 and then there's three trucks in the back. That'll be four or five moving left to right. Okay, good. So we're gonna aim at that first truck, okay? All right, it's a little longer on the burst. Training, so we just, we call it a cheeto bomb. It actually has just some orange powder in it. It shows you actually where you're impacting. And of course, if you had an actual grenade round, it would be exploding with a big fireball as opposed to just a bunch of orange powder. But that is a fun weapon to shoot. Kind of like shooting a shotgun, it kicks a little bit but at the same time you don't have to be over the accurate with it, because again, it is a grenade launcher. But it is a fun weapon to shoot. The Air Force and DOD as a whole is actually transitioning to the M320. So it's still the same thing, same caliber, that 40 millimeter grenade, but it's just a little bit different setup, but it's kind of the new and improved model if you will. So we're shooting two other weapons at the MPM G-Runs today. We're actually shooting the M240 Bravo, which that shoots a 7.62 caliber or three away caliber round. So big heavy machine gun, it actually takes about two people to employ that properly. That can go on top of a vehicle, if you're doing convoys, or it can actually go in an overwatch position. It's just a big deterrent, because when you start hearing that machine gun going, you're gonna get your head down. So it's our big Bertha that we like to employ. And then we also have our M249, which that is a light machine gun as well. It shoots a 556 crown. So same thing as the M4 rifle, it just shoots on a belt. And so it's a fully automatic machine gun. That only takes one person to operate and that's, again, fun to shoot and you usually get your head down when you start hearing those rounds. Coming out here, getting out of the office and out behind your computer is nice because, again, you get a shooting machine gun, how many other people get to do that on a Friday. And the biggest thing is, we get to spend time with each other. So a lot of us have been in the unit for a while together and we do form that brother and sisterhood. So it's fun to get out, hang out with each other. We are doing a little bit of like a little barbecue today so that's fun too. But again, overall it's always a fun experience coming out here, shoot some machine guns. And so we are out here, 5th of August, so nice and warm in the Arizona heat. It's just, it's unforgiving. And so being out here, have about seven clouds in the sky right now. So I mean, it's unforgiving, but again, it's fun. We come prepared. We've been doing this long enough where we have plenty of water, plenty of Gatorade, bring some pop-ups, kind of make it bearable. But at the same time, we come out here in January, December timeframe. I've been out here when it's raining sideways and it just rains all day and we're still out here training, cold and freezing wet, just kind of questioning our motives for being out here. But at the end of the day, again, it's always just a fun experience for my airship. So I am now starting Jeffery C-Strand. I'm with the 944 Security Forces Squadron here at the Gear Force Base and I am the Comet Arms NCYC and I've actually been with the 944 for about, going on nine years now, so a little bit, I took over as the Comet Arms NCYC about a year ago. So I've been learning that side of Security Forces since then. The 944 Security Forces Squadron, we do differ a little bit from a regular active duty Security Forces unit in that we strictly train and deploy. So every four years, we're usually heading out the door somewhere because those are the three years we're training and you're doing stuff like this, getting ready to go. But yes, that is our main mission at the 944. Whereas in active duty Security Forces units, they're defending the gate, the base itself, the flight line doing a patrol and whatnot. So again, we do differ a little bit in that sense. Biggest thing for not only myself, but anyone that is out here shooting is just making sure that everyone's safe. We obviously don't want any accidents. You don't want anybody getting hurt. We have a saying, we like to leave the range with the same blood and rank that we came in with. Again, we don't want anybody hurt. So that's the biggest thing, but then also as a Comet Arms Instructor, I also am making sure that the weapon is being employed properly and effectively that students are getting the right fundamental sound that we're teaching in the classroom as opposed to just coming out here and kind of doing their own thing because of course there is a right and wrong way to shoot these weapons. So that's the biggest thing. And then also just like to make sure my instructors are still conveying the message and teaching properly as well. The standard setup that we have for the 249 or excuse me, the 240 firing pit. So we'll have obviously one Comet Arms Instructor and then we'll have the shooter and then what we call the assistant gunner. And so the shooter obviously is in charge of employing that weapon, pulling the trigger and getting the rounds down range. And then our assistant gunner is in charge of making sure the weapon gets reloaded, doing barrel changes. Because again, like you said, that weapon is very hot. So we have to change the barrel out pretty often. And then they're also giving corrections because in real life, if members are actually using this weapon, say in a deployed environment, then Comet Arms, we're not gonna be there. And so the assistant gunner has to learn to make corrections. Tell their shooter to come up or down left or right to actually hit that target. And so that's essentially what we're doing here. Comet Arms, we're sitting next to them coaching. We're just making sure that again, we're being safe. And that if there is a major malfunction or something with the weapon that Comet Arms, my instructor is there to help out and handle it. So actually everyone here is a T.R. We only have a handful of A.G.Rs in a street first unit, but yes there are. So most of everybody here is a actual T.R. today. So they're here, I'm actually here during our ATE. So we're knocking out a lot of this training, but yeah, they're just, they're getting their annual calls right at this part.