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Ammo Pouches and Cases 売り出し中









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業界: --その他--店舗-倉庫-e104cbda

22件の結果

  • (32) Entrenching Tool Carriers, (195) M4 Three Mag Pouches & Assorted Items

    (32) Entrenching Tool Carriers, (195) M4 Three Mag Pouches & Assorted Items

    Chambersburg, PA

  • (230) M4 Three Mag Pouches

    North Las Vegas, NV

  • (111) M4 Three Mag Pouches

    North Las Vegas, NV

  • (100) M4 Three Mag Pouches

    North Las Vegas, NV

  • (394) M4 Two Mag Pouches

    North Las Vegas, NV

  • (400) M4 Two Mag Pouches

    Chambersburg, PA

Ammo pouches and cases for organized, field-ready storage

Ammo pouches and cases keep rounds, magazines, and shooting accessories protected, accessible, and properly organized — whether you're outfitting a range bag, a duty belt, a hunting pack, or long-term storage in a shop or armory. Browse our listings and you'll find everything from MOLLE-compatible magazine pouches and shotgun shell carriers to hard-sided transport cases and waterproof field boxes. Inventory at Ritchie Bros. comes through government surplus auctions, law enforcement liquidations, and commercial consignments, so the selection shifts constantly.

If you're equipping a team, building out a personal kit, or reselling tactical gear, buying through auction gives you access to bulk lots and individual pieces at prices well below retail — often with surplus military and LE-grade construction you can't easily source new.

Types of ammo pouches and cases you'll find in our listings

The category covers a wide range of carrying and storage solutions. Each format serves a different purpose, and knowing the differences helps you bid with confidence:

  • Single and double magazine pouches: Designed for rifle (AR/AK pattern) or pistol magazines, with bungee retention, hook-and-loop flaps, or open-top kydex inserts. MOLLE/PALS webbing on the back is standard for surplus gear.
  • Shotgun shell pouches and bandoliers: Elastic shell loops or pocketed pouches for 12 ga and 20 ga, common in hunting and clay shooting setups.
  • Hard cases: Waterproof, crushproof transport cases — often Pelican-style — with foam inserts for sensitive optics, ammunition, or boxed rounds.
  • Ammo cans and storage boxes: Steel surplus cans (M2A1 .50 cal, M19A1 .30 cal, PA120 fat 50) with gasket seals for long-term moisture-protected storage. See our ammo cans category for dedicated listings.
  • Dump pouches and utility pouches: Roll-up or fold-flat pouches for collecting spent magazines or general field gear.
  • Chest rigs and bandolier-style carriers: Multi-mag platforms worn over the torso, frequently sold as part of surplus lots.

Materials and construction to look for

The longevity of a pouch or case comes down to the material and the stitching. Military and LE-spec surplus gear is typically built from 500D or 1000D Cordura nylon with bartacked stress points and Berry-compliant hardware (ITW, Duraflex). Cheaper commercial knockoffs use lighter denier nylon and plastic hardware that breaks under load.

Hard cases are usually polypropylene or polymer with O-ring gaskets and pressure equalization valves. For steel ammo cans, the gasket condition matters more than the exterior paint — a flattened or torn rubber seal won't keep humidity out, regardless of how clean the can looks.

Brands and surplus sources worth knowing

You'll regularly see gear from Eagle Industries, Tactical Tailor, BlackHawk, Condor, BAE Systems, Safariland, and London Bridge Trading in our listings — names that supply US military, DoD contractors, and law enforcement agencies. For cases, Pelican, SKB, Plano, and MTM Case-Gard show up frequently in shipping and storage lots. Steel cans typically carry US Government markings and lot numbers stamped on the lid.

When buying surplus, the markings on the gear tell the story. Look for NSN (National Stock Number) tags, contract numbers, and manufacturer date codes — these confirm authenticity and help you avoid commercial reproductions sold as surplus.

What to look for when buying used ammo pouches and cases

  • Stitching and bartacks: Inspect load-bearing seams, especially at attachment points and around retention flaps. Frayed or pulled stitching is the most common failure point on used pouches.
  • Hook-and-loop condition: Velcro loses grip over time. Check that closures still hold firmly under tension, particularly on magazine retention flaps.
  • Hardware and buckles: ITW and Duraflex buckles are durable but can crack with age and UV exposure. Test every snap, clip, and release before committing.
  • MOLLE/PALS webbing integrity: Loose or torn webbing on the back panel means the pouch won't sit flush on a plate carrier or belt.
  • Gasket and seal condition (hard cases and ammo cans): Run a finger around the gasket — it should be supple, not cracked or compressed flat. A failed seal defeats the purpose of waterproof storage.
  • Interior cleanliness: Surplus gear may carry residue, sand, or oil. Lot photos in our listings usually show interior condition, but factor in cleaning time for bulk purchases.

Buy used ammo pouches and cases at Ritchie Bros.

Listings for ammo pouches and cases at Ritchie Bros. and IronPlanet rotate frequently as government surplus, agency liquidations, and commercial consignments come through. You'll find individual pieces, palletized lots, and mixed inventory ranging from MOLLE magazine pouches and shotgun bandoliers to Pelican hard cases and steel surplus cans. Each listing includes condition photos and lot details so you can evaluate before you bid — and with auctions running daily, fresh inventory shows up across our marketplace every week.

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