Ok so ar15 for home protection. Correct ammo.my kids are downstairs. I'm upstairs ..(I know...I know)......but someome breaks in....is my saftey ON OR OFF? and is my trigger finger ON OR OFF?
For me its insurgency lol although I dont think these techniques will work in a video game. Im just trying to figure out where my eyes should be going when scanning a room.
This method of teaching is extremely effective, not only is he teaching you the most safe and efficient way, but is also encouraging the students to be active in the training by asking queations, and showing and explaining in detail why certain tactics are either not a good idea, or obsolete, all while not in a condescending manner that will discourage the students from being active and really learning in the whole training, this is fantastic
This dude is a genius with the angles and his clear experience and analysis of each little step, look and position. I've taken a ton of courses teaching "slicing the pie" and only got "look around a corner a little before you step in". He breaks this into the smallest details. Genius. Clearly a VERY experienced operator.
I mean some israeli units have stupidly high operational tempos in dense urban environments. Its no surprise. I wonder if he was with Yamam or Yahalom. Those dudes (and dudettes in the case of Yamam now, I think) just clear rooms all damn day.
Actually Israeli are good at this bro ..they arw training police in Mexico because Mexican marines armi navy etc are too busy with the drug war going on over there so they brought this type of guys to train the police cus the Mexican armi and marines were training them but due to the war they are fighting can't train them like before
I dunno, I mean he describes his technique and it works for him, but I wouldn’t call it genius or say it’s the best way to cut angles. The way he hugs the wall with his hips and stays tight to the threshold wall is kind of counter intuitive to slicing the pie. I would train to cut the narrow angle along the threshold wall, and instead of going straight into sidestepping into the doorway like he does, you should back up along the opposite wall to cut the rest of the angle. That way you are a smaller target and not standing completely in the death funnel. Another benefit is that you have full muzzle control. I honestly think he’s fucked by keeping his left side tucked along the wall. If a threat approaches from the rear, he needs to turn 180 degrees. Also, if he starts taking fire from behind the concealed wall he’s in no position to return fire. Taking the room from the opposite wall in the hall you are able to return point fire immediately through the concealment, and if a threat comes from the rear it’s a pivot just a little over 90 degrees. Being further away from the door or corner also gives you more control over how much of the pie you slice as well. Ya he’s full of shit.
@@DustyBallz777 OK, not to try to be insulting, but how much CQB training have you been through? Have you been in active CQB contact? I have. Former Army Ranger here. Been there, got shot at, done that. Got the best special forces training AND experience. Calling THIS guy Full of Shit is the typical sign of a UA-cam "expert" who has watched some videos explaining how some guy might think about being good at a real life combat killing machine that people like me got ground into. Hey, if you're more experienced than me or kicked down more doors or cleared more high risk rooms than me, I apologize. However, I have had several years of REAL WORLD experience to see what works and what shoots out of nowhere to surprise and kill you. When you demonstrate you're a 20 year special forces operator with intensive CQB REAL WORLD experience, then your observation might be valid. Just looked at your posted videos. So you like shooting games? That's nice. While you sit in mommy's basement, playing games. us real men actually do what you play to. When someone posts a video of how some loser should jack off in mommy's basement while playing video games, you should speak up then, not when real men are talking about defending a country and shit, OK, dipshit? Seriously, when you're just some dumbass game player, you don't know shit about the real world, MUCH LESS lethal special forces maneuvers that have nothing to do with real life than a video game has to do with a movie, so don't even think to advise on something you have zero experience with that carries such a high price tag, as you do with a fucking video game!!!!
Matt Bowman I cant argue with all of that experience. But if I see something that doesn’t look right, and I’ve got a better method of doing it, I’ll call bullshit when I see it. I don’t have on duty experience, but as a civilian who trains with firearms, moving and clearing solo is where all of my training and drills are. I don’t have to get my big brain time on to figure out that if I’m coming up to the leading edge of my corner and I have the space behind me to back up and put distance from me and that wall, I will do it. That’s just common sense man, I didn’t think you had to be an “expert”for something like that. The way he does it is literally so bad it’s like he was trolling with this video. It costs damn good money to run through a training camp and go through their instructions and mock ups, so maybe for the real deal course with this guy he comes across a lot better, but this is just a cheesy UA-cam snip where he talks about a protractor and shows us how he can cram his workspace right up against the wall so tight he can’t even bring his muzzle up. I’m not a real operator, so go ask any of them why pushing around a corner with your body pressed up against it is a bad idea. As for my videos I had to upload for another forum, boy ya sure got me figured out, genius.
Eli is a pro. This is how it’s done. Y’all can joke all you want, but Eli and Project Gecko are a SOUND system for effective professional tactics and training for real world scenarios.
Then the Marine realizes he’s just trying to make toast and he’s holding a banana and 4 crayons. Marine becomes confused. Yells FRAG OUT again, but nothing happens. Marine sniffs the kitchen counter and is distracted by the strange smell.
Interesting nuance there about why accelerate through 60-90 degrees, and taking the lead foot slightly across the threshold when popping the hard corner at 180. I like the way this lecture encapsulates the idea that there is no cover in cqb but there is concealment, and that the fatal funnel problem doesn't exist because you're processing 'chunks' of the space you're opening up and can still flinch away. Alot of people today teach step center [fast or slow from narrow to 90] then accelerate with a committed entry, then slow as you clear the threshold to scan and reach your point of domination. Look like you instead keep to the essential idea that you even when clearing the hard corner you avoid fatal funnel by only sticking your muzzle in, and the lead foot so you are stable to flinch back out. The biggest criticisms I hear about Israeli method are 'fatal funnel' and 'it only works when the environment are thick hard walls not American wood walls'. But here you've talked about both. One, no fatal funnel if you can abort commitment at different stages of opening the space. Two, its not about using the corner as cover but preserving advantage of concealment against wider angles than you want to process sequentially. This is maybe the most direct rebuttal I've ever heard to those criticisms. Great stuff!
Sometimes you have to get in there quickly. Slowing down can get you killed. Its possible to use this in conventional warfare operations but this Israeli guy went up against insurgents. Get in the room, push along the wall left or right creating space wherever you can for the next guy. It happens fast. Never just jump from narrow angle to middle, you can use these threshold preparations as you move up to building. Sweep window as you move to door
@@1truthbegettingtold275 this entire guide is for when your alone not with a squad its meant to give the one person the highest success rate and survival rate when clearing the room ALONE
@WolfdeathnoGames this is episode one of the guide, this is "Pros guide to CQB" which has mostly teamwork aspects, I probably went off the main topic of the video.
Anytime you have to push a building in say pubg or escape from tarkov, you have to be thinking about tactically and efficiently clearing/controlling and then commanding the space. If you are pr-aiming a door way or a slight lead off, make sure you are at head-level, not at the floor, not at 3 feet. You can use the standard door frame as a good training mark for pre-aiming and prefire Finally its always good to think tactically because this process can become muscle memory allowing you to focus on other aspects. Finally follow muzzle discipline, do not sweep your teammates, and it will become ingrained. No muzzle sweeping my teammates and dipping my gun for forward passes means that my teammates know i am dependable, if they cut me off or cross in front they will compromise my line. Also never jump the point man with a thermal scope without telling him. Anything Hot I kill.
Trainer: "I will check the narrow angle..." R6 Siege players: "You missed the cameras, Black Eyes, Frost mats, EDDs, Evil Eyes, pixel holes, Echo drones..."
That's actually sad xD You try to do slicing in rainbow as much as it's possible and you have some shit echo drone that makes you give up all the room control... Tho if there's no echo then just look for traps after you've cleared the room, easy
Ah ha, not anymore, now you have worry about the cool aid man crashing through the wall and wrecking your shit, as well as tachanka looking like the juggernaut from COD with his lmg 😂😂
That's an extraordinary amount of detail required to safely walk into a room. Looks like it requires a LOT of practice. The explanation was really good.
This series is again very promising. I miss the humour of the UF Pro medic a bit, but then again there is only one UF Pro medic. There is no question about it: on the CQB-front Eli is one of the best trainers and one can only listen and learn. This is high quality training, for free. Thank you UF Pro and Eli from Project Gecko!
@@derikafriedrich9306 totally with you. therefore we aren't discussing tactics as a whole. thank god the concept of LP requires certain intellectual capacities.
As someone that does this professionally, the information conveyed in this video is excellent in my opinion. The angle explanation is very well done - I really appreciate Project Gecko and UF Pro sharing this knowledge. This are life saving knowledge bombs.
👍 I've done room clearing with a team. Getting ready for single-man room clearing training for a small Montessori school. Great explanation of a very dynamic situation. It's a shame for the need to address threats such as these.
I practice clearing my house all the time, and I will be sure to add this to my knowledge of room clearing. Thanks for making these CQB guides, this channel is what I’ve been looking for. Subbed after the first vid I watched.
I still can't believe this content is here to watch for free. Very useful even if you're a non-team guy and you're just curious or you think this might come handy for yourself someday. This is excellent and much appreciated for sharing.
Actually watching this and taking notes it opens your eyes to how detailed this was. I managed 3 1/2 pages in my small notebook highlighting main points and the question session at the end right before the video in the classroom. This was an amazing class to a problem we all have the potential to face.
I've watched multiple CQB informative videos and I've not taken notes on any of them. This video, like you said, was very eye opening and made me want to take notes on this. The way he explained things is very easy to understand and take notes on.
Been watching and self teaching myself on CQB combat training and trying to perfect it since I’m not old enough I got to use the resources I already have on hand
I don't normally comment and you won't read this but just wanted to say thanks. It's been a few years since I've been out of the service and I was wanting to gauge my retention. Very clear instruction, put forth in an easily digestible format. I have found, the distinct way of teaching that is practiced by the military, more than anywhere in the civilian sector is the most successful. No nonsense, practical instruction with constant checks to make sure everyone is tracking. Thanks again. Really enjoyed it.
I absolutely LOVE that the classroom session is in sepia tone and that the field exercise is bright. Gives a great feel to the video. Almost like a real movie. Great editing!
Explained by a true expert which makes this a pleasure to watch and listen. He brings short and pin point explanations. Amazing video and series. Can't wait for next video :) Good job!
This is for real world situations that you and me could find ourselves in. But since a lot of you are talking about rainbow 6 siege, I’ve been playing since the second closed beta and I will say, taking the lessons here and applying to a video game or what I like to call a simulation actually oddly helps and it’s weird but works a little bit. I’ve seen a lot of noobs stick their rifle through a window or a hole and blasted them through a wall with my shotty or cooked a nade and sent it in front of their face. The biggest point he makes that translates to games is DONT STICK YOUR RILFE BARREL THROUGH ANY DOOR OR WINDOW WHERE AN ENEMY CAN SEE IT. Dead give away for prefire, and you wonder how they know you were coming. These are also valuable lessons for life so don’t just brush them off like he’s joking. It’s awesome that they put these videos up for free. Thank you.
Why would you say this? The guy drops his muzzle and jerks around like a moron at a doorway, opening himself to reprisal to everyone in the angles he didn't check with his barrel through the breach. They step left and have a guy with his rifle down and shit in his pants when he realizes there's a room of guys with their muzzle properly trained on him.
Just found your channel, and worked through your CQC playlist. You're a brilliant teacher, clear and logical and the camera angles are spot on. Would feel very comfortable asking questions if I had any. Will be drilling these before my next cqc airsoft match, being new to the sport hopefully it'll help me up my game and be of more use to my team. Keep these videos coming.
Yes! This is EXACTLY what I've been waiting for on the intertubes. This is next level stuff to me. Thank you so much, excellent instruction and you put it out there for free.
The instruction isn’t just fantastic, but the demonstration with the phone is also superb. Brilliantly demonstrates the concept and why it’s effective.
Nice video, Eli did an awesome job of instructions. Broke it down so you can easily understand. Brings back the Army days as an MP going through shoot houses. Great job keep em coming!
I really enjoy his style, knowledge, and experience. One of the very few instructors today I agree with 100%. I've been doing this for over 35 years studying and working (LE-SWAT, Military and Executive protection) applying these lessons learned. The sad part is that most of these lessons I learned lesson through errors and big mistakes in real operations. Later on I learned these lessons in a format and through advanced instruction with LE units. Well done
What a fabulous channel. The production is so clean, it's like a movie, the theoretical - practical teaching is the better so far and the knowledge in noticeable. Congrats!
As someone specialized in long-range combat, this is super interesting for me. Open field, high altitude and alone situations practice absolutely different paradigm and approach.
Good stuff, I really appreciate the amount of thought the instructor puts into making sure he isn't exposing past any of the angles that he doesn't already have control over, and the instructor does a good job of attacking the tricky angles like the 90 and the hard corner past the 150. I do have some issues with it though, for example when he talks about bailing out, he's ducking back to an area of safety but in the process he is sacrificing angles that he has already taken. Now, if you are in a situation where you do not have the luxury of retreating and it is absolutely necessary that you take this structure then you now have sacrificed that angle which means you no longer have the initiative. It is possible that you can retreat, reorient, and attack from a different angle. But most likely you cannot, which means you'll either have to depend on the enemy attacking you or you have to attack from the same angle twice which is a great way to get your head taken off. If you take an angle you hold it or you retreat and find a new one, and like I said in a CQB setting there very well may not be a new angle you can attack from. Another thing, attacking that hard angle past the 150 should in my opinion be a quick attack through and past the fatal funnel. If you have additional cover points in the room that an enemy could work an ambush off of then he could very well wait for you to enter the doorway and then pop out. His attention will immediately be drawn to that doorway, less so if you rush through the funnel to clear that hard corner and then sweep back around to clear the deeper points of cover.
IF you bailed - there was a reason for that. bailed? great. now , at that point, we are not reslicing unless it is certain specific constellations. In such events which a bailout (extracting angles) was done..this....is where our methodology kicks in SOPs which leverage that very situation you just describe. but this we will never put online. it works like a charm.
The concept is dating all the way back to the late 70s. how ever, this methodology i promise you, as conducted, will be new for you. thats the feedback i got from multiple units who are familiar with LP.
Great guide again from eli! keep up the good work! UF Pro, best gear you can get for your money, that knows what the people in the field need. No doubt about it, best combo ever!
So... limited entry drills. Seriously fantastic presentation. Loved the points made about orientation checks. Throttle control has never been explained better.
Love all the comments. A lot of Steps: wait for back up, frag the room, etc. From a Law Enforcement perspective we do active shooter training, mostly team scenarios but some one man. We have to run to the threat and take immediate action no matter how many guys may or may not be there. Before going into a room dynamically and getting your head blown off you hope to have the opportunity to slice the pie. This method is better than any I've seen or learned. The great thing is its free instruction.
Despite being an army vet I watch this to improve my Mil sim gaming. It's crazy how poorly CQB was taught to me in the military, admittedly I wasn't infantry.
The nugget of the “… fatal funnel doesn’t exist” when slicing a room versus the dynamic entry was mind blowing! 🤯🤯🤯 Makes perfect tactical sense, but it’s the first time I’ve ever heard someone actually say it. 21 minute mark
Eliran means contextually. As in it does exist but in a different state, a two-way engagement area rather than a danger zone to move through immediately.
Mr WhiteHawk Unless everyone youre playing with is experienced and all communicating you will run into that problem on any game. Squad, Siege, Insurgency, etc. Thats why its always better to try and play with a group of friends who are all on the same page and work well as a team. Randoms on the internet are too... random lol.
You're using one man clearing techniques with an 8 man team? That's your problem right there. Clearing with a squad is a whole other world than this right here. Stack up, nade in, breach and push-push-push. Medics should be the last men standing if shit goes wrong and can revive casualties.
Good video. Room clearing is not always throw a grenade in and follow up. And not always you can wait for the rest of your team. He do it by the book. Slices the pie. And look around and listen. What I learned from the video is the angel of the weapon looking around corners. So the "defender" will not see the muzzle of your gun. And keep balance for a quick step back out of sight. This how you do it with a M4 or similar. I would probably drop main-gun to the sling and used a sidearm (Glock 9mm). But the video is how to use yuor main gun.
What about - in these examples - the right corner? At 24:10 we have a Narrow angle, yet we can't see the woman in the corner (who can be seen at 25:51). To see the corner you have to step in, but when you step in you have to deal with 2 corners.
Using this in the new COD Modern Warfare, 60 kills, zero deaths. yup it works in video games too it seems... the psychology of room clearing in video games is exactly the same as in real life. Most enemies position themselves at the 90, or ambush from the corners. Slicing the pie and snapping high threat angles always seems to catch them off guard. Nice.
Ouroboros _xlo A lot of it was luck but I was making decisions based on minimizing risk based on exposure to thresholds. Some corners will be 50/50 chance of survival but others you can control very well when using concealment effectively and shooting from cover
@@izkh4lif4 Dude, I'm 7.5k on the kills leaderboard and 9.5k on the score leaderboard. No one has a legit 60 kill streak, not even as high up as me. There's too much going on in the game for you to have used this and not died, not only that but this process is too slow for you to have gotten 60 kills in one match. Even in regular Dom matches, you have to run around fast and grind for a 60-80 kill game. Unless you were playing walking vegetables that didn't shoot. And you're telling me you got two tac nukes in a row in the same match? Okay bud.
22:18 if the enemy even slightly anticipates that you might peek outta there that means you are dead. I served the military too and I would not peek like that. Everything else is solid though.
I thoroughly enjoy watching these vids and learning, as the philosophy goes "ALWAYS" be a student. As a civilian this is valuable info and visual training in the event (heaven forbid of course) SHTF🤙🍀🍀.
Excellent video and so happy this popped up . Learned alot and man that ol guy that implemented the angles is clever using math for clearing rooms . Hope to see more vids !
I've cleared rooms in the military and never have I kept my elbow out like that. You clear rooms all day that arm would be dead. Keep your shit nice and tight and you'll have more control for a lot longer.
Depends pn the body type. Ive always locked the weapon into my shoulder with my non dominate hand and only held yhe weapon with my firing hand when doing a mag change. Also because i have long arms ive got to chicken wing just a little bit.
Door Spook. This is actually based in reality. The way law enforcement and military clear rooms is dangerous. It’s outdated and ineffective. There is a reason why CQB tactics have changed. Slicing the pie like you are taught in the military will get you killed.
Hi. I did not notice that on the video. I grip the gun with my left under the rail. Right elbow automatic go left to your body. Grip rail with left over the rail , your right elbow goes up. Test it out ;) Comment :) ?
If you train this in your home, put a camera recording in to the room. Try to pie / ambush the camera without being spotted from extermity first. Keeping your hands and legs in line with the pie section while maintaining good balance for action / firing is the a hard part.
in regards to the footwork at the threshold, i also found it works just as well if you decide to shuffle the feet rather than picking up and replanting. This makes sure the feet are always planted and ready to bail if need be. This technique has saved me from quite a few deaths in airsoft because of minimum exposure and ability to pop in and out quickly.
That’s exactly how I‘ve been trained in the Swiss Army. You might not look as cool as your favourite high speed operator just rushing into the room but you‘ll probably live longer! 🤘🤙
This checks out - Former leo - Our team called this limited penetration. Slicing the pie is another way - basically the same things but it varies in the way you attack your angles.
Get more intel on CQB: bit.ly/3X9PEQG
Ok so ar15 for home protection. Correct ammo.my kids are downstairs. I'm upstairs ..(I know...I know)......but someome breaks in....is my saftey ON OR OFF? and is my trigger finger ON OR OFF?
Me:"Let's study!"
10 seconds later...
Watching Pro's guide to CQB.
Same
Well you are studying, just not for class lol
Got tired of studying anatomy and here I am, what the heck haha.
It’s studying, civilian guys gotta strive for tier 1 performance otherwise what’s the point.
Me:"Let's work!"
10 seconds later....
Watching Pro's guide to CQB.
Make sense? Perfect.
Escape from Tarkov will fear me.
@@leviwierman3504 It's deff one of those games you cant seem to stop playing but do not seem to want to play it alot cus of gear mechanics.
For me its insurgency lol although I dont think these techniques will work in a video game. Im just trying to figure out where my eyes should be going when scanning a room.
if you play tarkov you already know this shit lol
>slowly peeks through a door in factory
>lvl 4 hatchling beheads you
>he finishes the level and extracts by rushing and randomly shooting in the air
@Vitor Cavalcanti I wouldn't consider it a team game. It is what you make of it. You can add me though. Powder-
This method of teaching is extremely effective, not only is he teaching you the most safe and efficient way, but is also encouraging the students to be active in the training by asking queations, and showing and explaining in detail why certain tactics are either not a good idea, or obsolete, all while not in a condescending manner that will discourage the students from being active and really learning in the whole training, this is fantastic
Very unusual for an Israeli. This guy is excellent. Clearly very professional but humble and approachable. Very personable.
just saying solo room clearing is dumb,. and stupid dangerous
You won't always have a choice
@@MRsolidcolor you in some situación wont have a choice in the matter
@@spankysaiyan1567 situación? Lol why not "situation" lol
Can't wait to do this guide on Grandma's house
When you rip your gun safe open at 2am , put on your gear and just know its going to be the hardest and sweatiest larp session ever
😅😂😂
😂
For the Holidays
she still gonna slay you
This dude is a genius with the angles and his clear experience and analysis of each little step, look and position. I've taken a ton of courses teaching "slicing the pie" and only got "look around a corner a little before you step in". He breaks this into the smallest details. Genius. Clearly a VERY experienced operator.
I mean some israeli units have stupidly high operational tempos in dense urban environments. Its no surprise. I wonder if he was with Yamam or Yahalom. Those dudes (and dudettes in the case of Yamam now, I think) just clear rooms all damn day.
Actually Israeli are good at this bro ..they arw training police in Mexico because Mexican marines armi navy etc are too busy with the drug war going on over there so they brought this type of guys to train the police cus the Mexican armi and marines were training them but due to the war they are fighting can't train them like before
I dunno, I mean he describes his technique and it works for him, but I wouldn’t call it genius or say it’s the best way to cut angles. The way he hugs the wall with his hips and stays tight to the threshold wall is kind of counter intuitive to slicing the pie. I would train to cut the narrow angle along the threshold wall, and instead of going straight into sidestepping into the doorway like he does, you should back up along the opposite wall to cut the rest of the angle. That way you are a smaller target and not standing completely in the death funnel. Another benefit is that you have full muzzle control. I honestly think he’s fucked by keeping his left side tucked along the wall. If a threat approaches from the rear, he needs to turn 180 degrees. Also, if he starts taking fire from behind the concealed wall he’s in no position to return fire. Taking the room from the opposite wall in the hall you are able to return point fire immediately through the concealment, and if a threat comes from the rear it’s a pivot just a little over 90 degrees. Being further away from the door or corner also gives you more control over how much of the pie you slice as well. Ya he’s full of shit.
@@DustyBallz777 OK, not to try to be insulting, but how much CQB training have you been through? Have you been in active CQB contact? I have. Former Army Ranger here. Been there, got shot at, done that. Got the best special forces training AND experience. Calling THIS guy Full of Shit is the typical sign of a UA-cam "expert" who has watched some videos explaining how some guy might think about being good at a real life combat killing machine that people like me got ground into. Hey, if you're more experienced than me or kicked down more doors or cleared more high risk rooms than me, I apologize. However, I have had several years of REAL WORLD experience to see what works and what shoots out of nowhere to surprise and kill you. When you demonstrate you're a 20 year special forces operator with intensive CQB REAL WORLD experience, then your observation might be valid.
Just looked at your posted videos. So you like shooting games? That's nice. While you sit in mommy's basement, playing games. us real men actually do what you play to. When someone posts a video of how some loser should jack off in mommy's basement while playing video games, you should speak up then, not when real men are talking about defending a country and shit, OK, dipshit?
Seriously, when you're just some dumbass game player, you don't know shit about the real world, MUCH LESS lethal special forces maneuvers that have nothing to do with real life than a video game has to do with a movie, so don't even think to advise on something you have zero experience with that carries such a high price tag, as you do with a fucking video game!!!!
Matt Bowman I cant argue with all of that experience. But if I see something that doesn’t look right, and I’ve got a better method of doing it, I’ll call bullshit when I see it. I don’t have on duty experience, but as a civilian who trains with firearms, moving and clearing solo is where all of my training and drills are. I don’t have to get my big brain time on to figure out that if I’m coming up to the leading edge of my corner and I have the space behind me to back up and put distance from me and that wall, I will do it. That’s just common sense man, I didn’t think you had to be an “expert”for something like that. The way he does it is literally so bad it’s like he was trolling with this video. It costs damn good money to run through a training camp and go through their instructions and mock ups, so maybe for the real deal course with this guy he comes across a lot better, but this is just a cheesy UA-cam snip where he talks about a protractor and shows us how he can cram his workspace right up against the wall so tight he can’t even bring his muzzle up. I’m not a real operator, so go ask any of them why pushing around a corner with your body pressed up against it is a bad idea. As for my videos I had to upload for another forum, boy ya sure got me figured out, genius.
Those bags under his eyes... dude just stays up at night clearing his house.
haha guilty
Or he has witnessed some shit that keeps him up at night.
@@Stripedspot 100%
Maybe he loves smoking 2
😂😂
YT recomends me this video: makes sense?
me: clicking the video
YT: perfect
He goes home to his wife: Honey I am seeing another woman.. make sense? OK good.
spicecrop 😂😂😂😂😂😂
lmao
HAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAHHAH
Lol😂
😂
Tried this while my wife was asleep. Found 3 men under the bed.
🤣🤣🤣
🤣
LOL
look the pantry
That makes sense. Ok good
Have you tried switching to third person perspective by pressing RB?
LMAO
Very cringetastic
Christz.
😂
yooo made my day ... laughed my ass off :D :D :D
Will be confusing the hell out of my dogs while practicing this at home while the wife is away this weekend.
Practiced in my house all the time. If you do it for a living....you want to get it perfect.
@МЭF15ТФFДL VЄЯↁЦИЅНДЄL jealous nigga
J T the brick if you have a 120 pound legally dangerous malamute you don’t have to worry much about room clearing, more just cleanup lmao
I used to do it when I was into airsoft, it stepped up my game tenfold. My dog would peak around the corner like wtf are u doing? Lol
You should practice this with your wife. You don't want to room clear on your own. Watch the video on weapon flow.
Fabulous instructor. Many people CAN DO but CAN'T TEACH. This guy is a great teacher.
Wife at work: Hes probably cheating on me..
Me:
lol
Makes sense? Good.
Or when she wakes up to me training this is even better.
"Aight time to study for the math test tommorow"
15 minutes later with a broomstick handle:
Eli is a pro. This is how it’s done. Y’all can joke all you want, but Eli and Project Gecko are a SOUND system for effective professional tactics and training for real world scenarios.
Marine Corps room clearing- FRAG OUT
Then the Marine realizes he’s just trying to make toast and he’s holding a banana and 4 crayons. Marine becomes confused. Yells FRAG OUT again, but nothing happens. Marine sniffs the kitchen counter and is distracted by the strange smell.
You are a true US Marine. I salute you.
GREAT!
You know how Tank Commanders do it? :D
@@jasonmeister6988 what? What is it?
yep, my room is clear.
Thats what you think
Profile pics check out
@@RAYTHEONGAMING *shotgun pump
@@________tacticalresponse5203
Breaking your ally wasn't very challenging but I found some ways to have fun
Mine too!
*chuk chik*
Oh... forgot 180 Degrees.
Interesting nuance there about why accelerate through 60-90 degrees, and taking the lead foot slightly across the threshold when popping the hard corner at 180. I like the way this lecture encapsulates the idea that there is no cover in cqb but there is concealment, and that the fatal funnel problem doesn't exist because you're processing 'chunks' of the space you're opening up and can still flinch away. Alot of people today teach step center [fast or slow from narrow to 90] then accelerate with a committed entry, then slow as you clear the threshold to scan and reach your point of domination. Look like you instead keep to the essential idea that you even when clearing the hard corner you avoid fatal funnel by only sticking your muzzle in, and the lead foot so you are stable to flinch back out.
The biggest criticisms I hear about Israeli method are 'fatal funnel' and 'it only works when the environment are thick hard walls not American wood walls'. But here you've talked about both. One, no fatal funnel if you can abort commitment at different stages of opening the space. Two, its not about using the corner as cover but preserving advantage of concealment against wider angles than you want to process sequentially. This is maybe the most direct rebuttal I've ever heard to those criticisms. Great stuff!
Sometimes you have to get in there quickly. Slowing down can get you killed. Its possible to use this in conventional warfare operations but this Israeli guy went up against insurgents. Get in the room, push along the wall left or right creating space wherever you can for the next guy. It happens fast. Never just jump from narrow angle to middle, you can use these threshold preparations as you move up to building. Sweep window as you move to door
@@1truthbegettingtold275 "One man room clearing"
@@1truthbegettingtold275 this entire guide is for when your alone not with a squad its meant to give the one person the highest success rate and survival rate when clearing the room ALONE
@WolfdeathnoGames this is episode one of the guide, this is "Pros guide to CQB" which has mostly teamwork aspects, I probably went off the main topic of the video.
@@1truthbegettingtold275 1:30 he states what you may have missed
Trainer: Can anyone give me an example for this situation?
Me: Pavlov Vr clutch 1v5
Anytime you have to push a building in say pubg or escape from tarkov, you have to be thinking about tactically and efficiently clearing/controlling and then commanding the space.
If you are pr-aiming a door way or a slight lead off, make sure you are at head-level, not at the floor, not at 3 feet. You can use the standard door frame as a good training mark for pre-aiming and prefire
Finally its always good to think tactically because this process can become muscle memory allowing you to focus on other aspects. Finally follow muzzle discipline, do not sweep your teammates, and it will become ingrained. No muzzle sweeping my teammates and dipping my gun for forward passes means that my teammates know i am dependable, if they cut me off or cross in front they will compromise my line.
Also never jump the point man with a thermal scope without telling him. Anything Hot I kill.
@@OneMouseGaming also try using short barrels if you play cqb/factory, it's alot better to have room to move your gun pre-peek
🤣
Dude this is actually what I used this for
Trainer: "I will check the narrow angle..."
R6 Siege players: "You missed the cameras, Black Eyes, Frost mats, EDDs, Evil Eyes, pixel holes, Echo drones..."
That's actually sad xD You try to do slicing in rainbow as much as it's possible and you have some shit echo drone that makes you give up all the room control... Tho if there's no echo then just look for traps after you've cleared the room, easy
Why not drone the room first
This instructor is just not telling those recruits that they could use vertical destruction to get an advantage over the enemy inside.
Ah ha, not anymore, now you have worry about the cool aid man crashing through the wall and wrecking your shit, as well as tachanka looking like the juggernaut from COD with his lmg 😂😂
this comment section is a cringe fest from gamers who thinks theyre cool
That's an extraordinary amount of detail required to safely walk into a room. Looks like it requires a LOT of practice. The explanation was really good.
Thats why not alot of people can join military or police special forces
Drill, drill, drill.
@@FatonKasolli-ll8iupolice special forces?
@@sam-kx3ty gign in france would be an example. Or anti terrorist police/SWAT forces in germany, I dont know what their name is
@@isaakh-bc9bm it’s called SWAT or special operations.
This series is again very promising. I miss the humour of the UF Pro medic a bit, but then again there is only one UF Pro medic.
There is no question about it: on the CQB-front Eli is one of the best trainers and one can only listen and learn. This is high quality training, for free. Thank you UF Pro and Eli from Project Gecko!
But it's also a concern when opposition is using our knowledge against our own.
@@derikafriedrich9306 totally with you. therefore we aren't discussing tactics as a whole. thank god the concept of LP requires certain intellectual capacities.
I‘m hyped like everytime when a new video appears!
Same . Uf Pro is the big sexy
I swear I love them!
SWAT or FPS?
I wonder if his mind would just stop procesing if someone actually answered "No." to his "Makes sense?".
Loads his gun, shoots you , "Perfect"
Instructor: "Makes sense?"
Student: "No."
Instructor: *Instinctively shoots student dead and continues with lesson as if nothing happened*
@@ulrohermit1369 Laugh out loud!
@@BLACKINFINITYETERNITY ok boomer
@@DisappointedScrosh l'm a commentator, you stupid bitch!
As someone that does this professionally, the information conveyed in this video is excellent in my opinion. The angle explanation is very well done - I really appreciate Project Gecko and UF Pro sharing this knowledge. This are life saving knowledge bombs.
Glad you like it. hit us up if you got questions.
If you don't mind me asking, what is it you do?
@@ch._3205 He goes through doors for a living...
👍 I've done room clearing with a team. Getting ready for single-man room clearing training for a small Montessori school. Great explanation of a very dynamic situation. It's a shame for the need to address threats such as these.
I practice clearing my house all the time, and I will be sure to add this to my knowledge of room clearing. Thanks for making these CQB guides, this channel is what I’ve been looking for. Subbed after the first vid I watched.
I still can't believe this content is here to watch for free. Very useful even if you're a non-team guy and you're just curious or you think this might come handy for yourself someday. This is excellent and much appreciated for sharing.
When I want to clear a room, I usually eat a bunch of hard boiled eggs.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Nice tactic
Impractical jokers anyone??
Ovaltine Jenkins 😂😂😁😁😁
Made my day
Actually watching this and taking notes it opens your eyes to how detailed this was. I managed 3 1/2 pages in my small notebook highlighting main points and the question session at the end right before the video in the classroom. This was an amazing class to a problem we all have the potential to face.
Thank you. a very intellectual comment. refreshing.
I've watched multiple CQB informative videos and I've not taken notes on any of them. This video, like you said, was very eye opening and made me want to take notes on this. The way he explained things is very easy to understand and take notes on.
Been watching and self teaching myself on CQB combat training and trying to perfect it since I’m not old enough I got to use the resources I already have on hand
I don't normally comment and you won't read this but just wanted to say thanks. It's been a few years since I've been out of the service and I was wanting to gauge my retention. Very clear instruction, put forth in an easily digestible format. I have found, the distinct way of teaching that is practiced by the military, more than anywhere in the civilian sector is the most successful. No nonsense, practical instruction with constant checks to make sure everyone is tracking. Thanks again. Really enjoyed it.
Thanks for following us 😎🤙
This is the most detailed room clearing video Ive seen on YT yet. Congrats
Clint's room-clearing video from ~10 years ago is also important for anyone wanting to know the CQB-esque 'What/How' as well as the 'Why'
Nikola Milenkovic link?
Link pls
'Thunder Ranch - Defensive Tactics'
^ I believe he explores 10 rules for this series
Yeah. Clint's a legend dude.
I absolutely LOVE that the classroom session is in sepia tone and that the field exercise is bright. Gives a great feel to the video. Almost like a real movie. Great editing!
I love UF PRO videos especially the CQB drills training, field medicine shooting and hand to hand combat skills
Same and those are all my favorite episodes
Explained by a true expert which makes this a pleasure to watch and listen. He brings short and pin point explanations. Amazing video and series. Can't wait for next video :) Good job!
This is for real world situations that you and me could find ourselves in.
But since a lot of you are talking about rainbow 6 siege, I’ve been playing since the second closed beta and I will say, taking the lessons here and applying to a video game or what I like to call a simulation actually oddly helps and it’s weird but works a little bit.
I’ve seen a lot of noobs stick their rifle through a window or a hole and blasted them through a wall with my shotty or cooked a nade and sent it in front of their face.
The biggest point he makes that translates to games is DONT STICK YOUR RILFE BARREL THROUGH ANY DOOR OR WINDOW WHERE AN ENEMY CAN SEE IT. Dead give away for prefire, and you wonder how they know you were coming.
These are also valuable lessons for life so don’t just brush them off like he’s joking. It’s awesome that they put these videos up for free.
Thank you.
Telegraphing or flagging is what it is called.
I absolutely love the camera work in these, keep it up!!
Like a movie, I'm waiting for his old combat to pop in and ask for help.
Uf pro you have the best UA-cam channel ever
Why would you say this? The guy drops his muzzle and jerks around like a moron at a doorway, opening himself to reprisal to everyone in the angles he didn't check with his barrel through the breach. They step left and have a guy with his rifle down and shit in his pants when he realizes there's a room of guys with their muzzle properly trained on him.
@@ErgonomicChair he said force on force is different
Several years late to this, but man the amount of information given and his ability to teach are awesome.
Just found your channel, and worked through your CQC playlist. You're a brilliant teacher, clear and logical and the camera angles are spot on. Would feel very comfortable asking questions if I had any. Will be drilling these before my next cqc airsoft match, being new to the sport hopefully it'll help me up my game and be of more use to my team. Keep these videos coming.
Same I also watch these for airsoft.
Yes! This is EXACTLY what I've been waiting for on the intertubes. This is next level stuff to me. Thank you so much, excellent instruction and you put it out there for free.
The instruction isn’t just fantastic, but the demonstration with the phone is also superb. Brilliantly demonstrates the concept and why it’s effective.
“I wanna work.” Means something drastically different in this guy’s world than mine.
Nice video, Eli did an awesome job of instructions. Broke it down so you can easily understand. Brings back the Army days as an MP going through shoot houses. Great job keep em coming!
I really enjoy his style, knowledge, and experience. One of the very few instructors today I agree with 100%. I've been doing this for over 35 years studying and working (LE-SWAT, Military and Executive protection) applying these lessons learned. The sad part is that most of these lessons I learned lesson through errors and big mistakes in real operations. Later on I learned these lessons in a format and through advanced instruction with LE units. Well done
I cant get enough of these room clearing drills. Some people pay for videos like this. Makes sense? Good.
The guy with the red sunglasses is actually sleeping, he just doesn't want anyone to notice.
@Han Lockhart some ppl need the extra
@Han Lockhart Could be trying to get used to it.
Sleeping on the job ey
@Han Lockhart maybe a lasertag exercise for roomclearing? The red glasses are mostly laserprotectionglasses
What a fabulous channel. The production is so clean, it's like a movie, the theoretical - practical teaching is the better so far and the knowledge in noticeable. Congrats!
Thanks Eli for this amazing content. I'm not used to write a lot of comments but when it gets to such high quality work, I have to.
As someone specialized in long-range combat, this is super interesting for me. Open field, high altitude and alone situations practice absolutely different paradigm and approach.
One of the best videos, the trainer, is extremely expert in his field. I really enjoyed and loved watching the video
Good stuff, I really appreciate the amount of thought the instructor puts into making sure he isn't exposing past any of the angles that he doesn't already have control over, and the instructor does a good job of attacking the tricky angles like the 90 and the hard corner past the 150. I do have some issues with it though, for example when he talks about bailing out, he's ducking back to an area of safety but in the process he is sacrificing angles that he has already taken. Now, if you are in a situation where you do not have the luxury of retreating and it is absolutely necessary that you take this structure then you now have sacrificed that angle which means you no longer have the initiative. It is possible that you can retreat, reorient, and attack from a different angle. But most likely you cannot, which means you'll either have to depend on the enemy attacking you or you have to attack from the same angle twice which is a great way to get your head taken off. If you take an angle you hold it or you retreat and find a new one, and like I said in a CQB setting there very well may not be a new angle you can attack from. Another thing, attacking that hard angle past the 150 should in my opinion be a quick attack through and past the fatal funnel. If you have additional cover points in the room that an enemy could work an ambush off of then he could very well wait for you to enter the doorway and then pop out. His attention will immediately be drawn to that doorway, less so if you rush through the funnel to clear that hard corner and then sweep back around to clear the deeper points of cover.
IF you bailed - there was a reason for that. bailed? great. now , at that point, we are not reslicing unless it is certain specific constellations. In such events which a bailout (extracting angles) was done..this....is where our methodology kicks in SOPs which leverage that very situation you just describe. but this we will never put online. it works like a charm.
Fun to see that what we have taught in the last 7-8 years is becoming mainstream. Works like a charm.
The concept is dating all the way back to the late 70s. how ever, this methodology i promise you, as conducted, will be new for you. thats the feedback i got from multiple units who are familiar with LP.
This is by far the best CQB example I’ve had
This guy is special.
Great professionalism!
Professional soldier: in the case of disconnection you may work alone
Gamers: Don't joke about that
So helpful! Neaded to clean a room out for space during spring cleaning and really helped!
Great guide again from eli! keep up the good work!
UF Pro, best gear you can get for your money, that knows what the people in the field need.
No doubt about it, best combo ever!
“If I hear three people speaking Arabic” 🤣 Everybody got it? Lol
That was some Israeli ass shit to say lol
@@noah-vu6ic majority of all terrorist attacks are from people speaking that language. So what's up?
@@noah-vu6ic fuckin love it
@@user-mz6ts4xn6i I'm pro Israel and I'm Jewish definitely not hating on Israel just thought it was funny that he said that haha
How about: "I hear three people speaking Russian? Makes sens?", "No", "Good!"
I learned a lot about angles, especially the upright 90° door frame angle in room clearing.
Become a member of a swat just to be good at airsoft cqb
i'm actually just watching this to up my cqb game in airsoft :P
*S T O N K S*
@Christian Matis trust me, there are. and then they run into me, just to have their life's work destroyed.
@@Spoon3rYT no one dares to ask the man with his big iron on his hip
@@thechuckennoris5751 big iron in my hiiiiip
So... limited entry drills.
Seriously fantastic presentation. Loved the points made about orientation checks. Throttle control has never been explained better.
Love all the comments. A lot of Steps: wait for back up, frag the room, etc. From a Law Enforcement perspective we do active shooter training, mostly team scenarios but some one man. We have to run to the threat and take immediate action no matter how many guys may or may not be there. Before going into a room dynamically and getting your head blown off you hope to have the opportunity to slice the pie. This method is better than any I've seen or learned. The great thing is its free instruction.
Appreciated.
Oh i tought this was a tactical guide to one man room CLEANING. Mommy be mad
Despite being an army vet I watch this to improve my Mil sim gaming. It's crazy how poorly CQB was taught to me in the military, admittedly I wasn't infantry.
Awesome, I’m here for the same reason. More specifically insurgency, but I could apply this to Tarkov or Squad.
The nugget of the “… fatal funnel doesn’t exist” when slicing a room versus the dynamic entry was mind blowing! 🤯🤯🤯 Makes perfect tactical sense, but it’s the first time I’ve ever heard someone actually say it. 21 minute mark
Eliran means contextually. As in it does exist but in a different state, a two-way engagement area rather than a danger zone to move through immediately.
Technique is very similar to the way I was taught. Eli explains it very well 👍🏻
I didn't know Firas Zahabi also taught CQB lessons. What a great man he is.
New subscriber. Love this channel. I've learned more about techniques in three videos than all of the other channels combined! Keep up the good work.
This why you throw boomerang before you enter a room.
NOSTALGIC Australian army wants to know your location
@@robstark3464 the Lanisters are looking for you btw as well.
😂😂 black dynamite
@@Trevor-Wayne see this guy gets it
@@NostalgicTribe HA! I THREW THAT SHIT BEFORE I CAME IN THE ROOM!
good clean room teacher! We use here something like what you pratice, in Military Police of State of São Paulo, Brazil! Congrats man!
Caveira! Brasil
Do you guys get more specific training concerning favelas do to it being more disorganized and closer than normal CQB in normal buildings?
Just the way this guy talks... You can tell he literally deal with you, no problems, understand? Good... Let's continue.
I started doing this in Escape from Tarkov and now I never die.
Oh boy I'm gonna be so good at RB6 Siege now
This is one of the best, most well articulated instructionals I've seen on this subject
Try doing this in Squad...
Gunned down by your own squad lead.
It's pretty basic threshold clearing.
Mr WhiteHawk Unless everyone youre playing with is experienced and all communicating you will run into that problem on any game. Squad, Siege, Insurgency, etc. Thats why its always better to try and play with a group of friends who are all on the same page and work well as a team. Randoms on the internet are too... random lol.
Pretty this was for solo dolo work
@@raydon14ify Great thing about limited penetration is that it doesn't change to much with a buddy.
You're using one man clearing techniques with an 8 man team? That's your problem right there. Clearing with a squad is a whole other world than this right here. Stack up, nade in, breach and push-push-push. Medics should be the last men standing if shit goes wrong and can revive casualties.
One man room clearing:
- Step one: wait for teammates
- Step two: clear the room with them
Step three: hell no my mates won't come and guys inside that room are all bad guys so fuck this shit, time for some fireworks.
that so dumb. what if they are dead or you got split up like he said
@@xsleezerx2083 IT was a joke. Relax.
Not a very good joke since he gave context of the particular situation.
*-Step one: pull pin out of grenade
Good video. Room clearing is not always throw a grenade in and follow up. And not always you can wait for the rest of your team. He do it by the book. Slices the pie. And look around and listen. What I learned from the video is the angel of the weapon looking around corners. So the "defender" will not see the muzzle of your gun. And keep balance for a quick step back out of sight.
This how you do it with a M4 or similar. I would probably drop main-gun to the sling and used a sidearm (Glock 9mm). But the video is how to use yuor main gun.
thanks you fixed my biggest flaw: visibility, i used to keep my firearm up at all times
Se viene lo buenos gente querida , después de una sería genial sobre TCCC , ahora nos van a mimar con CQC , i love UF PRO
What about - in these examples - the right corner? At 24:10 we have a Narrow angle, yet we can't see the woman in the corner (who can be seen at 25:51). To see the corner you have to step in, but when you step in you have to deal with 2 corners.
Tactical order of engagement, priority of work. All covered in the course.
Who else is gonna try this in their house 🙋♂️
lol already did
Me doing this using nerfgun
I train every morning
Knowledge is no good without practice
@@VashGames Yeah, but you gotta do it in full tactical gear otherwise it's not real LARPing. :P
Thank you for the high quality videos and tips/Tricks UF PRO :-D
I'm so happy i found your channel just a couple of months ago 👍
This is very good explanations of CQB. Listen and learn, even if your tactic is little bit different.
BTW instructor looks like Badr Hari kickboxer.
Best clutch or kick guide I´ve ever seen so far. Good job!
Using this in the new COD Modern Warfare, 60 kills, zero deaths. yup it works in video games too it seems... the psychology of room clearing in video games is exactly the same as in real life. Most enemies position themselves at the 90, or ambush from the corners. Slicing the pie and snapping high threat angles always seems to catch them off guard. Nice.
No it does not work, because the game will respawn a fucker at 15 degree when you're at 140...
I usually get the dudes that jump into rooms and quick scope me
Lol you did not go 60-0 using this in MW stfu
Ouroboros _xlo A lot of it was luck but I was making decisions based on minimizing risk based on exposure to thresholds. Some corners will be 50/50 chance of survival but others you can control very well when using concealment effectively and shooting from cover
@@izkh4lif4 Dude, I'm 7.5k on the kills leaderboard and 9.5k on the score leaderboard.
No one has a legit 60 kill streak, not even as high up as me.
There's too much going on in the game for you to have used this and not died, not only that but this process is too slow for you to have gotten 60 kills in one match. Even in regular Dom matches, you have to run around fast and grind for a 60-80 kill game.
Unless you were playing walking vegetables that didn't shoot. And you're telling me you got two tac nukes in a row in the same match? Okay bud.
I use this in Airsoft CQB and it works like a charm. Thanks for that.
22:18 if the enemy even slightly anticipates that you might peek outta there that means you are dead. I served the military too and I would not peek like that. Everything else is solid though.
I thoroughly enjoy watching these vids and learning, as the philosophy goes "ALWAYS" be a student. As a civilian this is valuable info and visual training in the event (heaven forbid of course) SHTF🤙🍀🍀.
Excellent video and so happy this popped up . Learned alot and man that ol guy that implemented the angles is clever using math for clearing rooms . Hope to see more vids !
I've cleared rooms in the military and never have I kept my elbow out like that. You clear rooms all day that arm would be dead. Keep your shit nice and tight and you'll have more control for a lot longer.
This shit looks stupid with a stupid premise. Foreign sf, an oxymoron, they're all sf, lol
Yes as a SAW gunner I highly agree
Depends pn the body type. Ive always locked the weapon into my shoulder with my non dominate hand and only held yhe weapon with my firing hand when doing a mag change. Also because i have long arms ive got to chicken wing just a little bit.
Door Spook. This is actually based in reality. The way law enforcement and military clear rooms is dangerous. It’s outdated and ineffective. There is a reason why CQB tactics have changed. Slicing the pie like you are taught in the military will get you killed.
Hi. I did not notice that on the video. I grip the gun with my left under the rail. Right elbow automatic go left to your body. Grip rail with left over the rail , your right elbow goes up. Test it out ;) Comment :) ?
Me:
UA-cam: Pro's guide to CQB | One man room clearing
At least that was a pretty entertaining recommended video.
This guy Eli is so legit. Thanks for the info man
If you train this in your home, put a camera recording in to the room. Try to pie / ambush the camera without being spotted from extermity first.
Keeping your hands and legs in line with the pie section while maintaining good balance for action / firing is the a hard part.
Fantastic work man, amazing
in regards to the footwork at the threshold, i also found it works just as well if you decide to shuffle the feet rather than picking up and replanting. This makes sure the feet are always planted and ready to bail if need be. This technique has saved me from quite a few deaths in airsoft because of minimum exposure and ability to pop in and out quickly.
Shuffling = noise. But sometimes shuffling happens due to stress.
That’s exactly how I‘ve been trained in the Swiss Army. You might not look as cool as your favourite high speed operator just rushing into the room but you‘ll probably live longer! 🤘🤙
Weve been training most of the Swiss units. good guys.
It’s good training to have with all the warfighting you guys do.😉 Love Swiss firearms.
Man I wish I knew about this channel sooner
This checks out - Former leo - Our team called this limited penetration. Slicing the pie is another way - basically the same things but it varies in the way you attack your angles.