I agree to a point, which is why even though I have a few of the "cool toys" I still have lots of what works. I have never used tampons on a trauma patient.... only for nose bleeds, their intended use for my female soldiers, and as pranks for my males. ("quit crying, here's a tampon"

) in theory, it seems like the'yd work, so I have some tampax supers. though, as I think about it, you'd have to work quickly, because as soon as they get wet, they expand, and you want them to apply pressure on the bleed, not just sponge up all the red stuff.
I was careful to pack them in pouches where I had space, but not enough to fit more kerlix. in other words, the tampons are augmenting the kerlix... I'm not leaving rolls of kerlix out to make room for them. as for the CATs... I'd like a couple of SOF-Ts, but I haven't been able to get those.... so since it's all I have, and I've had good experience with them, I packed as many as I could (9). the israeli's are handy tools. I like them. the combat gauze, I'm a little sketchy on, though..... seems liike it works great in practice, sounds like it would make a big difference....... but I'm not ready to replace all my regular white fluffy stuff with it. so again, I packed it where it fit, but not at the expense of Kerlix.
I'm carrying 7 ace wraps, 15 rolls of kerlix, 9 kravats, 6 tampons, 9 CATs, 6 israeli's, and 4 rolls of combat gauze..... and a few random items like an eye dressing, 2 abdominal dressings, and some original Quickclot. that's all my bleeding items. I've got enough stuff where I feel comfortable I can handle what comes my way. if not, I'll improvise. semper gumby.
the only place I really disagree with you is the coban.... that stuff is wonderful, but it always seems to get squished inside my bag and then i can't get it to unroll and be useful, especially with gloves on. Ace wraps and tapeworks every time, though.