Hey guys, thanks for the great comments. I want to make sure guys understand what we are doing in this series. This not about the scenario so much, but making Myles work through problems using skills and technique he learned over the last couple years with pressure. The problems are going to becoming more and difficult over the next few vids. Again thanks for the great comments.
Awesome that you created this series and sharing it with others. There was so much to unpack from this ep alone and its prob only the surface layer of room clearing lol. Great content guys I hope everyone that watches this can get useful information out of it cause I know I sure did.
While you never want to "go after 4 guys by yourself" the SAS dude in Nairobi pretty much did just that. He "only" took out 3 bad guys that had ak's - bomber vests and ieds. It just depends on the individual and his skill set. That particular SAS dude probably had a rough time in the doorways considering his balls just barely fit through lol
Not only long hours of ingress egress, also countless hours working and honing the skills before hand. Have many hours clearing while in the Corps. I can tell you our hearts raced the most on house clearing.
Christian Craighead. After the first guy detonated himself Christian neutralized the other four., while saving dozens of hostages and disoriented public clearing not a training "killing house" but a hotel a big hotel! Even more impressive he wasn't even working he was called to give aid by an unknown. Legend indeed he has done some other rather impressive feats of bravery and skill showing that the Regiment is still the highest skilled SF group in the world. They quite litrely wrote the book! 👌
As a long-time follower of the TacticalHyve Channel, it's been fun to watch Myles' skillet improve and evolve over time. His weapon manipulations, i.e. his comfort collapsing the weapon rounding corners, in addition switching from his strong-side shoulder, when pieing opposite-side (weak-side) angles is manifestly more polished and refined; his shot selection and intuition when clearing is also noticably improved! ^_^
This video is amazing. I love how the scenario involves complex rooms/lighting situations vs. a simple threshold. The mentor/mentee formatting is incredibly valuable as well - posing questions, answers, and a review all in one. There is so much excellent information here for one to digest. Great work Myles and Tosh!
It's useful to know what to do in that situation but the skill is pretty basic. Set up in your predetermined safe room of your house (or an office room) and wait for them to come to you. This training covers a lot more skills needed.
I would also like to see a scenario with one man against multiple intruders. I have a family and with the way my house is laid out, the barricade and wait for them method is not feasible.
@@AverageJoe4063 why not have a designated safe room that's sorta centrally located around the bedrooms that all the people in the house at least attempt to get to in the event of an emergency and post up in there?
Great attention to detail! The shooter knows his stuff for sure, but refining those minute things only helps. One man clearing is sketchy so it takes a lot of confidence and quick-thinking to prioritize danger areas.
I really appreciate this video! Most tacticool videos won't show their mistakes, they want to look like high speed "operators". Y'all kept it real, and talked over the mistakes which is EXACTLY what we need! More videos like this! Is Tosh Nihongin?
I was just saying something similar earlier. Single man room clearing is VERY difficult (and very VERY dangerous) so you will make mistakes, the main thing is doing what you can to midigate those risks. I think they should try some more elaborate schemes like adding moving targets (as in able to change locations) and maybe even multiple structures, because you can NEVER train too much when it come to this stuff.
exactly why I liked the video. Sure some mistakes were made and even I spotted one about 4 minutes in but it is a very difficult thing to achieve especially when your learning it. He did extremely well.
Took a training a few weeks ago and in these types of drills there are so many variables that you have to have locked into muscle memory. I made so many tiny mistakes from ammo awareness to body positioning at doorways vs hallways. Little things but unless you're training and making these mistakes, you will never know where your skill level is or what you need to work on. Up the stress and even more "little mistakes" add up to monumental ones. Great video, best one from this channel in a long time.
This situation reminds of Police Officers responding to an active shooter event. Training and scenarios like this should be mandatory for us to ensure that we know what we must do if we have to go into a structure during a real event,.
That and a dozen other things. There's probably 3 - 5 weeks of knowledge and practice a year needed by our officers across a wide variety of things that are expected of them. That's a month of pay and time they aren't on shift or on call, and most departments don't have, or at least make the time, the time or funding for that.
@@TheJBerg you hit it right on the head. I remember working for a chief that limited 99% of the officers in our agency (the 1% where he buddies) to one training class a year. I remember asking him about that he said he didn't want a bunch of brainiac officers in his department. Just answer calls and then write reports
When I was watching you clearing the compound, two questions were suddenly popped up in my mind and decided to write it down right away in the comments section, but I again prefer to watch the complete video first before I write something. I'm happy to see that the Instructor pointed out the same two things what I had in my mind, that you didn't use WML where needed essentially and you continously manipulate with safety as you were the only man in the drill. Anyhow good stuff, really appreciate your efforts. Keep it up man, thumbs up for you guys 👍
He did great, it's easy to knock him for his faults, but in the moment, under stress, decisions like that are difficult to make. I guess MY biggest thing was that first room he entered after entering the structure, he took WAY too long to collapse his sector of fire, instead of sweeping the entire room (since he cleared 80% of it before entering), he shouldve simply cleared one corner than snapped around to the other, but then again, I'm not the one in the moment. Lastly, I like how hard he dug out his corners, especially under stress, without proper training, it's easy to let that kind of small stuff fall by the wayside, but it could just as easily save your life. Good work! Lets see more scenarios like this, they're good training for civilians, fun (and fun to watch) and educational.
Myles did excellent! Never wanna do it but if you have to this is what you wanna do. Couple of small things but that’s easy to pick apart in retrospect. The fact is he put the targets down and they didn’t put him down. 🤙🏼🤙🏼
I am glad you guys are doing this because if you think about it.. you have a threat in your home or in a commercial building.. you may be the only responder around until Police arrive.. So eventhough you never want to room clear by yourself, should train to the best of your ability because that is unfortunately the more probable scenario is being by yourself.
I very much disagree with the safety discussion at approx. 8:00. I definitely understand the idea, but, I'd suggest we never get used to on-fire weapons in the middle of a high-stress environment like the one demo'd here. What happens when you train to keep that safety off, then drop into a team environment where you're not the #1 man? It takes less, an avg of .25s break a shot, less to get that weapon off safe on entry. Better to save your team from a negligent discharge during an entry. Otherwise, really loved this video Many focus on team entry rather than clearing by yourself. Great work here. Pied the corners, determined danger areas. Well done! And, I like the, "If you have a gadget on the system, be prepared..."
I'd definitely like to see some work from the opposite site - structure defense. Also, cameras on the opfor would be very useful to watch for signalling with feet /weapon, and good for everyone to see things from inside.
C’est très intéressant. Ce type est extra dans ses pas, il est un excellent tacticien. Bravo messieurs. Je m’abonne à votre chaîne parce que vous faites du bon boulot. Songer a mettre les sous-titres dans d’autres langues pour permettre la compréhension, surtout en français
Great video! I only found one video you guys have on light placement. I cant help but wonder if the light placement effected Myles's use of his light. I kept trying to pause it to where I could see, but couldn't tell if his light could be actuated from both sides. I wonder if it is an ambidextrous set up, and if not, if that made him subconsciously disregard it. Again though, great info and training points.
It shows the use of his rifle light has not become habitual. Under stress, a lot of things happen. Being in the exercise versus flat range training is very different.
@@ericanderson3777 I think he meant it simply factually, the shooter hasn't learned to use his light when appropriate because he has not ran enough simulations where he used it. I would suggest playing airsoft legitly with a light. It has the benefit of teaching you observation, weapons manipulation, light manipulation, movement, etc. It's obviously not quite near real life fighting, while it can induce training scars like for example endless shooting from magazines that hold hundreds of rounds but target detection and acquisition are still skills learned while playing and for me I use a light when I play, it's very useful and teaches you both light discipline and to use it when necessary and when I go shooting with my real rifle I use my light in low light conditions fairly often. You have to think about doing it until you do it habitually.
Yall should do one with a real life situation where a man wakes up to 4 people breaking in , doesn't have time to put on all his tactical gear , barely awake, and all he has available is whatevers in his nightstand.
Damn that's a hard situation. I was getting anxious when he had to turn his back to the uncleared hallway. But you gotta do what you gotta do. To heck with single man CQB. Especially when potentially dealing with multiple badguys. 😅
This is EXACTLY what I wouldn't teach. Number one knowing how many targets and what they're going to do is teaching you to expect a specific outcome. Did that and you can expect to die. You need to adapt and work any problem... Moving targets included.
Depending on how you wargame it? Let's say he was clearing his house after a break-in, he saw them get out of the vehicle from his bedroom window or camera feed. He saw four but only three were actually inside and the no-shoot was a family member he could have hurt if he got too anxious on target id. Where was the last target, took off or was only ever the lookout and never entered, that's normal and getting hung up on it causes anxiety.
Not bad at all you can tell I still got that itch I was calling out sectors and things while watching it lol good stuff I wouldn’t run so much but other than that this is a new way to add to my resume lol I want more and more HOOAH
I was wondering if he even had a light during this training evolution. I cant say shit because you did 10x better than I would . Nice job Miles and awesome video Bros.. Fieldcraft Survival says the number 1 man I never wrong ..
Simunition is basically colored wax pellets in a brass cartridge. Like a big boy airsoft paintball cross over. It's expensive, and you can get similar training with the commercial airsoft replicas for much less money, but people will roast you for being a LARPer
Hey guys, I saw a lot of comments about safety manipulation. There are different schools of thought on this. I have been through many of them. Bottom line do what you are comfortable with. That being said from personal experience if I am the #1 man my weapon is on fire ready to engage. Now if my weapon is not being used in my search of course put on Safe. Thanks guys.
With smooth rolling a corner, you expose yourself to every single threat in the room instead of one at a time. It looks cooler, but you're pretty much screwed if there are 2 or more guys in that room.
Sure. In concept yes. But it’s one of the better alternatives. Multiple peaking is much worse. You don’t want opponents to know your position and keep peaking the same angle. And smooth movement …. Technically erratic varied movement is better but that’s insanely difficult and requires coordination better left focusing on firing and target acquisitions. Fast movement. Sure. As long as you can acquire targets. But yes fundamentally it’s very dangerous. They all are and smooth movement is one of the better “less risk” options. One time peak and take out targets … while that’s the dream … is usually impossible to do
Yep, you've got that right. Also leg stance is wrong. At first room he attacked positive corner fed insteadof negative. Door opening from wrong side etc. Don't get me wrong, he's still doing great job . Check Eli Fieldboy's CQB methodology . That may help
forgive the noob question here, but is what they are shooting called simunition rounds? And what are they, a paint or pellet? Looks like they leave a mark and break the skin like on his left forearm.
one question on when he went up to the first door i think he straffed off to the left first checking the corner he alr checked most of the corner so he was able to see no one was in that corner but he still pushed a corner he already knew was un occupied turning his back to the more open room and the other opening also he never collapsed his weapon system
something I noticed at 4:30 was that he could see a doorway (closet in this case) to the left but he entered the room and THEN turned to the left. In that time the enemy could have shot him if already pointing a gun at him. He can already see nobody can be on the right side of the room and the front is clear and so is the area where the mattress was. But he enters and then hears a shuffle turning left. Had the guy not moved he could have shot him. Instead he should have positioned himself already prepped to be aiming at the closet and stepped in whilst aiming in that direction.
You need to remember that its easier watching from the side and telling someone what he could/should have done because youre not under stress like he is and you have different angles and information you see that he doesnt at the time. Altho not wrong, remember that its easier said than done.
I have also done WAY more single man CQB than I wanted to. Normally I would wait for a second guy at least. More than a few times they weren't going to be there any time soon, so I went in. I'm glad I don't do that any more.
Hey guys, thanks for the great comments. I want to make sure guys understand what we are doing in this series. This not about the scenario so much, but making Myles work through problems using skills and technique he learned over the last couple years with pressure. The problems are going to becoming more and difficult over the next few vids. Again thanks for the great comments.
Awesome that you created this series and sharing it with others. There was so much to unpack from this ep alone and its prob only the surface layer of room clearing lol.
Great content guys I hope everyone that watches this can get useful information out of it cause I know I sure did.
While you never want to "go after 4 guys by yourself" the SAS dude in Nairobi pretty much did just that.
He "only" took out 3 bad guys that had ak's - bomber vests and ieds.
It just depends on the individual and his skill set. That particular SAS dude probably had a rough time in the doorways considering his balls just barely fit through lol
Chris Craighead is his name.
Zero fucks given what the pussy terrorists were called.
And it was hours long multiple ingress and egress .. people forget that .
Obi-wan Nairobi
Not only long hours of ingress egress, also countless hours working and honing the skills before hand. Have many hours clearing while in the Corps. I can tell you our hearts raced the most on house clearing.
Christian Craighead. After the first guy detonated himself Christian neutralized the other four., while saving dozens of hostages and disoriented public clearing not a training "killing house" but a hotel a big hotel! Even more impressive he wasn't even working he was called to give aid by an unknown. Legend indeed he has done some other rather impressive feats of bravery and skill showing that the Regiment is still the highest skilled SF group in the world. They quite litrely wrote the book! 👌
As a long-time follower of the TacticalHyve Channel, it's been fun to watch Myles' skillet improve and evolve over time. His weapon manipulations, i.e. his comfort collapsing the weapon rounding corners, in addition switching from his strong-side shoulder, when pieing opposite-side (weak-side) angles is manifestly more polished and refined; his shot selection and intuition when clearing is also noticably improved! ^_^
I can only sum up everything in one sentence ...
This is great stuff...
This video is amazing. I love how the scenario involves complex rooms/lighting situations vs. a simple threshold. The mentor/mentee formatting is incredibly valuable as well - posing questions, answers, and a review all in one. There is so much excellent information here for one to digest. Great work Myles and Tosh!
Wouldn’t the scenario be better if it was reversed? One man attempting to fend off 4 intruders…that scenario seems to be more likely going forward.
It's useful to know what to do in that situation but the skill is pretty basic. Set up in your predetermined safe room of your house (or an office room) and wait for them to come to you. This training covers a lot more skills needed.
Yeah I was hoping for that too.
I would also like to see a scenario with one man against multiple intruders. I have a family and with the way my house is laid out, the barricade and wait for them method is not feasible.
@@AverageJoe4063 why not have a designated safe room that's sorta centrally located around the bedrooms that all the people in the house at least attempt to get to in the event of an emergency and post up in there?
@@footfeathers Yep if they're coming in then let them come to you.
Love the break down at the end. Awesome job guys!
Myles is a beast
Great attention to detail! The shooter knows his stuff for sure, but refining those minute things only helps. One man clearing is sketchy so it takes a lot of confidence and quick-thinking to prioritize danger areas.
I really appreciate this video! Most tacticool videos won't show their mistakes, they want to look like high speed "operators". Y'all kept it real, and talked over the mistakes which is EXACTLY what we need! More videos like this! Is Tosh Nihongin?
Okinawian
I was just saying something similar earlier. Single man room clearing is VERY difficult (and very VERY dangerous) so you will make mistakes, the main thing is doing what you can to midigate those risks. I think they should try some more elaborate schemes like adding moving targets (as in able to change locations) and maybe even multiple structures, because you can NEVER train too much when it come to this stuff.
Constructive criticism in a respectful way makes for an all out better video
exactly why I liked the video. Sure some mistakes were made and even I spotted one about 4 minutes in but it is a very difficult thing to achieve especially when your learning it. He did extremely well.
This is one of the better videos posted by this channel. Solid work Myles! Hope to get to your level at some point!
Appreciate the comment!
VERY INTENSE... EXCELLENT MYLES,. the light. So intense . I was on the edge of my seat
The first kill house with actual furniture I saw .. really good job .
Awesome, i would like to see more of these in ever harder more advanced situations.
Standby we are gonna hand myles his ass!
The background music was phenomenal, perfect for the situation.
Good job Myles.
UA-cam is finally starting to recommend things I enjoy watching
Thank you out for the training on how to keep Rex and Bruno safe from the ATF at 2 am.
3:10 the enemy shoots.. did i see correct that het hit the corner of the wall? if so he would be hit because the bullet would go through the wall
Took a training a few weeks ago and in these types of drills there are so many variables that you have to have locked into muscle memory. I made so many tiny mistakes from ammo awareness to body positioning at doorways vs hallways. Little things but unless you're training and making these mistakes, you will never know where your skill level is or what you need to work on. Up the stress and even more "little mistakes" add up to monumental ones. Great video, best one from this channel in a long time.
This situation reminds of Police Officers responding to an active shooter event. Training and scenarios like this should be mandatory for us to ensure that we know what we must do if we have to go into a structure during a real event,.
Very similar
That and a dozen other things. There's probably 3 - 5 weeks of knowledge and practice a year needed by our officers across a wide variety of things that are expected of them. That's a month of pay and time they aren't on shift or on call, and most departments don't have, or at least make the time, the time or funding for that.
@@TheJBerg you hit it right on the head. I remember working for a chief that limited 99% of the officers in our agency (the 1% where he buddies) to one training class a year. I remember asking him about that he said he didn't want a bunch of brainiac officers in his department. Just answer calls and then write reports
When I was watching you clearing the compound, two questions were suddenly popped up in my mind and decided to write it down right away in the comments section, but I again prefer to watch the complete video first before I write something. I'm happy to see that the Instructor pointed out the same two things what I had in my mind, that you didn't use WML where needed essentially and you continously manipulate with safety as you were the only man in the drill. Anyhow good stuff, really appreciate your efforts. Keep it up man, thumbs up for you guys 👍
Thank you
Gentleman that was fantastic I remember the days
Excellent video! Overall, Great job one-man room clearing. Identifying the hostile versus the non-threats.
Glad you liked it!
He did great, it's easy to knock him for his faults, but in the moment, under stress, decisions like that are difficult to make. I guess MY biggest thing was that first room he entered after entering the structure, he took WAY too long to collapse his sector of fire, instead of sweeping the entire room (since he cleared 80% of it before entering), he shouldve simply cleared one corner than snapped around to the other, but then again, I'm not the one in the moment. Lastly, I like how hard he dug out his corners, especially under stress, without proper training, it's easy to let that kind of small stuff fall by the wayside, but it could just as easily save your life. Good work! Lets see more scenarios like this, they're good training for civilians, fun (and fun to watch) and educational.
I would love to take captain hooks class.
Man if I had the funds my big a55 would be going to these places as much as possible... thank y'all for sharing your knowledge
This channel rocks!! Myles has the best job in the world. Having fun while getting trained by some of the best.
One man CQB is a really really bad idea BUT shit happens.
Yeah, I practice mainly because if someone's breaking into my house, it's gonna be me.
I’m from the UK but man CQB looks so fascinating! This video was badass
An excellent video! Myles is definitely a (deadly) force with which to reckon!
Loved the critique, as well!👍👍👍
Myles did excellent! Never wanna do it but if you have to this is what you wanna do. Couple of small things but that’s easy to pick apart in retrospect.
The fact is he put the targets down and they didn’t put him down. 🤙🏼🤙🏼
great training, like to see more of this. Question do you have any videos of a shotgun as a primary weapon.
I am glad you guys are doing this because if you think about it.. you have a threat in your home or in a commercial building.. you may be the only responder around until Police arrive.. So eventhough you never want to room clear by yourself, should train to the best of your ability because that is unfortunately the more probable scenario is being by yourself.
I very much disagree with the safety discussion at approx. 8:00. I definitely understand the idea, but, I'd suggest we never get used to on-fire weapons in the middle of a high-stress environment like the one demo'd here. What happens when you train to keep that safety off, then drop into a team environment where you're not the #1 man? It takes less, an avg of .25s break a shot, less to get that weapon off safe on entry. Better to save your team from a negligent discharge during an entry.
Otherwise, really loved this video Many focus on team entry rather than clearing by yourself. Great work here. Pied the corners, determined danger areas.
Well done!
And, I like the, "If you have a gadget on the system, be prepared..."
This was very informative
Awesome video, exactly the kinda stuff i wanna see. Hope to see more of these in the future. Thanks for what you do guys!
Stim shot Tact Sprint through the door, Knee Slide Cancel to the middle of the room and 360 while Bunny Hopping 😎
This was one of the best solo killhouse clears I've seen, great work, just what was the light on the rifle for 😂.
This is why I love this channel I'm learning a lot
Only reason why I would enter a room with a threat, is if the threat is in a room with 20+ kids
That roll through the doorway was incredible. Definitely gotta start training that.
That was intense and impressive.
You done A+ job! Well done Myles
Great job Myles!
Great job by Miles and you with your ideas Tremendous video keep up the great work
This man did a great job! Yes there is room for improvement but overall very good.
Love these! Can't wait for part two!
Right on
This was cool. Thank you
hey brother, that place is awseome. did work there also, couple trikki rooms but you did good
Great Content. Thank you
Great breakdown!
That was intense. Good breakdown.
My palms got sweaty while I was watching this 😅. Great video, I love the progression.
Good stuff. Keep it coming.
I'd definitely like to see some work from the opposite site - structure defense. Also, cameras on the opfor would be very useful to watch for signalling with feet /weapon, and good for everyone to see things from inside.
We will be getting more Go Pros so everyone involved has a perspective we can use.
I'm glad I took the time to watch this. Subbing.
Awesome job
Awesome job Myles!
Right on
Clearing looked very good. Nice job 👍🏽
C’est très intéressant.
Ce type est extra dans ses pas, il est un excellent tacticien.
Bravo messieurs.
Je m’abonne à votre chaîne parce que vous faites du bon boulot.
Songer a mettre les sous-titres dans d’autres langues pour permettre la compréhension, surtout en français
Great video!
I only found one video you guys have on light placement. I cant help but wonder if the light placement effected Myles's use of his light. I kept trying to pause it to where I could see, but couldn't tell if his light could be actuated from both sides. I wonder if it is an ambidextrous set up, and if not, if that made him subconsciously disregard it.
Again though, great info and training points.
It shows the use of his rifle light has not become habitual. Under stress, a lot of things happen. Being in the exercise versus flat range training is very different.
@@TacticalHyve I'm not going to lie, I'm not sure if you mean "has not become habitual" positively or negatively. Agreed on your second point.
@@ericanderson3777 I think he meant it simply factually, the shooter hasn't learned to use his light when appropriate because he has not ran enough simulations where he used it. I would suggest playing airsoft legitly with a light. It has the benefit of teaching you observation, weapons manipulation, light manipulation, movement, etc. It's obviously not quite near real life fighting, while it can induce training scars like for example endless shooting from magazines that hold hundreds of rounds but target detection and acquisition are still skills learned while playing and for me I use a light when I play, it's very useful and teaches you both light discipline and to use it when necessary and when I go shooting with my real rifle I use my light in low light conditions fairly often. You have to think about doing it until you do it habitually.
Yall should do one with a real life situation where a man wakes up to 4 people breaking in , doesn't have time to put on all his tactical gear , barely awake, and all he has available is whatevers in his nightstand.
Damn that's a hard situation. I was getting anxious when he had to turn his back to the uncleared hallway. But you gotta do what you gotta do. To heck with single man CQB. Especially when potentially dealing with multiple badguys. 😅
This is EXACTLY what I wouldn't teach. Number one knowing how many targets and what they're going to do is teaching you to expect a specific outcome. Did that and you can expect to die. You need to adapt and work any problem... Moving targets included.
Depending on how you wargame it? Let's say he was clearing his house after a break-in, he saw them get out of the vehicle from his bedroom window or camera feed. He saw four but only three were actually inside and the no-shoot was a family member he could have hurt if he got too anxious on target id. Where was the last target, took off or was only ever the lookout and never entered, that's normal and getting hung up on it causes anxiety.
That was awesome!!! Such a great video!
Not bad at all you can tell I still got that itch I was calling out sectors and things while watching it lol good stuff I wouldn’t run so much but other than that this is a new way to add to my resume lol I want more and more HOOAH
I was wondering if he even had a light during this training evolution. I cant say shit because you did 10x better than I would . Nice job Miles and awesome video Bros..
Fieldcraft Survival says the number 1 man I never wrong ..
What pistols and rifles are being used along with ammo for this?
Simunition brand convention kits and ammo.
Simunition is basically colored wax pellets in a brass cartridge. Like a big boy airsoft paintball cross over. It's expensive, and you can get similar training with the commercial airsoft replicas for much less money, but people will roast you for being a LARPer
It looks like a 30 round magazine was used. I the "heat" of clearing and shooting, when is it recommended to change mags?
Most home invasions involve more than two to four people, you are going to engage them yourself.
And most home invaders will run after they are fired upon. They might fire back but once one of their co-conspirators gets hit, they run.
@@franktall7705 yep, ive never seen any videos of home invaders not run once they realize the home owner is armed.
Its reassuring to know I'm not the only one who would roll into that scenario with my rifle on Fire. EXCELLENT Video. Keep training!
I learned the hard way. Prep your shit before hand.
Hey guys, I saw a lot of comments about safety manipulation. There are different schools of thought on this. I have been through many of them. Bottom line do what you are comfortable with. That being said from personal experience if I am the #1 man my weapon is on fire ready to engage. Now if my weapon is not being used in my search of course put on Safe. Thanks guys.
The famous DD MK 18 love it
Watch this in fast speed for ultra legendary mode.
Hey, awesome video! One question, what kind of sunglasses are those? I think I've seen navy seals using them in a tv show before.
Great video! What kind of rounds did you use? It appears to me like airsoft / paintballs, but Im not sure...
such a good video, and with genuinely interesting feedback at the end
Good stuff
Great content
Great training video! Great job sir !
Much appreciated!
when someone’s title is “subject matter expert” and they missing a hand
You know that dudes got experience
Awesome!!! Great learning experience. Sims are fun until you get a contact shot to your left shoulder.
Love you all
That was intense!
With smooth rolling a corner, you expose yourself to every single threat in the room instead of one at a time. It looks cooler, but you're pretty much screwed if there are 2 or more guys in that room.
Movement makes you harder to hit
Sure. In concept yes. But it’s one of the better alternatives. Multiple peaking is much worse. You don’t want opponents to know your position and keep peaking the same angle.
And smooth movement …. Technically erratic varied movement is better but that’s insanely difficult and requires coordination better left focusing on firing and target acquisitions.
Fast movement. Sure. As long as you can acquire targets.
But yes fundamentally it’s very dangerous. They all are and smooth movement is one of the better “less risk” options.
One time peak and take out targets … while that’s the dream … is usually impossible to do
Yep, you've got that right. Also leg stance is wrong. At first room he attacked positive corner fed insteadof negative. Door opening from wrong side etc. Don't get me wrong, he's still doing great job . Check Eli Fieldboy's CQB methodology . That may help
forgive the noob question here, but is what they are shooting called simunition rounds? And what are they, a paint or pellet? Looks like they leave a mark and break the skin like on his left forearm.
one man clearance is what a school cop has to do
question, checking under the bed should be a thing in scenarions like this, right? what if someone would hide beneath the bed with riffle ready?
After Uvalde, one man clearance should be the norm.
6:20 bro you died here 🤣
Also arrest/clear the “unarmed” person. They may be a decoy or trying to lower your guard to shoot you in the back.
one question on when he went up to the first door i think he straffed off to the left first checking the corner he alr checked most of the corner so he was able to see no one was in that corner but he still pushed a corner he already knew was un occupied turning his back to the more open room and the other opening also he never collapsed his weapon system
Respect!
That was incredible 👏🙌
something I noticed at 4:30 was that he could see a doorway (closet in this case) to the left but he entered the room and THEN turned to the left. In that time the enemy could have shot him if already pointing a gun at him. He can already see nobody can be on the right side of the room and the front is clear and so is the area where the mattress was. But he enters and then hears a shuffle turning left. Had the guy not moved he could have shot him. Instead he should have positioned himself already prepped to be aiming at the closet and stepped in whilst aiming in that direction.
You need to remember that its easier watching from the side and telling someone what he could/should have done because youre not under stress like he is and you have different angles and information you see that he doesnt at the time.
Altho not wrong, remember that its easier said than done.
As a wiser man than me has said many times: Single-man CQB is suicide.
Buuuuuut, sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do.
It’s all a roll of the dice
I have also done WAY more single man CQB than I wanted to. Normally I would wait for a second guy at least. More than a few times they weren't going to be there any time soon, so I went in. I'm glad I don't do that any more.
A flashbang or similar would be helpful
I like the cod protector
Excellent videos guys!
How about how to take on a team with NVG assaulting your home by yourself without NVG?
Awesame done!!
Wow. that's an operator.