food, Flashlight, Light Stick


Number of Pieces: ‎1, 54


Manufacturer: ‎Mayday Industries


UPC: ‎696735515539 033586623868


Item Package Dimensions L x W x H: ‎18 x 15 x 9.1 inches


Package Weight: ‎17.1 Pounds


Brand Name: ‎AmericanMedSupply.com


Part Number: ‎KEX4


Size: ‎4 Person


Date First Available: February 17, 2006


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Jan 26

This item is non-returnable:

Non-returnable. Transportation of this item is subject to hazardous materials regulation

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Good Starter
This is the perfect starter kit. I am not a Emergency Guru, but I know that there are a few items that most will want to upgrade. The flashlight, radio, and utility knife will be replaced in my bag. The stove is great, but there is nothing in the kit to cook. The bag is decent, but I did receive the black (Emergency Kit printed in yellow) bag as pictured. Instead I received a digital camo pack, which is not a gig, I prefer the one I received. I plan on picking up another. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2013 by FlynHayn

  • Great kit, a must have!
I was in the emergency food storage business for several years so I'm able to evaluate the quality of this survival kit. It has virtually everything needed in an emergency situation. It is well packaged and comes in a high quality backpack. Just grab it and run. The only possible shortcoming is the volume of food and water. It would be hard for four people to get by on, but it could be done in an emergency. And after all, that's what its for. I definitely recommend this kit. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2007 by Steven L. Sorensen

  • everything you need
When it comes to a survival kit for an average family, i believe that something is better than nothing. This kit is EXCELLENT to have around in the event that some unknown catastrophe forces you to leave quickly without warning or time to prepare. I know I may never use it and it may sit in my house for years BUT I ALSO know that in the event my family and I have to leave our house quickly, I can keep us prepared and alive by just grabbing 1 backpack. That brings me some comfort and peace, and for me is worth the $65.00. I also slowly add additional items to the pack (better knife, extra light, emergency cash, etc). Highly recommended product. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2014 by jake krippelz

  • I'm not a crazy doomsday prepper...
But I am terrified of zombies. This little kit has enough food and water for 4 people for 3 days! I am only a single person, so this will get me through a disaster for a good period of time. The cooking stove, flashlight, and tent look pretty cheap, but you can easily swap some of these items for better ones as time goes on. Wonderful to have on hand in case of emergency (think hurricanes, snowstorms, earthquakes, EMP, etc not necessarily zombies). Everyone should have a kit and a plan. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2013 by N. M. Nash

  • Survival Kit
Let's start off by saying I'm in no way a professional or experienced "prepper". I do, however, live in the Pacific Northwest and found that this kit will meet my family's needs if we were ever in an emergency situation (we keep it in the car). It has food, water, matches (waterproof!), blade, water purifier etc. I would recommend splitting the items up into 2 backpacks since it might be quite heavy for 1 person to carry without a break. I did add some thing like a first aid kit, er um feminine products and things like that. Very decent buy especially for the price. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2013 by AnaH.

  • I think it is great.
I received exactly what I paid for and appreciated the upgrade when they were out of certain products. I ordered a set for each of my family members homes. I was quite satisfied with all 9 or 10 of them. I only wish it had the few other small items in there that I had to purchase separately. But this still is a great pack. I hung it up in a designated place in my laundry room so all we would have to do is grab it n go. Thank you. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2013 by ct thom

  • Great Kit
I keep this kit in my car and I feel more secure in having it there. It is as described and I think it's a great deal for the price. I was lucky that they had run out of the regular backpacks and had upgraded me to a camo backpack, although I would have been happy anyway because the contents are what really matters the most. The kit arrived quickly and in perfect condition. I would recommend this survival backpack kit. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2014 by Peaches

  • Great value, convienent!
For the money this kit is a fantastic start for a short and minor disaster. I'm giving it 4 stars because I recognize the price and that no kit put together for large quantity sale will be perfect or high end. What follows is a list of criticisms though to help people who buy it round it out or know more about what they're getting. This is NOT a Bug out Bag, and a good BoB will cost you $1,000 to put together not even including weapon. I got this kit as something that will hang out in my vehicle full time (water and food in winter or peak summer months could be an issue here, still strategizing on that, e.g. keep a smaller bag with those components at work) and provide necessities to help get me to a BoB or home should things go awry while I'm on the road or at work. The backpack has "Survival Kit" on it in large yellow letters. This is dumb, you know what it is and you don't want people who don't have one of their own to know what it is. For now I've taped it over with black gorilla tape. I'm thinking about a better solution including making it look like a college student's bag. Imagine for some reason you are forced to walk home or to a designated shelter, and things happen to be causing people to be irrational, you do not want a big target on your back. The 5-in-1 survival tool is complete crap because the compass for me was DoA (this is the -1 star). This is very dangerous for someone who needs it but didn't test it when they got it and on a regular basis. A good compass though costs more than this entire kit. I moved half the matches to the inside of this tool, just to be located elsewhere and a bit more water resistant. Don't forget you still need the striker on the box. I threw a bic lighter in the bag as well. For some reason I got an entire extra box of no name band aids, I didn't see it in the product description. That's kind of nice, but I removed it. No one needs 30 standard band aids in a 3 day kit. Instead of the small n piece first aid kit I'd rather have quick clot and a compression bandage. The things that standard first aid kits do for you basically boils down to unnecessary comforts in the scope of a 3 day disaster bag, aside from covering some inconvenient cuts at best. Wear the gloves. It's a logical addition though (the small varied kit, not the significant box of one bandage type) The water supply is 3 day and 4 person only in the sense that you have iodine based water purification tablets (50 quarts worth) and there are 4 plastic pouches with spouts that each contain 6 ~4 ounce water packets. After you remove and exhaust the packets the pouches can be used to gather water from a source and purify it. Otherwise ~26 ounces of water per person isn't impressive for 72 hours. If I was building this kit I would probably do the same though, at most I'd bump it up about 50%. Water is heavy. The food supply is a bit thin at 800 calories per person per day by any standard. Yes I realize this is "survival" kit, but I still think 3600 cal bars would have been a nice touch. My D batteries have a use by date 2 years shy of the food and water expiration. The bag leaves little room for your own additions, which I imagine people will have some. I've added a full tang hunting knife, Gerber multi-tool, quikclot trauma kit, bic lighter, and 8oz hand sanitizer (many uses). I have other things in my vehicle so they don't need to be in the bag, wet ones, fire steel, compass, hand/feet warmers, small but powerful flashlight, q-tips, tissues, toilet paper, ibuprofen, antacid, boots, gloves, baseball hat, outerwear-warmth, and outerwear-rain (additional gear in winter season also). A few of these if not in vehicle where bag is used I would include in the bag itself; especially fire steel, good compass, and toilet paper/tissues. On the average the quality of all items, as expected, is low. What do you expect though, put more stuff and better stuff in your BoB or house. This is no substitute though for what you can inexpensively do at home, rather a nice addition or best on the road. Realistically bottled water is supposed to have an indefinite shelf life, you can easily keep gallons per person stored at home. In addition your house presumably has a couple weeks worth of food all about. I expect the honey bucket kit to be more common in the house, this backpack kit seems more like a compact and practical mobile addition or at work in the locker/desk. If you are truely looking for a grab-and-go bag away from home and do not plan to build real BoBs (outdoor survival of undetermined length, as opposed to 2-3 days) for up to four people that you will not augment too much then this seems to be a much better choice: http://www.amazon.com/Survival-Earthquake-Evacuation-Emergency-Preparedness/dp/B002H5Y9YY/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1335747080&sr=8-3 are you really going to scoff at an extra $35 per person for making it well through a short disaster experience? The earliest, simplest, and cheapest differences between the Mayday kit here and my BoB are a part of this other kit. e.g. mylar sleeping bags instead of mylar blankets, e.g. hand crank equipment. I will update this if I experience any quality issues around the food or water in the future. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2012 by Anon

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