Archive | Tactics and Training

D.I.R.E. Course from Adler & Assoc. and UW Gear

UW Gear is in the business of making gear for the armed citizen, so it only makes sense that they should start offering training geared toward the armed citizen. The new D.I.R.E. Course from Adler & Associates and UW Gear is designed to prepare regular citizens for worst case scenarios.

D.I.R.E. stands for Disaster Insurgency Recovery Event. While many courses do a great job of focusing on specific skills like weapons manipulation or emergency first aid, this course is a practical application of many skills that the armed citizen will find useful in a disaster. It is the first course in an entire planned series of D.I.R.E. courses that will build skills and provide application of the skill that is specific to disaster scenarios.

Visit the UW Gear forum for more information.

No Amount of Gear Can Replace Practice

We talk about gear a lot on JTT. We talk about new gear, classic gear, gear that works, gear that doesn’t work, and any other kind of gear. Gear keeps the lights on at JTT. However, I recently had two experiences at roughly the same time that reminded me of some truths that I already knew – the best, newest, most efficient gear cannot replace skill that has been honed by regular practice and skill is perishable. Your gear can enhance your skill and it should fit your skill level but it can never replace your skill and that skill can be lost, or at least diminished, if it is not practiced. This applies to more than just firearm manipulation.

Bogota Entry Toolsets are easy to use but take practice to master.

Bypassing Locks

If you have been reading this blog for a while, you know that I am a big fan of the Bogota Entry Toolsets from SerePick. These amazing tools allow unskilled users to bypass locks with some degree of success but they really come into their own in the hands of skilled users. A skilled Bogota user can often bypass locks in a matter of seconds. These are some seriously efficient and effective tools.

There was a time when I was fairly proficient with the Bogota rakes as a result of quite a bit of practice. However, when I recently received two new Bogota Entry Toolsets for review, I realized it had been several months since I last bypassed a lock. That time without practice was immediately apparent when I started testing the new tools. Much of lock bypassing is dependent on “touch” and subtle movements. I am still working to regain the touch that was lost over those months. I struggled to use the tools even though they are some of the most innovative and effective lock picks available.

No matter how efficiently configured your weapon is, it takes training to get the most out of it.

Carbine Manipulations

You may have noticed that over the last several months there has been a lot of reviews for AK-47 specific items on JTT. This was not planned but it was a lot of fun. With so many AK items to review, it was a great time to get some trigger time on my AKs and that is just what I did. Nearly all of my range time and dry fire exercises were spent with the AK at the expense of time with my AR. When I did return to training with the AR, it was immediately apparent that I lost some crispness in my manipulations. I could feel it and the shot timer certainly showed it.

While the fundamentals of marksmanship certainly apply to any carbine, the manipulations that an AK requires are very different from that of an AR. Time spent working out the AK review items was time spent not practicing with my AR. Time spent not practicing, is time spent regressing. This is true even with an ergonomic carbine like the AR that I have configured in a way that supports the way that I typically shoot.

Preaching to the Choir

I suppose that there are actually two lessons here. First, gear simply can not replace skill gained in training. Second, skills can be extremely perishable and can be diminished by lack of practice. Hopefully, this serves as a friendly reminder to hit the range and maybe even take a training course. When you can’t hit the range, schedule some time for dry fire practice. Do something so that you don’t lose something.

Multitasker Series 2X

I fell in love with the Multitasker Series 2 last year. Since I received it, I haven’t been to the range without it and I use it at home frequently when working on my ARs (and other things). I guess that I was so absorbed in my Series 2 that I forgot to mention that the Series 2X is now available.

The Multitasker Series 2X offers several great improvements over the Series 2. The most noticeable of which are the new larger and beefier jaws. The Series 2 had really fine teeth that were very grippy, but not necessarily the best for gripping items with large angular surfaces like large bolts. The Series 2X has teeth that would make a T-Rex jealous. These will definitely grip just about anything you can throw at them. The wire cutters have also been improved which is saying a lot because they were already pretty darn good.

The Series 2X also features a new pivot design. The Series 2 ball bearing pivot has been replaced with a self lubricating hybrid pivot design that is bull strong and very smooth.

The melonite coating of the Series 2 has been replaced with a more durable PVD or Titanium Nitride coating. This new coating will offer increased wear resistance versus the melonite treatment that was used originally.

Glock shooters will find the 2X to be more useful. It will come with a 3/32″ punch attachment that replaces the cleaning pick that was found on the Series 2 (except for the Brownells models which will still feature the cleaning pick). Many Glock shooters will know that a 3/32″ punch is basically the only tool needed to detail strip a Glock down to small parts.

The Series 2X is a worthy successor to the Series 2. Get all the latest Multitasker information at MultitaskerTools.com and at the Multitasker Tools Facebook Page. You can purchase your own Multitasker Series 2X from TacStrike.

You can also check out the earlier Series 2 at Brownells.

Paper Targets from TacStrike

TacStrike is well known for their steel targets, but that just isn’t good enough for them. They want to provide all your training target needs! They have begun ramping up a huge selection of paper targets that can really take your training to the next level. The new line up of targets includes target overlays for IDPA and precision shooting, a ton of realistic scenario targets, training targets from VTAC, and more.

Check out their full line of paper targets at TacStrike.com.

Magazine Management

Many shooters spend time on the range honing their emergency reloads into smooth, efficient actions. But, how many shooters spend time on the range practicing magazine management as an underlying structure and strategy for success with their reloads? There are actions that you can take before the emergency reload that can increase your efficiency, or better yet, preclude the need for an emergency reload all together.

Magazine management is simply the act of rotating your magazines in your chest rig, belt rig, or plate carrier so that you maximize the chance of having a magazine in the optimal position for reloading when you need one. It is a dynamic decision making process that is happening at each reload and with just a little forethought and practice, it can be second nature.

Fast, Faster, Fastest

Each shooter’s strategy for magazine management will vary based on the way that they carry magazines, the shooter’s strong hand, and other factors. The first step toward developing your strategy is identifying where your fastest reload comes from.

As a general rule, your fastest reload will come from the pouch that is closest to your support hand (non-dominant hand) simply because this will be the easiest to reach. Open top pouches will be faster than those with flaps or retention of some kind. Additionally, it is generally faster to reload from belt level than from chest rig level. This combination of factors is why many shooters will place an open top magazine pouch on the support side of their belt to serve as a dedicated emergency reload location.

Once you have identified the fastest reload location, you should order the rest in terms of speed and ease of use. Generally, the closer your magazine pouch is to your weapon side (dominant hand), the slower and more difficult it will be to reach.

This chest rig shows the available reload locations numbered from fastest (1) to slowest (3) for a right handed shooter.

Lets look at the simplified example of a 3 cell chest rig. The fastest reload will be the one closest to the support hand which is the pouch marked with a 1. The slowest reload is closest to the weapon hand which is the pouch marked with a 3.

Now that you have ranked your pouches in order based on speed and ease of reach, you have already done much of the work. You can use this information to develop your magazine management strategy. Remember, the goal is to always have a magazine available in the fastest reload location. This is accomplished by choosing which pouch you reload from based on the situation and rotating magazines when possible.

Choose the Pouch Based on the Situation

Speed is not the emphasis with administrative and “tactical” reloads so they should come from your slowest pouches. Using our example chest rig from above, this means that an administrative or tactical reload will come with pouch 3. By choosing to complete your reloads that do not require speed from your slowest pouches, you help ensure that there will be a magazine available in your fastest reload location during an emergency reload.

Top Off

Let’s carry our example further. You have just completed a administrative reload from pouch 3 and completed a course of fire. Before you start the next course of fire, it might be wise to complete another tactical reload from pouch 2 so that you can start the next course of fire with a topped off rifle. By keeping your rifle topped off from the slowest location, you accomplish two things. Most importantly, you reduce the chance that you will need an emergency reload at all and secondly you keep that all important fastest pouch ready to go with a fresh reload.

Rotate, Rotate, Rotate

What if you run through a course of fire that requires an emergency reload and find yourself with a moment before the next course of fire begins? This is an excellent time to rotate magazines. Top off your weapon, then take the magazines from your slowest pouches and move them over to your fastest pouches. Remember, the goal is to always have magazines ready in your fastest pouches.

Back to our example chest rig. If you emergency reload from pouch 1 and you find yourself in a lull in the action, rotate the magazine from the slowest available pouch (2 or 3) into pouch 1. Now you are ready for another emergency reload.

Layered Approach

If you have magazines in multiple locations like on a belt and chest rig, it can help to think of your gear in a layered approach. I choose to use a belt rig as my base line since I carry a firearm daily. It makes sense for me to reinforce going to the belt for my reload in training since the same motions will work for reloading my handgun or my carbine. If I am taking a carbine course, I will always have my belt rig on but I usually only have a chest rig on if the round count and pace of the course requires additional magazines.

My belt is typically going to be my fastest reload location. I think of my belt as my main support gear while my chest rig is secondary. The belt feeds my rifle and the chest rig feeds my belt. I am constantly rotating magazines from my chest rig to my belt to ensure that there is always a reload available in my fastest location.

Conclusion

Magazine management isn’t rocket surgery. Identify your fastest reload locations, choose your reload location based on the situation, top off, and rotate. Identify your strategy at home, practice it on the range, and soon it will be second nature.

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