Emergency Thermal Blankets (4 Pack) |  | Brand: Quake Kare Category: Sports
List Price: $9.80 Buy New: $4.00 as of 3/12/2010 00:52 CST details You Save: $5.80 (59%)
New (8) Used (1) from $4.00
Seller: Emergency Disaster Systems, Inc. Rating: 17 reviews Sales Rank: 22
Media: Misc. Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 52 x 0 x 48
MPN: 3AQK-4P Model: 3AQK-4P ASIN: B0007N0XDO
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Provides compact emergency protection in all weather conditions. | | • | Made of durable insulating mylar material designed by NASA for space exploration. | | • | Retains/reflects back 90% of body heat. | | • | Reusable, waterproof and windproof. | | • | 52" X 84" |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Emergency thermal blanket to be used as emergency shelter. Also great for camping, hiking, and surviving the cold outdoors. Excellent as liner of sleeping bag.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 17
Absolutely Essential Survival Kit Item January 10, 2006 Roy Jaruk (Patterson, NY United States) 111 out of 116 found this review helpful
If you are setting up a "grab & go" pack - the kind of thing that lives in your car or at your office, insurance against a manmade disaster like a terrorist attack or a runaway nuclear reactor; or a natural catastrophe like an earthquake or a hurricane - you cannot get along without these mylar blankets. You can use them as blankets, cloaks, tents, groundcloths and signal panels. They are almost weightless and as noted, very versatile. They belong in every survival kit, automobile glove compartment, and hiker's pack. I cannot recommend them highly enough.
Top of the Line June 3, 2008 Geoffrey F. Beneze (Tempe, AZ USA) 58 out of 59 found this review helpful
I have used mylar "space" blankets for the past 30 years for near innumerable projects. Want to make a solar oven? here's a tool to allow that. Increase the rating on your sleeping bag by 20 degrees (put the mylar INSIDE the bag), I've made emergency ponchos from them while backpacking. Ground cloths, signal devices, sun awnings (in this mode they help provide cooling), insulation for coolers, animal shelters, a lining for an incubator.
They don't have to wait around in your car or "read bag" to find uses! However, I carry them in each vehicle, I have one in each of my various (depending on purpose) "ready bags", in emergency kits made for the kids and in all the first aid kits in the house, vehicles, the ranch and other such haunts.
This little piece of plastic may well be one of the premier tools of all time.
Good quality Space Blanket June 29, 2009 W. Strong (Denver, CO) 42 out of 42 found this review helpful
I've played with a couple of different brands of space blankets and these blankets are of fine quality. They suffer the usual short comings of this material (tears spread easily) but on the grand scale of space blanket brands, you are getting one of the better quality blankets. For example, one of the cheaper brands I have tried experienced flaking of the mylar coating after (admittedly) rough handling. The brand being reviewed here did not suffer from this flaking. Definitely recommended.
Emergency Essential September 6, 2009 Ambergris (New England.....USA) 22 out of 22 found this review helpful
I have carried mylar thermal blankets along with me during my hikes to the north country here for decades. In addition to the many other uses mentioned here by others, I have used them before to actually sleep with just to experience it. And even though they are like curling up all cozy with a large plastic bag, they are nothing less than amazingly warm. Quite simply put, they enable you to radiate back as much of your own body heat as several wool blankets are capable of. However, there is one thing I feel I must add about sleeping with these blankets on a cold ground that doesn't seem to be covered by other reviewers. Remember that to keep warm, you must have as much insulation under you as over. At home, our mattress more than does the job. Out in the wilderness on the cold ground we are forced to improvise. If it comes a time that you really are in a survival situation, or just forced by whatever causes to be sleeping directly on a cold ground, remember to put as many of these thermals, (or any kind of blanket) under you as over. You would not believe the number of hikers and campers I have encountered that pile on the blankets on top of them, while putting just one underneath. And then wonder why they spent the entire night nearly freezing to death. In conclusion, one cannot recommend having these along on a hike or camping trip enough since they are so small and easy to tote along. Carrying one 4 pack of these thermals on any outdoor excursion is equivalent to toting 10 full size blankets. Something near impossible to manage in a back pack outing even if you wanted to. Considering their low cost, versatile uses, and life saving possibilities, one would be foolish not to pack them on any wilderness excursion, or include them as an essential addition in any survival kit. My own recommendation is don't leave home without them, and, buy them here on Amazon in bulk rather than at a sporting goods store, where they can easily cost you twice as much...
Thermal blanket April 15, 2009 O. Romero 15 out of 16 found this review helpful
Hi
The thermal blankets I received are warm and comfortable. The only drawback (which I know cannot be avoided because of the material used) is that they make a crunchy noise when one moves.
I would recommend them for cold climates, which is where I used mine. I plan to use the ones I didn't open yet to leave in my car and relatives' cars for emergencies.
Thank you.
O. Romero
Showing reviews 1-5 of 17
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