USING THE STATION 150
Medical Bag
To use the Station 150 as a medical response bag, start by organizing your supplies into functional zones inside the bag’s large, rigid compartment. Its 149-liter capacity allows you to dedicate space for trauma gear (tourniquets, pressure dressings, chest seals), airway management tools, diagnostics (BP cuffs, stethoscopes, pulse oximeters), medications, and general first-aid supplies. The rigid walls and protective shell help maintain shape and prevent gear from shifting, making it easier to keep items exactly where you place them — critical during fast-paced response situations.
When you arrive on scene, convert the Station 150 from transport mode into a stable medical workstation. Place the bag on the ground or floor, open the workstation compartment, and unfold the 6061 aluminum legs until they lock into place. This elevates the bag to a comfortable working height, allowing you to stage instruments, lay out medications, or prepare dressings without kneeling in dirt, snow, or uneven terrain. The reinforced tabletop surface provides a clean, steady platform, which is especially valuable when treating injuries outdoors, in parking lots, remote campsites, or other non-clinical environments.
As you work, the design helps maintain clear organization. Keep the main compartment partially open so you can access stored supplies while using the elevated surface as your active treatment area. This setup mirrors the functionality of a field medical table — everything stored where it should be, but immediately at hand for triage, wound care, splinting, or patient assessment. The bag’s rugged, weather-resistant construction protects sterile supplies from dust and moisture, while the all-terrain wheels let you reposition the workstation quickly if the situation changes.
When the response is complete, simply fold the legs back into the chassis, secure your supplies, and zip the bag shut. The Station 150 returns to a durable, rollable transport mode in seconds. This quick breakdown makes it ideal not only for professional responders, but also for event medics, wilderness groups, shooting-sports safety officers, or anyone who needs a portable, organized, and dependable medical setup in unpredictable environments.
