 Hey everyone, Dylan Schumacher, Citadel Defense, and today we're gonna talk about my dry fire kit. So this isn't anything really fancy. I just thought I should do a video on this because I try to dry fire a lot, and so I have this little Tupperware full of my dry fire goodies that enables me to do my dry fire. And there's some stuff in here you might wanna consider getting. There's some stuff that might not care about, but so I just keep all my dry fire stuff together in this little Tupperware and that's where it lives. But in here, I just have some empty mags for the different guns that I dry fire and work with. So I have two empty AK mags. I have three empty AR mags, and we'll talk about that in a second while I have three of them. Right now I have an AR mag pouch in there because sometimes I'll practice my AR mag reload just off my belt so I don't have to get all kitted up and whatever. And then again, same thing here, I have three Glock mags and we'll talk about Y3 in a second. I got my shot timer. So this is an old shot timer that doesn't really work that well. And what I mean is if I shake it, it'll readjust the time for my first shot or last shot. So I don't really use it on the range anymore because it doesn't good at recording times. However, it is great for using to just record second beeps. When that's all you're working with, this thing still works fine. So I use it for that. I did put a piece of tape over the beeper so it's not so loud in the house because otherwise, of course, that's way too loud. So this just happens to be an old Pocket Pro that isn't super functionally warm. And so now it's dedicated for my dry fire. The other thing I have in here, so I have an Altoid and I have it full of some nine millimeter dummy rounds, some of which right now are stuffed in one of my mags. And then I have another Tupperware that I fill with my AR dummy rounds. And then I have these two things which are in my magazines, which I'll explain now. So I got these from Sheepdog Response, I believe is where I actually purchased these. I'm sure you can get them elsewhere. I don't know what they're called, but they're basically like a dry rack practice tool. When you put it in the AR mag, the blue one for the AR one there, what happens is it doesn't let the follower come all the way to the top of the magazine, like there. So it won't let the bolt lock back on a empty mag. So you can cycle the gun with this in it. And they're great for push-pull rack drills or tap-rack bang drills. They do a great job so you don't have to have dummy rounds and feed them in out of the gun and stuff like that. So I really like them for that. They cost me, I don't know, five bucks each for like three of the AR ones and three of the pistol ones. And so, you know, they're a great little tool to have. I suggest you have them add them to your dry fire regimen. Same thing here. So I have one for the pistol one here. I don't know if you can tell, but that's actually a orange pistol thing that depresses the follower. So that, again, I can tap-rack bang the pistol and it's not gonna lock the slide to the rear on an empty mag. Other than that, there's just some loose AR rounds in there. The other thing that I have that's not really part of my dry fire kit, meaning it doesn't live in this box, but that I do have that I use for dry fire a lot are these scaled targets. Now I got these from Ben Stogersproshop.com or something like that. Ben Stogersproshop, you Google that, you'll find it. And they're scaled targets. I don't have the card right here that says what scale they are, but these are like IDPA, you know, targets that are scaled. And I think these are like a one to three size ratio, meaning like for every three feet of where you are that simulates three yards. And so I got a couple of those full IDPA size ones, a couple of these like six inch circle ones. I think these are more like a one sixth scale. The poppers, you know, which are like a one sixth scale. And then I even have some of the poppers that are one third scale. I don't have them all here right now because some of them are in my little dry practice area and they're being used. So, you know, this is kind of a great little setup to have in your dry fire area when you have constrained space and it kind of lets you simulate further distances on targets. I usually work like, I don't know, 10, 12 feet off of one of these IDPA targets. You know, and it simulates, I'm being like five, seven yards away, something like that, nothing super exciting. But it gives you a good size target to work with and a good size something to shoot at. So I really like these from my dry fire practice. Been using them for six plus months now and I'd recommend them to you. I think they were like 10 bucks shipped. So really, they're really reasonable and there's really no reason you shouldn't have them. You can always just put up a full sized target in your dry fire area if you got the space. But again, if you wanna simulate that kind of ideal, ideal five to seven yards, you know, then maybe something like this might be a better fit for you. So that's it. Those are all the little tricks of the trade and tools of the trade that I use for dry fire. Hope that's helpful. I hope you have a dry fire kit. If you don't make one that you just have dedicated gear that you're using to dry firing because if you want to get better at shooting, you have to be dry firing. You're not gonna get better at shooting without dry firing, I promise. That's all I got. Do brave deeds and endure.