KTT Field OS // Eureka, MT // 48.8797°N 115.0525°W
Veteran-owned. One working camouflage system, soft goods built around signal discipline, and a lab on this site that shows you exactly what the gear does.
// Start Here //
The site has products, tools, founder context, and the weird Montana humor. You do not need to decode all of it at once.
// 01 Gear //
The core line: physical shielding and retention soft goods designed and prototyped in Eureka. No software toggles to trust — inside the enclosure is quiet, outside is convenience. Product images are AI-generated concept renders; each piece is at a different stage of development.
Phone isolationFaraday PouchPhone goes in, signals stop. Cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS-assist isolated in one physical step.
Card shieldingRFID WalletContactless cards and badges answer readers only when you choose to present them.
RetentionDouble Tap PouchA flexible retention concept — one pouch shape tuned for mags, radios, or utility carry.
// 02 The Lab //
Two working consoles back the products with something you can run yourself, right here.
Pick a device, see what it broadcasts, then flip the shield and watch the meters drop. Routes straight to the right countermeasure.
02Kit builderLoadout ArchitectMount gear on a plain carrier and watch weight, mobility, utility, and signal control trade off. Save it, export the manifest.
Every tool run and hidden mode logs progress here. Progress unlocks rewards — including a 10% shop code.
Open the archive →More in the lab: R&D hub · Terrain & Pattern reference
// 03 Field Notes //
KTT comes from service work where radio discipline, weather, and weight were daily constraints — not style cues. TV-D1 and the soft goods start with Tobacco Valley terrain and repeatable tests, and every order funds the next prototype round.
// 04 Tactical Rodeo //
Local rodeo texture, morale patches, and enough Montana nonsense to keep the lab pages honest.
Enter the rodeoKTT exists because the best ideas usually start as field problems nobody else cared enough to solve.
Every shirt, patch, pouch, wallet, and weird experiment is part of the same mission: build practical gear, test it honestly, and keep funding the next prototype.
Checkpoint Charlie relay opened. Papers are questionable, but the gear transfer has been approved.
Transmission origin: Tobacco Valley. Border static fading. KTT field systems remain online.