Hello from Australia. We aren't able to get semi auto rifles of any kind here but we can get rem 7615's and bolt guns with 10 round mags. Do you guys have any videos showing the practical use of these? Oh and anything with sxs shotguns? The handgun stuff we can just get from your other vids.
@Highjak86 thats funny because even though he didnt check the chamber the weapon still seemed to reload. so whether or its a reload in your book, its still a reload
@joeratti All I'm saying is that when you pull the trigger in a real gun fight and your weapon does NOT go bang you CAN NOT automatically assume your weapon is empty and go straight to a reload. When you're getting shot at you will not remember how many rounds you have fired. You could have a failure to fire, double feed, etc and feeding your weapon in this case will not help your initial problem. All you're doing her is building training scars. Train like you fight as the Army says. Cheers
@Highjak86 Or getting killed when your enemy is still 5 feet in front of your face.. bang.. you're dead while you just tried to stuff another mag in your weapon on top of a misfire. Shoulda woulda coulda looked first.. but now you're dead. In other words.. what you're describing here is really a basic function of situational awareness; know the state of your weapon *at all times* No weapon means you're just in the way.. or worse.. you're pouring red stuff all over yourself like a leaky faucet..
Not when the weapon malfunctions in real combat.. you're dead bud.. no replay button here.
It's only a reload when you don't have an enemy that shoots back. Which brings me to my principle point ages ago. This type of training is for fighting poor people in poor countries without real weapons, and or, for fighting your own civilians in your own nation. Other than that.. it's great for winning matches.
Don't try it in a real fight with a real enemy.. You wont be coming home.
Wouldn't it save time just holding onto the mag after you reloaded? that way you can access the bolt catch with your thumb and not lose time reaching the foregrip again.
Problem with all this micro managment sillyness thats plauging the 'nation'.
Under real stress you don't reload in 2.6 seconds & in real situations
over-training like this actually hinders your performance. The real secret to real training does not lie in muscle memory.. it lay within the individuals abilty to cope with toxic stress bio-chemicals released by the brain. The real master of his environment trains within logical balance, he does not focus on perpetual, endless details, he wins.
@mrtruthify You're taking this a little too serious my friend. This is simply a drill. Don't assume for one second that this is all we concentrate on. We train hard so we can win the fight in "real world" situations. When people make comments like this no one takes them seriously. I hope you understand that. No malice meant. I just hate keyboard warriors always having to downgrade excellence. They don't recognize a good thing when they see it. Hope this doesn't describe you.
@joeratti And making my original comment I simply stated my perspective and then even made a compliment on the speed. If anyone is trolling here it is you. "arm chair know it alls" is a big statement for someone who has absolutely zero videos on their profile.
WOW dude, the real secret to training is learning to relax while dealing with stress. Muscle memory is one of the building blocks. Simple drills like this are great to do when working on the basics. If you think all training should be done in a high stress environment you will get people hirt or killed. Like Sup3rF1uid, I want to know what credentials you have.
@mrtruthify WOW way to over think the video. The guy in the video shows many things that show he is skilled in how to handle that weapon (IE Stance, gun level and holding the weapon). But for you to spew some speech about how he must master all things around his environment just shows you have no idea whats going on and really have never received any training in firearms.
@mrtruthify i hope you have been to combat, bcoz i have, and i know that when i needed to speed reload, which is pretty much every firefight, we never had time for TacReloads(on your own time), it was always speed reloads, and muscle memory has alot to do with it, Im a Marine Combat Marksmenship Instructor, and i will tell you there is a reason we teach muscle memory in the Marine Corps,, to say muscle memory has nothing to do with it would be ignorant, you ingored the entire concept of MM
@superman1371 I agree with you here Marine. I should have emphasised more that OVEREMPHASIS on teaching MM (via instruction, instead of individules adapting slightly with their own natural bodies reaction/action limitations, after being taught, [every man moves slightly differently] ) can become a problem in high stress situations & can hinder situational awareness, which I believe comes above all els.
I prefere an aware, thinking man next to me over a robot, this was my only concern overall
@mrtruthify SEALS train for 5 long hard years before becoming a SEAL....... would you also consider this over training? And how could you say how fast people need to be able to reload in a gun fight? in a small building out numbered?
Its not difficult to change mags quickly when you know that was your last round. In real life, not knowing your last round was chambered, you would check to make sure your weapon didn't malfunction before you go to swap mags. If you did know your last round was chambered you would change the mag as soon as you had a second.
Yes, but all these companies sure do make a lot of money off novices & retired people.
In fact, if you actually look up Real World Stats on people who fall for this type of "training" (step programming, not actual adaptive descision making, which is MUCH more important), you'll find the real answer to what this silly behaivior does to men in combat. As such, very few 'special forces' train correctly either, in "America" anyway. This crap seves well against gang members & poor nations, thats it.
@mrtruthify Care to explain how the Navy SEALS and their Army counter parts are having so much success over in Iraq and Afghanistan then? What, their training is BS? How about you mrtruthify? What are your credentials? What gives you the right to flat out state that very few "special force" train correctly?
I suppose you'll draw a long bow and say the SAS don't train properly either? What are you, goddamn mall ninja?
@Sup3rF1uid I already have.. RE-post: This step-programming is for fighting CIVILIANS in urban areas.. it's all purposly designed to CAPITALIZE off the fighting styles of POOR PEOPLE IN POOR NATIONS & untrained people in inner cities.. hence their concept of organization (speed etc). Dont expect any of the idiots on this page or the ones selling this scheme to know any of this; they believe the (C-intel) lie that this is "high level combat training." In the end.. this is designed to CITIZINS.
@Sup3rF1uid Even the little stop/look measure is added for URBAN FIGHTING [IN CROWDS] (not Combat environs where YOUR OWN men are on that fireing line WITH YOU), a broad term used in the industry (what you would call the military) for real words like KILLING foreign CITIZENS, PROTESTORS etc. WE have terms for them too.. we no longer send you boys to kill people defending themselves from our globalization, profit machine.. we simply refere to them as THREATS, aka sanitizing public consumtion
And that is the point, this step-programming is for fighting civilians in urban areas.. it's all purposly designed to capitalize off the fighting styles of poor people in poor nations & untrained people in inner cities.. hence their concept of organization (speed etc). Dont expect any of the idiots on this page or the ones selling this farce in this country to know any of this; they believe the (C-intel) lie that this is "high level" combat training. In the end.. they will be useing this on YOU.
@mrtruthify For civilian all they need to train on their aiming and control of their weapon. And all is weapon safety... Those are important for civilian... these type of training are for private contractors , police and can be for civilian if they want to see what it's feel like. I have no problem to sign up for these type of training.
@slimddozen Ammo is expensive they are not going to fucking dump a whole mag just to keep it real, this is to demonstrate a persons ability to reload from a empty mag (not under stress).
@mdu2112 The first move of the finger after firing the first shot is to drop the magazine (mag release button is on the visible side of the rifle). After that, he's just demonstrating safe technique by keeping his finger off the trigger until read to fire the second shot. A finger on the trigger during a reload is an extremely dangerous thing.
there's a magpul lever that clips onto the bolt catch and extends under the receiver to the other side so the shooting finger can get clear of the trigger and tap the lever releasing the bolt instead of having to thumb it. Most guys like it as they rest their finger on the groove near the mag release anyways. index finger push, mag in, finger push, squeeze. If you'd rather have your index on the trigger, you don't know gun safety :).
pretty darn good. He should practice not looking away from the target during his reload though. You may be fast, but in the short time they could take cover and you could lose them.
TRAIN LIKE YOU FIGHT- have some one else load two mags with a snap cap, you may get two rounds before you have reload or you may get twenty rounds before it fails.
The absence of refined motor skills in combat combined with terrible muscle-memory habits (using your thumb) to send the bolt forward can prove to be fatal as well.
Either get tac bolt catch or oversize catch. Factory could be pretty stiff and hard to find some times. One of my buddy has a tac catch and it releases the bolt with a touch of a finger (strong normal finger/thumb...not feather weigh)
Charge with his thumb? Are you talking about him hitting the bolt catch release, or turning off and on the safety? He did not work the charging handle with his thumb at any point in that video.
I mean the bolt catch/release - looks like hit put the mag in with his left hand and at the same time with the same hand hit the bolt catch and then boom! very fast.
first of all a magazine holds rounds not bullets when the bolt is back and you stick a loaded magazine you have to hit the bolt release to chamber a round
He did a great job. Efficiency of motion excellent. Checks his surroundings, good drill.
Here's my problem. This drill is all well and good on the range, with new magazines. Combat conditions are different, mags are constantly screwed up. What would have happened if he'd hit the release, and the mag hadn't dropped? He would have brought his new mag up, and then had both hands full trying to unf*ck the empty mag. Do yourself a favor. Practice stripping the old mag, and reload behind cover.
I think this drill is more intended for competition more so than combat. However, the sheer speed would make it quite effective especially if he had cover fire. I agree with you on stripping the old mag. Not all mags are drop free.
The procedure bases on the knowledge of your weapon system. You know yours and he knows his. Under these circumstances he knows that he doesn't need to get rid of the old mag and it would slow him down. What makes you think that he can't move behind a cover or strip the old mag in a smooth motion? Did you experience a problem with mag extraction with Pmags or HK steel mags? What would you do if there's no cover at all and you have to do the reload?
Anyone who has ever shot, who has any level of skill in shooting, who is qualified at all to say anything, will not have a bad comment about that reload. Job well done. Very impressive, Sir. Seems like you made some people jealous.
He hit the release with his thumb as he seated and pulled on the magazine. When we teach an AR15 reload we use the term "push, pull". We push up on the mag to "seat it" and pull down on the mag to make sure it's in. A phase one malfunction consists of "push, pull, tilt, rack, bang." You should come to one of our classes. You would love it! We offer a 100% moneyback guarantee at all of our schools. Check out our website for our training schedule. Hope this helps. Stay safe and God bless.
Before guns there was war. There will always be with war. Guns are not the problem. They are tools. Millions died by the hands of swords, stones & arrows.
By the way, if you ban guns, it doesn't matter. It's called the black market. I'll still get it.
Guns are for citizens who are smart enough to realize that in this day and age one cannot fully rely on the law enforcement to come to your aid in life threatening situations. For those who know their country could be attacked at any given second and it is necessary to form militias to defend it. For people who understand the concept of "a man with a gun is a citizen, a man without a gun is a subject."
because you dont always have a full clip in combat or you lose count of how many rounds you fired and you get the dead mans click by surprise. thats why a unknown amount of rounds could make for a better drill or practice.
Good point about a fumble reload. But the fact of the matter is this. Range time only prepares you under calm circumstances. Under duress you will and can make rookie mistakes that could get you killed or shot.
dam i wish i was that good real blinding speed.
well back to drilling for me!!!
paulwrightgroup 1 month ago
mag fail at the end haha
WitnessMELOx15 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Can someone please tell me the name of the song in TDSAs patrol rifle video?
Fyghaxnav 2 months ago
Hello from Australia. We aren't able to get semi auto rifles of any kind here but we can get rem 7615's and bolt guns with 10 round mags. Do you guys have any videos showing the practical use of these? Oh and anything with sxs shotguns? The handgun stuff we can just get from your other vids.
shazdee 5 months ago
Slight of Hand Pro right there!
-holds out my face to be slapped for using a MW2 joke-
zimman56 5 months ago
Nice
svt283 5 months ago
just like the man in the background says : Beautiful....
The1Darknes2 8 months ago
y is the buckle undone on that drop holster? so fast!!!!!!
MCTheReason 9 months ago
Gotta make correct use of that VFG.
Grubbernaut 9 months ago
This might be a stupid question but what is TDSA ??
harrison1019 10 months ago
@harrison1019 it's like the TSA but with a D.
leloodallasmultipass 9 months ago 16
@leloodallasmultipass LMAO. That's funny right there.
TDSATulsa 9 months ago 2
@harrison1019 TDSA is short for The Defensive Shooting Academy. Silly huh?
TDSATulsa 9 months ago
@TDSATulsa Thanks :)
harrison1019 9 months ago
Neat. Back in 82nd we only did pistol transition drills. Should've trained to reload.
voxtelnismo 10 months ago
Not checking the chamber first isn't a reload in my book. Still super fast though!!!
Highjak86 11 months ago 2
@Highjak86 Its a drill dude. Just a drill. To see how fast we can conduct a reload. Gee Whiz.
TDSATulsa 10 months ago
@TDSATulsa Always a self-absorbed critic out there isn't it? :)
voodoomanboy 9 months ago
@TDSATulsa You'll never pacify them. Ever. People always find something to bitch about! haha. Nice job. Very smooth speed reload.
BookXtremeHunts 6 months ago
@Highjak86 thats funny because even though he didnt check the chamber the weapon still seemed to reload. so whether or its a reload in your book, its still a reload
joeratti 10 months ago
@joeratti All I'm saying is that when you pull the trigger in a real gun fight and your weapon does NOT go bang you CAN NOT automatically assume your weapon is empty and go straight to a reload. When you're getting shot at you will not remember how many rounds you have fired. You could have a failure to fire, double feed, etc and feeding your weapon in this case will not help your initial problem. All you're doing her is building training scars. Train like you fight as the Army says. Cheers
Highjak86 10 months ago
@Highjak86 Or getting killed when your enemy is still 5 feet in front of your face.. bang.. you're dead while you just tried to stuff another mag in your weapon on top of a misfire. Shoulda woulda coulda looked first.. but now you're dead. In other words.. what you're describing here is really a basic function of situational awareness; know the state of your weapon *at all times* No weapon means you're just in the way.. or worse.. you're pouring red stuff all over yourself like a leaky faucet..
mrtruthify 10 months ago
@Highjak86
Anyway.. good point. I agree 100% with you.
Very basic stuff that gets shelved today in the "Tactical world"....
mrtruthify 10 months ago
@joeratti
Not when the weapon malfunctions in real combat.. you're dead bud.. no replay button here.
It's only a reload when you don't have an enemy that shoots back. Which brings me to my principle point ages ago. This type of training is for fighting poor people in poor countries without real weapons, and or, for fighting your own civilians in your own nation. Other than that.. it's great for winning matches.
Don't try it in a real fight with a real enemy.. You wont be coming home.
mrtruthify 10 months ago
@mrtruthify um have done in a real gun fight. you sir know nothing
stewpidaso26 9 months ago
Wouldn't it save time just holding onto the mag after you reloaded? that way you can access the bolt catch with your thumb and not lose time reaching the foregrip again.
blondbassist 11 months ago
Smooth reload - I like the thumb method I just usually can't hit the damn thing with my gloves on as well.
BritishTang 11 months ago
Shouldn't you check the chamber?
seventyfive1 1 year ago
Problem with all this micro managment sillyness thats plauging the 'nation'.
Under real stress you don't reload in 2.6 seconds & in real situations
over-training like this actually hinders your performance. The real secret to real training does not lie in muscle memory.. it lay within the individuals abilty to cope with toxic stress bio-chemicals released by the brain. The real master of his environment trains within logical balance, he does not focus on perpetual, endless details, he wins.
mrtruthify 1 year ago 2
@mrtruthify You're taking this a little too serious my friend. This is simply a drill. Don't assume for one second that this is all we concentrate on. We train hard so we can win the fight in "real world" situations. When people make comments like this no one takes them seriously. I hope you understand that. No malice meant. I just hate keyboard warriors always having to downgrade excellence. They don't recognize a good thing when they see it. Hope this doesn't describe you.
TDSATulsa 1 year ago 21
@TDSATulsa you got some real arm chair know it alls trolling your video
joeratti 10 months ago
@joeratti And making my original comment I simply stated my perspective and then even made a compliment on the speed. If anyone is trolling here it is you. "arm chair know it alls" is a big statement for someone who has absolutely zero videos on their profile.
Highjak86 10 months ago
WOW dude, the real secret to training is learning to relax while dealing with stress. Muscle memory is one of the building blocks. Simple drills like this are great to do when working on the basics. If you think all training should be done in a high stress environment you will get people hirt or killed. Like Sup3rF1uid, I want to know what credentials you have.
sapoguapo93308 11 months ago
@mrtruthify WOW way to over think the video. The guy in the video shows many things that show he is skilled in how to handle that weapon (IE Stance, gun level and holding the weapon). But for you to spew some speech about how he must master all things around his environment just shows you have no idea whats going on and really have never received any training in firearms.
TheMob1080 10 months ago
@mrtruthify i hope you have been to combat, bcoz i have, and i know that when i needed to speed reload, which is pretty much every firefight, we never had time for TacReloads(on your own time), it was always speed reloads, and muscle memory has alot to do with it, Im a Marine Combat Marksmenship Instructor, and i will tell you there is a reason we teach muscle memory in the Marine Corps,, to say muscle memory has nothing to do with it would be ignorant, you ingored the entire concept of MM
superman1371 10 months ago
@superman1371 I agree with you here Marine. I should have emphasised more that OVEREMPHASIS on teaching MM (via instruction, instead of individules adapting slightly with their own natural bodies reaction/action limitations, after being taught, [every man moves slightly differently] ) can become a problem in high stress situations & can hinder situational awareness, which I believe comes above all els.
I prefere an aware, thinking man next to me over a robot, this was my only concern overall
mrtruthify 10 months ago
@mrtruthify SEALS train for 5 long hard years before becoming a SEAL....... would you also consider this over training? And how could you say how fast people need to be able to reload in a gun fight? in a small building out numbered?
kenny8076 9 months ago
Its not difficult to change mags quickly when you know that was your last round. In real life, not knowing your last round was chambered, you would check to make sure your weapon didn't malfunction before you go to swap mags. If you did know your last round was chambered you would change the mag as soon as you had a second.
Kyl4321 1 year ago
Comment removed
angelicaspitsonslugs 1 year ago
now do a california style tactical reload. jk nice vid.
luzac159 1 year ago
not trying to be an ass. But i don't think you can do this kind of reload less than 2 seconds under stress. Depend.. i can do that too.
Vietboy1st 1 year ago
Yes, but all these companies sure do make a lot of money off novices & retired people.
In fact, if you actually look up Real World Stats on people who fall for this type of "training" (step programming, not actual adaptive descision making, which is MUCH more important), you'll find the real answer to what this silly behaivior does to men in combat. As such, very few 'special forces' train correctly either, in "America" anyway. This crap seves well against gang members & poor nations, thats it.
mrtruthify 1 year ago
@mrtruthify Care to explain how the Navy SEALS and their Army counter parts are having so much success over in Iraq and Afghanistan then? What, their training is BS? How about you mrtruthify? What are your credentials? What gives you the right to flat out state that very few "special force" train correctly?
I suppose you'll draw a long bow and say the SAS don't train properly either? What are you, goddamn mall ninja?
Sup3rF1uid 1 year ago
@Sup3rF1uid I already have.. RE-post: This step-programming is for fighting CIVILIANS in urban areas.. it's all purposly designed to CAPITALIZE off the fighting styles of POOR PEOPLE IN POOR NATIONS & untrained people in inner cities.. hence their concept of organization (speed etc). Dont expect any of the idiots on this page or the ones selling this scheme to know any of this; they believe the (C-intel) lie that this is "high level combat training." In the end.. this is designed to CITIZINS.
mrtruthify 1 year ago
@Sup3rF1uid Even the little stop/look measure is added for URBAN FIGHTING [IN CROWDS] (not Combat environs where YOUR OWN men are on that fireing line WITH YOU), a broad term used in the industry (what you would call the military) for real words like KILLING foreign CITIZENS, PROTESTORS etc. WE have terms for them too.. we no longer send you boys to kill people defending themselves from our globalization, profit machine.. we simply refere to them as THREATS, aka sanitizing public consumtion
mrtruthify 1 year ago
@Sup3rF1uid
He's talking out of his ass. I wouldn't waste any time discussing the matter, as his mind is already concluded.
opmike343 1 year ago
And that is the point, this step-programming is for fighting civilians in urban areas.. it's all purposly designed to capitalize off the fighting styles of poor people in poor nations & untrained people in inner cities.. hence their concept of organization (speed etc). Dont expect any of the idiots on this page or the ones selling this farce in this country to know any of this; they believe the (C-intel) lie that this is "high level" combat training. In the end.. they will be useing this on YOU.
mrtruthify 1 year ago
@mrtruthify For civilian all they need to train on their aiming and control of their weapon. And all is weapon safety... Those are important for civilian... these type of training are for private contractors , police and can be for civilian if they want to see what it's feel like. I have no problem to sign up for these type of training.
Vietboy1st 1 year ago
this is why AR's are way better than the little kiddies singing the AK's praises
bigbizable 1 year ago
holy balls
megatron515 1 year ago
is he a competitive shooter?
useless241 1 year ago
Cool shit. whats funny is this would never happen. why would there only be one round in the clip you know? oh well. its for fun.
slimddozen 1 year ago
@slimddozen Ammo is expensive they are not going to fucking dump a whole mag just to keep it real, this is to demonstrate a persons ability to reload from a empty mag (not under stress).
H3LLSMAN 1 year ago
@mdu2112 The first move of the finger after firing the first shot is to drop the magazine (mag release button is on the visible side of the rifle). After that, he's just demonstrating safe technique by keeping his finger off the trigger until read to fire the second shot. A finger on the trigger during a reload is an extremely dangerous thing.
barkalounger 1 year ago
Dang Eric must have been having an off day,
bettingpython 1 year ago
there's a magpul lever that clips onto the bolt catch and extends under the receiver to the other side so the shooting finger can get clear of the trigger and tap the lever releasing the bolt instead of having to thumb it. Most guys like it as they rest their finger on the groove near the mag release anyways. index finger push, mag in, finger push, squeeze. If you'd rather have your index on the trigger, you don't know gun safety :).
arapistonhalo 1 year ago
Maybe he's just insanely fast but it doesn't seem like he even hits the bolt catch after lading the 2nd mag?
lowfiwhiteguy 1 year ago
@lowfiwhiteguy
maybe a round was already chambered.
ELITEHAMSTER123 1 year ago 5
@ELITEHAMSTER123 Nope. He released the bolt catch after he seated the mag.
TDSATulsa 1 year ago 3
@TDSATulsa AH ok, I dont have an ar so I wouldnt know the special features of it. ;)
ELITEHAMSTER123 1 year ago
@TDSATulsa i heard the bolt catch release at 0:05 and i saw the bolt release
CFProject153 11 months ago
@ELITEHAMSTER123 You can see clearly that the bolt locks to the rear after the first round was fired. Very nice reload!
pacodlux 1 year ago
Yeah, he does. That's how he chambers a round. He hits it with his left thumb.
TDSATulsa 1 year ago
@TDSATulsa
I figured he did but he's so damn fast its hard to tell haha
lowfiwhiteguy 1 year ago
@lowfiwhiteguy he hit the bolt catch you can see the bolt lock back after he fires the first round from the first mag
graysonator123 1 year ago
@lowfiwhiteguy
He does bro...you can hear it. It's a clean reload.
724tone 1 year ago
Beautiful. LEO all the way!
fyrwolf87 2 years ago
pretty darn good. He should practice not looking away from the target during his reload though. You may be fast, but in the short time they could take cover and you could lose them.
nosolace001 2 years ago
nice reloading
vomitocatarromarcio 2 years ago
what is TDSA?
Crackerkiller5 2 years ago
The Defensive Shooting Academy of Tulsa would be my guess since the guy is an OHP Trooper (Oklahoma Highway Patrol). That was impressive.
dahelmetrk 2 years ago 2
gottcha, agreed. I train like I fight, muscle memory is key
CALISTR8SHUTR 2 years ago
i highly doubt that reloading was the first thing this guy learned.
drewhenderson13 2 years ago
TRAIN LIKE YOU FIGHT- have some one else load two mags with a snap cap, you may get two rounds before you have reload or you may get twenty rounds before it fails.
CALISTR8SHUTR 2 years ago
fast reloads can prove life or death
VALVEGAMER20 2 years ago 2
@VALVEGAMER20
The absence of refined motor skills in combat combined with terrible muscle-memory habits (using your thumb) to send the bolt forward can prove to be fatal as well.
Not a bad reload though.
ehnogi 1 year ago
@VALVEGAMER20 ...says valve gamer...the expert on life and death
stevensmiley 1 year ago 17
@VALVEGAMER20 Says the VG jockey.
nikolaiorelov69 10 months ago
fuckin crazy 5/5 stars
heymynameisaj 2 years ago
fucken perfect
guncrazy143 2 years ago
Either get tac bolt catch or oversize catch. Factory could be pretty stiff and hard to find some times. One of my buddy has a tac catch and it releases the bolt with a touch of a finger (strong normal finger/thumb...not feather weigh)
xycoordinatex 2 years ago
Nice, smooth reload. However... for combat consistency sake I would do a chamber check before the reload... as it takes no extra time.
DeltaZax 2 years ago
how did he charge with his thumb like that?
that was ridiculously fast!
HTB
hammertime870 2 years ago
Charge with his thumb? Are you talking about him hitting the bolt catch release, or turning off and on the safety? He did not work the charging handle with his thumb at any point in that video.
HKBM45 2 years ago
when he loaded the second mag his hand was in a position to hit the slide release with his thumb on the opposing side of the gun,
egomike88 2 years ago
wow now thats hard training
starfighter1235 2 years ago
@HKBM45
I mean the bolt catch/release - looks like hit put the mag in with his left hand and at the same time with the same hand hit the bolt catch and then boom! very fast.
hammertime870 11 months ago
I dont understand how he did that. I didnt see him hit the bolt release. How the hell was the the gun charged??????
FrankieFigz86 2 years ago
he charged with his thumb
Kuri47 2 years ago
lol i was just wondering the same thing, but apprently he is a ninja
2J8O4S6H9 2 years ago
when the mag is empty the bolt stays back, when he puts a mag with bullets in it it automaticly comes back driving the bullet in the chamber
FleshFreak666 2 years ago
no it looks like hard hit the bolt release with his thumb. ARs dont do that hanguns do.
FrankieFigz86 2 years ago
first of all a magazine holds rounds not bullets when the bolt is back and you stick a loaded magazine you have to hit the bolt release to chamber a round
m91nagant 2 years ago 3
You're assuming that the mag he dropped was empty.
ebrak47 2 years ago
It was empty, you can see that the bolt carrier was locked back after the first shot...
l33tkawasaki 2 years ago 2
After closer inspection, I see that you are right. He is very quick given that extra step of having to slam into battery. Thanks.
ebrak47 2 years ago
he can kill 2 people in less than 4 secs
oh shit
IskandarSams 2 years ago
nice. im fast, but not that fast. i better get back to practiceing my skills.......
wwclay86 2 years ago
Look at the safety too! Good stuff.
michaelthepsycho 2 years ago
Nice, I Could not hear the total time though.
maddhatter111111 3 years ago
2.6 seconds
Ragingmaja 2 years ago
He did a great job. Efficiency of motion excellent. Checks his surroundings, good drill.
Here's my problem. This drill is all well and good on the range, with new magazines. Combat conditions are different, mags are constantly screwed up. What would have happened if he'd hit the release, and the mag hadn't dropped? He would have brought his new mag up, and then had both hands full trying to unf*ck the empty mag. Do yourself a favor. Practice stripping the old mag, and reload behind cover.
flattop454 3 years ago
I think this drill is more intended for competition more so than combat. However, the sheer speed would make it quite effective especially if he had cover fire. I agree with you on stripping the old mag. Not all mags are drop free.
skyungjae 3 years ago
Understood. Good teammates, and communication make everything possible. The more we shoot, the more we learn.
flattop454 3 years ago
yeah clearly not a combat sit
Vice001 3 years ago
The procedure bases on the knowledge of your weapon system. You know yours and he knows his. Under these circumstances he knows that he doesn't need to get rid of the old mag and it would slow him down. What makes you think that he can't move behind a cover or strip the old mag in a smooth motion? Did you experience a problem with mag extraction with Pmags or HK steel mags? What would you do if there's no cover at all and you have to do the reload?
privatewheeler 3 years ago
Anyone who has ever shot, who has any level of skill in shooting, who is qualified at all to say anything, will not have a bad comment about that reload. Job well done. Very impressive, Sir. Seems like you made some people jealous.
lytningstrykes 3 years ago 2
looks smooth
eTernaLBOWLING 3 years ago
not bad
lossesincurred 3 years ago
When he removed the first magazine, how did it fire the second time? I did not see him hit the release.
policevid87 3 years ago
He hit the release with his thumb as he seated and pulled on the magazine. When we teach an AR15 reload we use the term "push, pull". We push up on the mag to "seat it" and pull down on the mag to make sure it's in. A phase one malfunction consists of "push, pull, tilt, rack, bang." You should come to one of our classes. You would love it! We offer a 100% moneyback guarantee at all of our schools. Check out our website for our training schedule. Hope this helps. Stay safe and God bless.
TDSATulsa 3 years ago
hehe nice i like it. wut ur website with the trainning schedule??
stewpidaso26 3 years ago
@TDSATulsa Does Mr. Luton still work at TDSA? I hope to make it out before he retires.
silvermediastudio 1 year ago
@policevid87
I think if you look closely he uses his thumb and taps it.
CaIlidus 1 year ago
Before guns there was war. There will always be with war. Guns are not the problem. They are tools. Millions died by the hands of swords, stones & arrows.
By the way, if you ban guns, it doesn't matter. It's called the black market. I'll still get it.
policevid87 3 years ago
Guns are for citizens who are smart enough to realize that in this day and age one cannot fully rely on the law enforcement to come to your aid in life threatening situations. For those who know their country could be attacked at any given second and it is necessary to form militias to defend it. For people who understand the concept of "a man with a gun is a citizen, a man without a gun is a subject."
trryangallagher 3 years ago 2
because you dont always have a full clip in combat or you lose count of how many rounds you fired and you get the dead mans click by surprise. thats why a unknown amount of rounds could make for a better drill or practice.
curexcult 3 years ago
This may be true but I'd rather have a gun in a fight to the death than nothing
socc3rplay3r1 3 years ago 2
Good point about a fumble reload. But the fact of the matter is this. Range time only prepares you under calm circumstances. Under duress you will and can make rookie mistakes that could get you killed or shot.
uniform72 3 years ago
Excellent speed.
TheRaginTiger 3 years ago
damn perfect man damn perfect lol
umbrellavideo 4 years ago
WOW!
caliber10 4 years ago
awesome!
SF18BRAV0 4 years ago