As an officer with the Wall Township (N.J.) Police Department, he had experienced this problem repeatedly and seen attempts to secure lights in various ways fail, either while running or during altercations. Determined to develop a solution that would satisfy his needs on patrol, Madhavan developed the Exxtremity Glove for his own use. "I feel safest when I have both hands free," he says. He took time to perfect the gloves that allow you to mount a tactical weapons light on the back of either hand and now sells them to other officers as owner and president of
221B Tactical
.
"For a foot pursuit or bailout, you don't need to worry about grabbing a light from your car before you go after a suspect. If you already have the Exxtremity Glove on, thelight will be with you the entire time, even while you grab, punch, or restrain a subject," says Madhavan. "It's not dropping to the ground or rolling away." And during a nighttime traffic stop, you can easily illuminate the inside of a car while your other hand is available to draw your weapon.
But it took time to come up with what would eventually become the Exxtremity Glove.
"I started working with little clip-on LED lights, but nothing seemed to be working," Madhavan says. "So I thought, where should the light ideally be? I realized while holding a flashlight, my hand was always where the light was pointed."
So he started testing different mounting systems and flashlights on his hand. He began with a small light velcroed to his patrol glove, but eventually decided on a larger weapons light. "If it's good enough to mount on a weapon for lighting, why not mount it on your hand?" he reasoned.