Here are several commonly used Japanese deductions.
Regardless of the appearance or structure, this is the most standard Japanese buckle. The quality is solid. Generally used in the external system of the backpack.
Such as an axe, or used in conjunction with a non-adjustable buckle to make up for the defect of the non-adjustable buckle. It is said that this is a Japanese-style buckle that meets military standards. It can be seen that its firmness is extraordinary. The middle block is very thick and has a non-slip groove to prevent the webbing from slipping off.
The anti-slip function of this Japanese-shaped buckle is even better, with protruding teeth, which can effectively bite the webbing. Generally used on longer webbing straps. This one-way Japanese buckle is used as a belt on the backpack. It is generally used to fix the chest strap on the chest of the strap. The Japanese buckle is buckled on the vertical webbing of the strap. The buckle is connected to the horizontal webbing on the chest and can be moved up and down. This design allows the backpack to close the strap on the chest when the backpack is carried, without hindering the movement of the arms, but this kind of buckle is one-way, so if you Pulling the chest strap too tightly will deform the vertical webbing of the back strap, so it is generally not used for large-capacity backpacks.
The two-way adjustable Japanese-shaped buckle is usually also used on the strap to connect the horizontal strap on the chest. The horizontal strap with this buckle is usually a webbing sleeve, which covers the strap instead of just the vertical webbing of the strap, because it is stretched. No matter how tight it is, the general large-capacity two-way adjustable buckle will be used on this kind of bag!











